Is a War over Taiwan Possible?
A threat to peace for which Australia must be fully prepared
Donald Trump has signaled his interest in using
America’s ‘One China’ policy as a bargaining chip in negotiations
with China over economic policy (including currency manipulation). While this
‘instinct’ of his isn’t without merit, it could represent a threat to peace for
which Australia must be fully prepared.
In brief, the ‘One China’ policy for
Australia and most countries, but not the U.S., has meant formal diplomatic
acceptance of the view that there’s only one China, that Taiwan is a part of
China, and that the People’s Republic of China (PRC) is recognized as the
government of China. Since the declaration of the PRC government in 1949, after
its defeat of the forces of the Republic of China (ROC) in the civil war on the
mainland, the PRC and ROC have been locked in a complex military, political and
diplomatic confrontation.
When the U.S. conducted its negotiations with the PRC on normalization of
diplomatic relations—to switch formal diplomatic recognition from the ROC on
Taiwan to the PRC on the mainland—Washington didn’t go as far as almost all
other countries. Instead, it took note of China’s position to that effect. It
refused to recognize Beijing’s entire formula for the ‘One China’ policy
because China refused to formally commit to an exclusively peaceful solution to
the stand-off. The U.S. has maintained unofficial representation in Taipei,
along with a military alliance, ever since the switch of recognition in 1979.
In the very year that U.S. recognised
Beijing, China began its first serious peace overture to Taiwan, though the
move didn’t bear fruit until the two warring parties met in 1992 and agreed
themselves that there’s only one China—the mainland and Taiwan. But they didn’t
address the question of which government was in charge. At that time, the ROC
maintained the formal diplomatic fiction that it ruled all of China, including
the entire Spratly Island group in the South China Sea.
Much has changed since then. Taiwan has
become a democracy and China has become the island’s main investor and main
trade partner. Economic integration has continued apace and China’s policy has
been to bind Taiwan to China “with economic ropes.” The significance and
subtlety of many of the political and military maneuvering has changed over
time.
The military threat from the PRC to Taiwan
hasn’t disappeared but it has been pushed very far to the back burner. Taiwan
has even resisted Washington’s efforts to push weapons purchases on it that its
armed forces don’t want. But it values highly the U.S. ‘alliance’ because
China’s armed forces have become so powerful in the past two decades.
Since June 2016, Taiwan has again been
under the Presidency of the pro-independence party, the Democratic Progressive
Party (DPP). When it last held the presidency (2000–08), there was no major
breach with China and, in fact, relations improved steadily. The Bush
administration even enhanced its military exchanges with Taiwan, as did Japan,
without serious impact on relations with China.
January 2017 presents us with a very
different scenario. The Bush mantra on this issue was ‘I want good relations
with China,’ no matter what we do with Taiwan. Trump, by contrast, appears to
believe that he can use U.S. recognition policy on Taiwan as a bargaining chip
to gain concessions from Beijing in economic policy.
We can credit his instincts. The issue is
so important to China that one might expect it would be prepared to make
concessions to preserve the current U.S. positions. But he’s misreading China’s
leadership and national sentiment in that country, especially its armed forces.
When China agreed to the current US
diplomatic position in 1972 and 1978, it did so from a position of severe
relative weakness. That was four decades ago. While China today has some
economic and military vulnerabilities that the United States could exploit in a
Taiwan-related negotiation, the leaders in Beijing sees the country as powerful
enough to get its way on Taiwan issues. They also see themselves as well within
their rights to use all forms of state power to do so. Moreover, the U.S.
position established in the 1970s leaves that country almost no room for
maneuver except outright recognition of Taiwan independence.
Australia’s response to any move by Trump
away from the One China policy will include a calculation of siding with our
major ally, and with the democratically-elected government of Taiwan. But we
need a clear-eyed view of just how China, and Taiwan itself, might react to a
threat of unravelling strategic stability in the Taiwan Strait. It’s that
stability, forged in 1972, that brought a sort-of peace to all of East Asia and
helped contain Soviet power until the USSR collapsed.
Modern China will use force when
threatened. In the very year that the U.S. granted it formal diplomatic
recognition, China invaded Vietnam. Its armed forces currently train for an
invasion of Taiwan. But China has many economic levers it can pull, to
devastating effect, before it needs to consider use of armed force. China also
has cyber warfare options against Taiwan and the US that didn’t exist until
quite recently.
Australia’s planning must include a view
on whether the risk of unravelling Asian strategic stability is worth
followership of our major ally if it threatens the Taiwan consensus on which
that stability is built.
This first appeared in the Australian
Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) in house publication The Strategist
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