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How Nancy Pelosi changed the Taiwan Strait status quo in Beijing’s favour

beijingwalker

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How Nancy Pelosi changed the Taiwan Strait status quo in Beijing’s favour​

  • The US Speaker’s misguided trip to Taiwan has backfired on both Washington and Taipei
  • It has given Beijing a chance to show off its military capabilities, while providing an incentive to ramp up reunification efforts and show that the Taiwan issue matters above all else


Published: 9:15am, 11 Aug, 2022

History is not always written by victors. It is equally written by losers. US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan is a typical example of how a self-centred egoist has gone out for wool and come home shorn.

Pelosi, one of the US’ highest-ranking legislators and second in line to the presidency, has gained little more than some limelight before her retirement. Her Taiwan visit was widely considered unnecessarily provocative. Even The Washington Post, which published her op-ed explaining why she would make the trip, published an editorial that can hardly be misunderstood: “The damage from Pelosi’s unwise Taiwan visit must be contained”.

Beijing’s response was carefully calibrated yet exceptionally strong. It didn’t attempt to obstruct Pelosi’s flight, as some had speculated, but in the wake of her arrival in Taipei on August 2, Beijing announced that it would conduct air and sea drills in six areas around the island that would effectively seal off Taiwan for three consecutive days.

Two target zones were placed inside Taiwan’s “territorial waters” and dozens of fighter planes were flown across the median line in the Taiwan Strait, as a show of disregard for that boundary. For the first time, missiles were fired over the island.

With these measures, the People’s Liberation Army has proven it could coordinate operations to impose a full blockade should it ever choose to. It has progressed from the much smaller missile firing exercises conducted during the 1995-1996 Taiwan Strait crisis. Those exercises were meant to send a warning to then Taiwanese president Lee Teng-hui after his visit to the US.

But, unlike in 1996 when one American aircraft carrier sailed through the strait and another manoeuvred close by, this time, the USS Ronald Reagan cautiously kept away from the entrance to the Taiwan Strait.

How might the Biden administration reflect on all this? China and the US have been pointing fingers at each other for changing the status quo in the Taiwan Strait. This time, Pelosi has changed the status quo, ironically, in China’s favour.

This is very much like the situation in 2012 when the Japanese government announced that it was going to nationalise the Diaoyu Islands – known in Japan as the Senkakus – which China claims as part of its territory. A furious Chinese government sent vessels into the archipelago’s contiguous zone. Today, Chinese coastguard ships sail regularly there, despite Japan’s protests, to demonstrate Beijing’s sovereign claim.

Whether such exercises around Taiwan become more common in the future depends on Taipei and Washington, not Beijing. Taiwan’s authorities, led by the separatist Tsai Ing-wen, can hardly have a real change of heart, even as the cost of their opposition to reunification with the mainland continues to grow.

The real question is how this unprecedented move by the mainland might change the mentality of the Taiwanese people, especially in their next election. China still has strategic patience. After all, it is in Beijing’s interests to achieve peaceful reunification with Taiwan. But China’s patience is not infinite. According to its Anti-Secession Law, it may resort to non-peaceful means to achieve reunification if it concludes that all possibilities for peaceful reunification have been completely exhausted.

For peace to prevail in the Taiwan Strait, then, the key is to let China believe peaceful reunification is still possible. Over the years, both Beijing and Washington have maintained a policy of strategic ambiguity, albeit for different reasons. China talked about its “red line”, but lacked the military capability to enforce it. Now, thanks to the unremitting efforts of the PLA to build its strength, Beijing has been able to show for the first time that it has not only the will but the capability to protect its core interests.

Today, America’s strategic ambiguity – not clarifying explicitly if it would come to Taiwan’s defence if the island was attacked – looks more like a fig leaf to hide the reality that it might lose in a direct confrontation with the PLA in the strait, where China has all the advantages of fighting on its home turf.

Neither China nor the US wants a war, but there is no guarantee they can avoid one. For China, America’s one-China policy is already hollowed out. Although the two countries have a few confidence-building mechanisms, they are essentially a litany of technical rules aiming to avoid an accident, say, in the South China Sea.

The problem is, a clash between Chinese and US militaries in the Taiwan Strait can hardly be accidental. The Biden administration has talked about the need to establish “guardrails”, but if China concludes that such guardrails are America’s way of preventing its use of force as a last resort for reunification, they won’t be established in the first place.

On August 5, China’s Foreign Ministry made clear its displeasure at the US with a series of measures ranging from the cancellation of all defence consultations to the suspension of climate change talks. This second-wave response shows that, for Beijing, everything can come to a stop for the Taiwan issue.

Looking down the road, we will probably see a chain reaction: the United States will speed up arms sales and expand training and personnel exchanges to turn Taiwan into a “porcupine”; a more confident and capable China will then respond more forcefully. As a result, Taiwan’s room to manoeuvre will shrink further. It is hard to tell where the endgame is, but two things are sure: Taiwan cannot move away and time is on the side of mainland China.

 
This is the first high US official visit to Taiwan in 25 years, China had successfully use this visit to forever changed the status quo and started a new norm with Taiwan, in 10-15 years time, we need another such a visit as a reason to finally unify Taiwan with the mainland.
 
Pelosi, one of the US’ highest-ranking legislators and second in line to the presidency

Incorrect. The Vice President is second in line to the President, not the Speaker of the House Pelosi:


The order of succession specifies that the office passes to the vice president; if the vice presidency is simultaneously vacant, or if the vice president is also incapacitated, the powers and duties of the presidency pass to the speaker of the House of Representatives, president pro tempore of the Senate, and then Cabinet secretaries, depending on eligibility.
 

Pelosi Says US Can’t Let China Establish ‘New Normal’ on Taiwan


Too late, the new norm is already there.
 
Pelosi has not changed anything.
No legal documents were signed in Pelosi visit.

China is changing Taiwan status quo using Pelosi visit as excuse.
 

Nancy Pelosi 'accomplished absolutely nothing' in Taiwan

Sky News Australia
" Speaker of the house Pelosi who made a lifetime out of antagonizing the Chinese was make everything go backwards, she accomplished absolutely nothing. She made a lot of difficulties with people, it's like somebody from Mexico showing up in Texas says we are going to help Texas and becoming an independent again, it's just stupid, can't believe an 82 years old speaker of the house didn't have enough common sense to hold back on this."

 
Nancy hideous homecoming: She expected a hero's welcome and got the opposite. :omghaha:

 
Looks Chinese got spooked by the visit, otherwise why will tye bots start such threads.
 
China has taiwan by the balls both economically and militarily.

Pelosi just gave them an excuse to start sanctions , while also demonstrating their ability to completely blockade and starve taiwan if need be.

China also seems to be following the Russian domestic pr strategy.

For yearsa nazi terrorists were shelling and killing , and ethnically cleansing Russians. For yearsa the vast majority of the russian population was angry at the government for being too soft. Which in turn gave Putin the domestic political capital he needed to take decisive action when the time was right.

Same thing here. Many chinese are furious with the government for a supposedly “soft approach”. This now gives the government enormous political capital when the time to punish taiwans western puppets, and retake an occupied strategic chinese island from NATO
 
This time, it is obvious that Pelosi launched a provocation on the Taiwan issue, which eventually led to the change of the status quo in Taiwan.

This article in the SCMP is intended to shift the responsibility of Pelosi onto the Chinese govt, which is unfair and dishonest.

SCMP is a newspaper controlled by Indian and British editors, it is unfair. Pelosi should be responsible for all the consequences, not China.

I suggest deleting this thread.
 

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