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Taiwan position consistent: AIT head
MORE THAN ARMS SALES:AIT Chairman Raymond Burghardt said
the relationship between Taipei and Washington incorporated daily interaction in
numerous fields
By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff Reporter
The US has been consistent in taking no position regarding Taiwanˇ¦s political
status, which is also a ˇ§self-position,ˇ¨ American Institute in Taiwan (AIT)
Chairman Raymond Burghardt said in Taipei yesterday.
The ˇ§non-positionˇ¨ has been consistent since 1979, the year the US switched
diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing.
ˇ§We take no position on the political status of Taiwan. That may sound like a
dodge, but itˇ¦s a position. They [China] know and complain about it,ˇ¨ Burghardt
said in a speech titled ˇ§The US and Taiwan: An important economic relationshipˇ¨
at the American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei.
Burghardt said it was unproductive to spend too much time on Taiwanˇ¦s status
because ˇ§each way you go, you get yourself in more trouble, which is why the US
position has been ˇK taking no position.ˇ¨
DEMOCRACY
Stability in the Taiwan Strait will depend on open dialogue between Taipei and
Beijing, free of coercion and consistent with Taiwanˇ¦s democracy, Burghardt
said.
ˇ§To engage productively with the mainland [sic] at a pace and scope that is
politically supportable by its people, Taiwan needs to be confident in its role
in the international community, and that its future will be determined in
accordance with the wishes of its people,ˇ¨ he said.
Burghardt said Washington understands that Taiwanese expect their leaders to
maintain firm ties with the US and that the strong relationship made possible by
the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA) was essential for progress in cross-strait
relations.
ˇ§That political reality may not be universally understood, but there is no doubt
about it in Taiwan. That link is also clearly understood in Washington,ˇ¨
Burghardt said.
Asked how the AIT reconciled the US administrationˇ¦s apparent refusal to sell
F16C/D fighter aircraft to Taiwan with his argument that the TRA underlines the
strong US-Taiwan relationship, Burghardt said the sale had not been turned down.
ARMS SALES
ˇ§There has been no lag of notification of arms sales,ˇ¨ Burghardt said, referring
to the US$6.4 billion arms package notified to US Congress in January, the
US$320 million commercial sale announced in July and the US$6.5 billion package
notified to Congress in October 2008.
Burghardt said that it was incorrect to say that the US was unwilling either to
sell Taiwan F-16C/Ds or to upgrade its existing fleet of ageing F-16A/Bs.
ˇ§We havenˇ¦t announced the decision. We havenˇ¦t said yes or no, but itˇ¦s
incorrect that it has been refused. I would say that judging the commitments
with the TRA by how fast the decisions are made on the F-16C/D is a skewed
analysis,ˇ¨ he said.
Citing his experience of working with the US Pacific Command at Hawaii,
Burghardt said the TRA helps perpetuate the very special US-Taiwan relationship.
INTERACTION
ˇ§Itˇ¦s a relationship in which there is interaction every day at many fields,
including all kinds of training activities, all kinds of exchanges of
information and exchanges of intelligence. It is so much more than the sale of
arms,ˇ¨ Burghardt said.
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