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China once again shows how to use
diplomacy
By Huang Tien-lin ¶À¤ÑÅï
The use of communiques and statements to gradually restrain the US and isolate
Taiwan is a special skill that China has developed over many years. Beijing uses
these communiques and statements to build a wall designed to keep the US and
other countries from interfering in ¡§China¡¦s business.¡¨ Despite some notable
successes, realities such as military strength and international pressure have
so far stopped Beijing from laying its hands on Taiwan.
This is why the strategy to promote unification through economic means has
become China¡¦s top strategy and time is proving it to be an effective approach.
As the strategy continues to develop through its different stages, the questions
from Taiwanese about the ¡§one China¡¨ market ¡X such as the loss of economic
sovereignty and domestic job opportunities ¡X are also increasing.
Beijing clearly feels that the most effective way to calm the wave of protest
among Taiwanese is if outside observers, the US in particular, support its
strategy from the sidelines.
This request by China may not seem to have anything to do with the national
sovereignty issue and it is frequently accommodated by US officials.
Just as China hoped, phrases such as: ¡§We welcome the increasing frequency of
cross-strait exchanges¡¨ and other ¡§pretty lies¡¨ roll so easily off the tongues
of US officials visiting China that they are becoming gradually formalized.
In the China-US joint statement issued by US President Barack Obama and Chinese
President Hu Jintao (JÀAÀÜ) during Hu¡¦s recent visit to Washington, the US could
not leave out mentioning ¡§that the United States follows its one China policy
and abides by the principles of the three US-China Joint Communiques,¡¨ or
fulfilling China¡¦s hopes ¡X maybe even demands ¡X by saying that the US ¡§applauds
the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement [ECFA] between the two sides of the
Taiwan Strait and welcomes the new lines of communications developing between
them.¡¨
This is symbolic of the formalization of China¡¦s economic approach and it makes
it clear that a signature is the only thing missing from a future joint US-China
¡§Taiwan Strait economic communique.¡¨
Such a communique would do more damage to Taiwan than the three US-China joint
communiques. At the very least, the recent joint statement achieved two things:
It helped legitimize and internationalize the ¡§one China¡¨ market and the ECFA,
and it has helped the pro-China Taiwanese government consolidate its position
ahead of next year¡¦s presidential election.
Huang Tien-lin is a former national policy adviser.
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