EDITORIAL : Beijing
will not go to rehab
In recent months, a number of Chinese apologists have made the case that
ˇ§abandoningˇ¨ Taiwan to China would help improve strategic cooperation between
Washington and Beijing. In their view, Taiwan remains the last impediment to a
flourishing relationship between the two giants, and therefore yielding to
Beijingˇ¦s irredentist claims on Taiwan would somehow unlock a future of manifold
promises and stability.
In the name of journalistic neutrality, this newspaper has given space for this
argument and has allowed those who disagree with such a strategy to also make
their case. However, facts alone suffice to discredit calls for the
international community ˇX and ultimately on Taiwanese themselves ˇX to sacrifice
Taiwan for a more constructive relationship with Beijing.
One need look no further than news over the weekend that Beijing prevented the
release of a damning UN document on missile proliferation involving Iran and
North Korea, as well as the possibility that China may have acted as a
transshipment point for related prohibited technology.
In light of this development, how could any of the academics who made the case
for abandoning Taiwan still argue that once the ˇ§Taiwan problemˇ¨ is resolved,
everything will be fine? North Korea, Iran and the proliferation of dangerous
technology has nothing to do with conflict across the Taiwan Strait, and to put
it mildly, it would be naive to assume that Beijing would become a more
responsible stakeholder in a post-ˇ§Taiwan problemˇ¨ scenario.
Why Beijing would reassess the utility of Iran and North Korea (and the other
repressive regimes it props up) after unification with Taiwan is a question that
none of the experts appear to have pondered seriously. The reality is, if
Beijing no longer had to focus on a ˇ§Taiwan contingency,ˇ¨ it would be in a
position to devote even more resources to other problematic areas, such as a
border dispute with India, contested claims in the South China Sea ˇX and yes,
its support for dictatorial or nihilistic regimes, which, potentially as a
result of Chinese assistance, are now in the possession of dangerous items such
as nuclear technology and the means to deliver nuclear warheads.
A consequence of Beijingˇ¦s refusal to play by the rules is that deadly
technology has landed in the hands of crackpot regimes, such as those in Tehran
and Pyongyang. The risk then increases that this technology will be further
proliferated, ending up in the arsenal of additional countries, or perhaps more
alarmingly, in that of even less accountable non-state actors, including
terrorist organizations. As a result, global security is undermined as a result
of decades of proliferation on Chinaˇ¦s part.
Anyone who has done business with China or any country that has been party to a
bilateral or multilateral agreement with China knows by now that Beijing
observes legal commitments in the breach. If, as the China apologists would
argue, Taiwan is to be considered as mere business transaction, then one would
logically assume that in exchange for goods, China would be expected to deliver
a service, or commit to something. However, to act in the belief that China
would respect its side of the contract is one hell of a gamble and history
clearly shows us that Beijing would continue to selectively behave as per
Western expectations.
If the past is any indication, sacrificing Taiwan in the hope that this point of
contention, once eliminated, would bring China in from the cold, is beyond
academic speculation: It is sheer stupidity.
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