EDITORIAL: Chen
Bingde wasn¡¦t lying, entirely
People¡¦s Liberation Army (PLA) Chief of General Staff Chen Bingde (³¯¬±¼w), who
visited Washington last week, caused a bit of a stir when he claimed that China
only had a garrison deployment across from Taiwan and did not have operational
deployments, much less missiles, stationed there.
While those comments were immediately ridiculed by Taiwanese authorities and the
US Department of Defense, the fact of the matter is that Chen wasn¡¦t lying
outright ¡X the veracity of his claim depends on how one defines ¡§across from
Taiwan.¡¨
One thing that history should have taught us about negotiating with China is
that it¡¦s all about the context. If what Chen meant by ¡§across from Taiwan¡¨ was
China¡¦s Fujian Province, then technically he was telling the truth, as the
Second Artillery ¡X the unit responsible for the bulk of China¡¦s missile arsenal
¡X has maintained a garrison in Fujian for more than a decade and it is not
altogether impossible that missiles are not permanently deployed there.
As is often the case, however, the pith of the matter lies in what Chinese
officials did not say. In the present case, what Chen omitted is that elsewhere
in China, the missile threat against Taiwan continues to expand and is doing so
despite ostensibly warmer relations between Taipei and Beijing. As the range,
precision and potential destructiveness of the PLA missile arsenal grows,
¡§across from Taiwan¡¨ loses all meaning, at least up to the point where the
missiles are no longer within range.
This may sound trivial, but this would not be so if Beijing were to offer to
dismantle its missiles targeting Taiwan ¡X as the US and Taipei have long
demanded ¡X whereupon specificity, rather than vagueness, will be key. If, at
some point, Beijing were to take ¡§seriously¡¨ requests that it dismantle or pull
back its missiles, lack of specificity could allow it to get away with murder
(¡§If the missiles don¡¦t exist, how can we dismantle them?¡¨ China could rightly
ask).
The Second Artillery¡¦s Base 52, which is headquartered ¡§across from Taiwan¡¨ in
Huangshan, Anhui Province, has at least six short-range missile brigades in
Fujian, Jiangxi, Zhejiang and Guangdong provinces, all intended for a Taiwan
contingency. Several of the delivery systems are road mobile, while other
missiles and their components can be distributed to any of the six brigades
throughout Southeast China and launched from there.
The 70-year-old Chen wasn¡¦t showing signs of senility when he made those
comments in Washington, nor did he think that US officials, who have substantial
imagery intelligence proving the contrary, were fools. Rather, he was setting
the scene for what could eventually become the parameters for negotiations on
Taiwan. While we can already expect Beijing to observe commitments in the
breach, it is also known that it will exploit to the fullest whatever room to
maneuver it is given as a result of the other side¡¦s failure to request
specifics. This is China¡¦s negotiating style, as any British official who
handled talks in the 1980s ahead of Hong Kong¡¦s retrocession in 1997 would tell
us.
Chinese officials aren¡¦t being vague out of carelessness or some ideological
proclivity for imprecision; they know exactly what they are doing and they
thrive on our failure to see their game, or when we approach negotiations with a
sense of cultural superiority.
Chen knows the map of China and is well informed on the number of ballistic and
cruise missiles, as well as artillery, the PLA has targeted at Taiwan. What he
and his masters count on is our ignorance and our impatience as we rush headlong
whenever we see a possibility of signing just about any agreement with China.
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