US Congress: A friend
to Taiwan
By Nat Bellocchi ¥Õ¼Ö±T
During the past weeks, US Congress has become more assertive on Taiwan policy.
On May 26, a record 45 senators wrote a letter to US President Barack Obama
urging him to ¡§act swiftly and provide Taiwan with the F-16C/D aircraft that are
critical to meeting our obligations pursuant to the TRA [Taiwan Relations Act]
and to preserving peace and security in the Taiwan Strait.¡¨
Yesterday, the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee was scheduled
to hold a hearing on US policy toward Taiwan, examining developments over the
past few years and looking toward the future.
This closer scrutiny is good. At pivotal moments in history, Congress has played
a key role in shaping US policy toward Taiwan and its people. In early 1979,
after the administration of then-US president Jimmy Carter had severed
diplomatic relations with the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT), Congress stepped
in and drafted the TRA, which stipulates that peace and security in the Taiwan
Strait and a peaceful resolution to Taiwan¡¦s future are key elements of US
policy.
A few years later, in the early and mid-1980s, Congress again played a key role:
This time in Taiwan¡¦s transition to democracy. Then-senators Ted Kennedy and
Claiborne Pell, together with representatives Steven Solarz and Jim Leach, held
frequent hearings and made statements urging the KMT to lift martial law and
establish a multiparty political system.
This happened in 1986 and 1987, after which Taiwan made its momentous transition
to a fully democratic political system. The first elections for all seats of the
Legislative Yuan took place in 1992 and the first presidential elections by
popular vote in 1996.
During the years of former president Lee Teng-hui (§õµn½÷), Congress yet again
played a key role, this time in convincing the administration of former US
president Bill Clinton to allow Lee to visit his alma mater, Cornell University.
As chairman of the board of the American Institute in Taiwan it was my honor to
welcome Lee to Cornell.
In the aftermath of the Cornell visit, China started to rattle its saber and
launched missiles against Taiwan, which led to the Taiwan Strait Crisis in the
spring of 1996 and necessitated the sending of two US carrier battle groups into
the area around Taiwan.
Regrettably, the Clinton administration drew the wrong conclusions from the
chain of events and started to make conciliatory gestures toward the People¡¦s
Republic of China, culminating in the infamous ¡§three noes¡¨ pronounced during
Clinton¡¦s June 1998 visit to Beijing: ¡§We have a ¡¥one China¡¦ policy that we
don¡¦t support a ¡¥one China, one Taiwan¡¦ policy or a ¡¥two Chinas¡¦ policy. We
don¡¦t support Taiwan independence, and we don¡¦t support Taiwanese membership in
international organizations that require statehood.¡¨
Congress was quick to rebut Clinton, saying that the new formulation was a major
change of policy which was not in keeping with the TRA: The Senate passed
SCR-107, affirming US commitments to Taiwan, by a vote of 92 to zero, while the
House passed a similar measure, HCR 301, by an equally overwhelming vote of 390
to 1.
Clinton did try to do some damage control by asserting that the future of Taiwan
needed to be determined ¡§with the assent of the people of Taiwan¡¨ in speeches in
early 2000, but the Clinton White House clung to the new formulations ¡X which
are perpetuated to this day ¡X and Congress got busy with other burning issues.
At the present time, the renewed interest by Congress could focus on righting
the wrongs of 1998 and insisting that its interpretation of the ¡§one China¡¨
policy only means that it recognizes one government as the government of China:
The one in Beijing, and no more than that.
However, as far as Taiwan is concerned, the US needs to demonstrate some new
vision. We need to lift the artificial restrictions which we have imposed on our
relations with the democratic nation of Taiwan, we need to make defensive
weapons such as the F-16s available according to the TRA and we need to work
more diligently to ensure that Taiwan is allowed to contribute fully to the
international community and become an equal member in all international
organizations.
Muddling through along the lines of present policy is no option: The future of a
democratic country is at stake.
Nat Bellocchi served as US ambassador to Botswana and is a former chairman of
the American Institute in Taiwan. The views expressed in this article are his
own.
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