It has been clear for sometimes that there is a gravitational pull –  from the traditional West-dominated world to a more Asia-centric  geopolitics with the rise of new powers on the Asian Continent, esp.  China on the Northeast part of the Continent. 
However, the  tilt is only relative – not the end of the liberal and progressive West  with America as its leader, as many may fear. For in a closely  interrelated and interdependent global society, the East and the West  has something to offer and complement each other. 
There was  bubble of optimism in the Western capitals that the new dynamism will  lift millions of people living in extreme poverty, especially China,  hoping that the New China will become “a responsible stake holder” and  contribute peace and prosperity to the world. 
But the hope  have proven to be premature; for it has turned out to be a power trying  to use its growing influence to reshape the rules and institutions of  international system to better serve its interests by riding the tide of  rising national confidence and nationalism at home. 
As we  have seen recently, it tried to project its hard power, making its  neighboring countries wary and insecure; and many countries in the  region are casting a wary eye on it, wondering how it will evolve. 
Case  in point: its close encounter with the Japanese navy ships in a  disputed island in the 
East China Sea and harassment of U.S. naval  vessels in the South China Sea clearly show the assertive stance of  China, bordering on arrogance and provocation. 
Ominously,  the rapid build-up of its military forces (with yearly double-digit  defense budget increases for decades), and its over-reaching territorial  claim – the Paracel/Spratly Islands (disputed no-man islets also  claimed by the littoral countries) – are indications of its  ultra-nationalism and assertive geopolitics. 
The most  outrageous case is, however, its unjustifiable claim over Taiwan (the  former Japanese colony with its sovereign status remains unsettled since  the end of WW II) by stoking nationalism at home. And it makes the  Strait a flash point in the Pacific, adding an unsettling feeling in the  world. 
In the face of such a stark reality, and in a  symbiotic global society of a new century, the democratic West has no  choice but to face it, and come to terms with a world in which the power  is shared with the rising East, esp. China, and try to get the best out  of it for peace and safety of the world being plagued with a multitude  of serious problems. 
But, by the same token, accommodation  shouldn’t be taken too far; and making room for a hegemonic power should  not be confused with giving way to it; it should be firm and  justifiable; for weakness will send a wrong message to the rising power  for further actions that might lead to instability in that region. 
As  the single most important country in the world, and champion of  democracy and human rights, America should maintain its credibility with  its allies, and keep the democratic Taiwan safe and independent, and  help China to move toward a more liberal society respecting human  rights, and honor the wishes of its oppressed minority ethnic groups. 
As a prominent journalist forcefully argues: “…moral progress in  international affairs is America’s goal,”  “America should adhere to  the values it professes and not to compromise or cower in matter of  principle.” Well said! (Foreign Affairs: May/June 2010), 
Indeed,  the greatest moments of American history have been ones when it acted  out of principle and for peace and justice for the world threatened by  egregious regimes, as we had seen during the WWII and Cold War. 
Democracy,  freedom and liberty have become the universal principles and mainstream  of the international society of the Post-War II. And the nation of  Taiwan has embodied all these values and is a success story. – nemesis  of the authoritarian regime across the Taiwan Strait. 
And  the safeguard of that precious democratic island state – a lynchpin of  islands chain in the strategic western Pacific – is not only crucial to  US foreign policy; it would be a touchstone of what the democratic West  with America as its leaders believe and uphold.   (August 2010:  A.  Chang) 
Source:   I Love Taiwan Google Forum: A letter to American and freedom-loving friends in the world -  Support an independent democratic free Taiwan - 
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