A leading national security expert is calling for a major change in US policy toward Taiwan.
“It is time for US clarity on Taiwan — strategic ambiguity has run its  course,” said Joseph Bosco, a former China desk specialist at the  Pentagon.
In a Taiwan analysis printed by the Los Angeles Times, he  added: “Neither Beijing nor Washington wants war, but as long as China believes  the US will ultimately abandon democratic Taiwan to avoid it, the danger of  conflict increases.”
Now working as a national security consultant,  Bosco, who specialized in China-Taiwan-US relations at Georgetown’s School of  Foreign Service, argued that current policies are “a formula for catastrophic  mutual miscalculation.”
“Washington should declare that we would defend  democratic Taiwan against any Chinese attack or coercion and that we also  welcome Taiwan’s participation in international organizations,” he  said.
And Bosco urged US President Barack Obama to invite President Ma  Ying-jeou (馬英九) to Honolulu for the APEC summit in November next  year.
“In return,” he said, “Taiwan must forgo formal independence for  now, even though that result is ultimately consistent with American  values.”
Bosco said that in exchange for China renouncing the use of  force against Taiwan, Washington should pledge not to recognize formal Taiwan  statehood and discourage others from doing so, while also insisting that if  China does use force it will lead to instant recognition of an independent  Taiwan.
The analysis was written in response to the recently released  Pentagon assessment of China’s continuing military buildup and its potential to  enforce territorial claims on Taiwan and in the South China  Sea.
According to Bosco, the anti-Western hostility and paranoia of  former Chinese leader Mao Zedong’s (毛澤東) years have resurfaced in Beijing, but  now, he says, the sense of grievance and resentment is “backed by the massive  economic and military power the West helped China build.”
The Obama  administration, Bosco said, worries that Beijing is defining its claims in the  South China Sea as “core interests” on a par with Taiwan and Tibet, and if  unchallenged could lead to “dangerous Chinese adventurism.”
“Yet on the  Taiwan flashpoint, Obama’s team has unwisely perpetuated the policy of strategic  ambiguity followed by every administration since [former US president] Richard  Nixon’s,” Bosco added.
“Under that policy, Washington periodically sells  Taipei weapons for minimal self-defense against an overwhelming Chinese attack.  But Washington does not commit the United States to intervene, or not intervene.  We rely on American unpredictability to stay Beijing’s hand,” he said.
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/08/22



 
 












 
		