Is Taiwan’s Independence Worth War?
by Patrick J. Buchanan Posted on August 02, 2022
https://original.antiwar.com/buchanan/2022/08/01/is-taiwans-independence-worth-war/
When a man knows he is about to be hanged in a
fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully, said Dr. Samuel Johnson.
If there is any benefit to be realized from the
collision between China and the U.S. over Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s proposed trip
to Taiwan, it is this: America needs to reflect long and hard upon what it is
we will fight China to defend in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea.
China, after all, is a nuclear-weapons nation with a
manufacturing base larger than our own, an economy equal to our own, a
population four times ours, and fleets of warships larger in number than the US
Navy.
An air-naval-and-missile war in the Western Pacific
and East Asia would be no cakewalk.
A massive barrage of anti-ship and hypersonic missiles
launched by China could cripple and conceivably sink the US carrier Ronald
Reagan now in the South China Sea. The Reagan carries a crew of thousands of
sailors almost as numerous as the US casualty lists from both Pearl Harbor and
9/11, the worst attacks in and on the US outside of such Civil War battles as
Gettysburg and Antietam.
What in East Asia or the Western Pacific would justify
such losses?
What would justify such risks?
Since President Richard Nixon’s trip to China, and
President Jimmy Carter’s abrogation of the mutual defense treaty with the
Republic of China on Taiwan in 1979, the US is not obligated to come to the
defense of Taiwan against China, which claims that island the size of Maryland
as "part of China."
Our military posture has been one of "strategic
ambiguity." We will not commit to going to war to defend Taiwan, nor will we
take the war option off the table if Taiwan is attacked.
But if the US went to war to defend Taiwan, what would
it mean?
We would be risking our own security and possible
survival to prevent from being imposed on the island of Taiwan the same regime
lately imposed on Hong Kong without any US military resistance.
If Hong Kong, a city of 7 million, can be transferred
to the custody and control of Beijing without resistance from the US, why
should it be worth a major US war with China to prevent that same fate and
future from befalling 23 million Taiwanese?
The retort comes instantly.
Allow China to take Taiwan without US resistance, and
our treaties to fight for the sovereignty, independence, and territorial
integrity of Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, Australia, and New Zealand
become suspect.
Belief in the US commitment to fighting for the nations
of East Asia and the Western Pacific would dissipate. The entire architecture
of the Asian defense against Communist China could disintegrate and collapse.
If we allowed Taiwan to be taken by China without
intervening, it is argued, the value of US commitments to fight to defend
scores of allies in Europe and Asia would visibly depreciate. US credibility
would suffer a blow as substantial as the loss of South Vietnam in 1975.
The fall of Saigon was followed by the loss of Laos
and Cambodia to communism, the overthrow of the shah, the Iranian hostage
crisis, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the strategic transfer of Ethiopia,
Angola, Mozambique, Nicaragua, and Grenada to the Soviet bloc, and the rise of
Euro-communism on the Old Continent.
Pelosi’s prospective visit to Taiwan, and the
bellicose reaction of Beijing, should raise other relevant questions.
If this should lead to a U.S.-China war, what would we
be fighting for? And what would victory look like?
Restoration of the status quo ante? Permanent
independence for Taiwan, which would require a new and permanent war guarantee
by the US and a new U.S.-Taiwan defense pact?
Would a permanent commitment fight to defend Taiwan
from China be acceptable to an American people weary of commitments and wars?
Again, why would we risk our own peace and security
for Taiwan’s freedom and independence, when we would not risk our own peace and
security for the freedom or independence of Hong Kong?
And after our victory in the Taiwan Strait, how would
we secure indefinitely the independence of that nation of 23 million from a
defeated power of 1.4 billion, bitter and bristling at its loss?
Consider: China, in this 21st century, has grown
massively, both militarily and economically, and in both real and relative
terms, at the expense of the United States.
Nor are the growth trends for China, with four times
as many people as there are Americans, favorable to the USA.
What guarantees are there that 2025 or 2030 will not
bring a more favorable balance of power for China in what is, after all, their
continent, not ours?
Unlike in the Cold War, time is not necessarily on the
side of the United States and its allies when all three of the nuclear powers
in East Asia – China, Russia, and North Korea – are hostile to the USA.
Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of Churchill, Hitler, and “The
Unnecessary War”: How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World.
To find out more about Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.
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