US-China at a weaponized breaking point over Taiwan
Beijing says bilateral relations will disintegrate if
Washington passes the 2022 Taiwan Policy Act that aims to fortify the island’s defenses
By JEFF PAO
SEPTEMBER 16, 2022
https://asiatimes.com/2022/09/us-china-at-a-weaponized-breaking-point-over-taiwan/
China’s government has reiterated its determination to
realize national reunification with Taiwan after media reports said the United
States was considering unveiling a sanctions package against China over its
treatment of the self-governing island.
According to a Reuters report citing
sources familiar with the discussions, the Biden administration is now mulling
a series of sanctions against China to deter it from invading Taiwan while the
European Union is also being asked by Taipei to implement similarly punitive
measures.
On Wednesday (September 14), the Chinese Foreign
Ministry’s spokesperson Mao Ning said that the Taiwan question is purely
China’s internal affair and no foreign country had the right to interfere in
it.
The US Senate Foreign Relations Committee on
Wednesday approved the
Taiwan Policy Act of 2022, which aims to bolster Taiwan’s defense capabilities
with almost US$6.5 billion in new security assistance over the next four years.
The legislation, if enacted, would effectively signal that Taipei is considered
a non-NATO ally by Washington.
The bill needs
approval from the full Senate, the House of Representatives, and President Joe
Biden before it can take effect.
Chinese Ambassador to the US Qin Gang reportedly told
US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman in a meeting on August 23 that
China-US ties would disintegrate if the Taiwan Policy Act of 2022 became law.
Washington is already ramping up punitive measures
against Beijing as bilateral relations plumb new lows. The US Department of
Commerce recently unveiled a series of export bans to prevent China from
obtaining high-end semiconductors and chip-making software and equipment.
On Monday, Biden signed an executive order that urges
drug makers to reduce their reliance on foreign labs, namely in China. More
specifically, White House officials told the media that the US hoped to reduce
its dependence on China for biomedical research.
As many of these sanctions are longer-term in nature,
the Taiwanese government is calling on the US and EU to implement other
measures that will have quicker effects.
Hsiao Bi-khim, Taiwan’s Representative to the US, this
week hosted about
60 legislators from Europe, Asia, and Africa in Washington and urged them to
take action to deter China from attacking Taiwan.
On Tuesday, Hsiao hosted dozens of members of
the Inter-Parliamentary
Alliance on China (IPAC) at the Taiwan-owned Twin
Oaks in Washington. She proposed they sign a pledge to push their governments
to adopt “greater deterrence against military or other coercive” actions by
China against Taiwan, Reuters reported.
Nazak Nikakhtar, a former official of the US Commerce
Department, was quoted as saying that the possible new sanctions on China would
be far more complicated than those imposed on Russia as the US and its allies
are deeply integrated with China’s economy.
Mao Ning of China’s foreign ministry said on
Wednesday: “The root cause of the current tensions across the Taiwan Strait is
that the One China principle has been challenged and the Democratic Progressive
Party (DPP) authorities keep pursuing the ‘Taiwan-independence’ separatist
agenda.
“No country or individual should underestimate the
Chinese government and people’s strong resolve and firm will to safeguard our
sovereignty and territorial integrity and to realize national reunification.”
Mao said she had no knowledge of what Ambassador Qin
specifically said to the State Department’s Sherman about the Taiwan Policy Act
of 2022 but she believed he was stressing the importance of upholding the One
China principle to maintaining bilateral relations.
Commenting on the meeting between Hsiao and foreign
lawmakers, Mao said the DPP’s attempt to collude with external forces in
pursuit of the “Taiwan-independence” separatist agenda would only lead to a
dead end.
Chinese state media commentators are weighing in with
similar warnings. Zhang Yi, a lecturer at Qingdao University, said DPP
authorities tried to get support from the EU but Brussells would definitely not
offer help at this time while facing serious internal and external problems
related to the Russia-Ukraine war.
Zhang wrote: “Due to the conflict between Russia and
Ukraine, European countries followed the US to sanction Russia but they then
faced a serious energy crisis. They could not even guarantee the energy supply
for this winter. The energy crisis has also led to a serious inflation crisis
within the EU. Externally, the EU’s international status is declining as the
euro has fallen sharply compared with the US dollar.”
Zhang noted the EU last year imported 472 billion
euros (US$472 billion) of Chinese goods, including machinery, autos, and
consumer products, and exported 223 billion euros worth of goods to China.
A commentary published by the state-owned Defense
Times said that
although European countries are troubled by the energy crisis, it is still
possible that the EU will choose to follow the US to sanction China.
The article said if the EU really does this, it should
make sure its member states can pay the prices.
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