Title: Text: Kerry Says U.S. Not Obligated to
Defend Taiwan from Attacks (Sen. Kerry's
April 25 speech on President Bush's remarks) (1580)
Translated Title:
Author:
Source:
Date: 20010426
Text: "The
Taiwan Relations Act does not commit
the United States to come to the defense of Taiwan in
the event of an attack,"
Senator
John
Kerry (Democrat of Massachusetts) said
in an April 25 speech to the Senate.
Kerry, the highest-ranking Democrat on
the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific
Affairs, was responding to a television interview President Bush gave
earlier that day in which the president reportedly said the United
States has an obligation to defend
Taiwan if it were attacked.
President Bush made "a far-reaching comment this morning on the
American defense of Taiwan, a comment which suggests that
without any consultation with Congress, without any prior notice to the
Congress, a policy that has been in place for 30 years is now summarily
being changed with implications that I believe are serious," he said.
For nearly 30 years,
Kerry said, U.S. policy has been
"there is but one China;
Taiwan is a part of China, and the
question of Taiwan's future must be settled
peacefully."
The United States has never stated what it would do "if Beijing
attempted to use force to reunify
Taiwan with the mainland -- until
today," he said.
The United States has been deliberately vague about the circumstances
under which it would come to
Taiwan's defense, and that strategic
ambiguity should be maintained,
Kerry said.
Removing strategic ambiguity "runs the risk of decreasing Taiwan's
security rather than increasing it and of eliminating the flexibility
that we will need to determine how to respond in any given situation,"
he continued.
Kerry
said that the Taiwan Relations Act "commits us to
provide Taiwan with the necessary military
equipment to meet its legitimate self-defense needs."
The Massachusetts Democrat said he supports the arms package that the
Bush administration approved for
Taiwan, adding that it "will
significantly increase the Taiwanese defensive capacities."
Following is the text of
Senator
Kerry's April 25 speech from the
Congressional Record:
(begin text)
TAIWAN
Senate April 25, 2001
Mr. KERRY. Madam President, I want to say
a word about what President Bush said this morning with respect to Taiwan
because if what the President said is, in fact, what he means, or if it
is indeed the new policy of the United States, it has profound
implications for our country. He made a far-reaching comment this
morning on the American defense of
Taiwan, a comment which suggests that
without any consultation with Congress, without any prior notice to the
Congress, a policy that has been in place for 30 years is now summarily
being changed with implications that I believe are serious.
When asked by Charles Gibson, on ABC's "Good Morning America,"
whether the United States had an obligation to defend Taiwan if
Taiwan
were attacked by China, President Bush said:
Yes, we do, and the Chinese must understand that.
Charles Gibson then asked:
With the full force of the American military?
President Bush responded:
Whatever it took to help
Taiwan defend herself.
For almost 30 years, through Republican and Democrat administrations
alike, the cornerstone of our approach to policy toward China and Taiwan has
been the so-called "one China" policy: There is but one China; Taiwan is a
part of China, and the question of
Taiwan's future must be settled
peacefully.
This policy was laid out in the 1972 Shanghai Communique issued by
the United States and China at the end of President Nixon's historic
visit. It was reaffirmed in subsequent bilateral communiques--in 1979,
when the United States recognized the People's Republic of China and
again in 1982 on the question of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan.
A consistent tenet of this policy is the U.S. expectation that the
question of reunification of China and
Taiwan will be settled peacefully. We
have never stated what the United States would do if Beijing attempted
to use force to reunify
Taiwan with the mainland--until today.
We have not stated it in the course of Republican and Democrat
administrations alike because we understood the danger of doing so.
We have been deliberately vague about what the circumstances might be
under which we would come to
Taiwan's defense, not only to
discourage Taiwan from drawing us in by declaring
independence but also to deter a Chinese attack by keeping Beijing
guessing as to what the response might be.
Sometimes some people have talked about trying to reduce that
ambiguity and simplify it and simply say, of course we would come to
their defense. But if you do that, you invite a set of consequences that
might carry with it its own set of dangers, and you may lose control of
the capacity to make a determination about what has happened and what
the circumstances really are to which you need to respond.
President Bush's comments this morning on ``Good Morning America''
suggest that the administration has decided to abandon the so-called
strategic ambiguity. If so, the President has made a major policy change
with absolutely no consultation with the Foreign Relations Committee,
the Armed Services Committee, the Intelligence Committee, or the
leadership of the Congress.
In my view, it is a policy change that serves neither our interests
nor Taiwan's. Any situation which results
in the use of force across the
Taiwan Strait is unlikely to be simply
black and white, as clear as can be. The Tonkin Gulf is a classic
example of that.
To this day, people debate over whether or not there really was an
attack on the Maddox and the Turner Joy, and whether or not there was an
appropriate response under those circumstances.
The scenarios which could lead to the use of force and the conditions
under which the United States might respond are simply too variable to
lend themselves to a simple, clear declaration such as the declaration
made by the President this morning.
For example, if China attacked in response to what it sees as a
Taiwanese provocation, would we then respond? Apparently so, according
to President Bush. Or if
Taiwan declared independence, and
China responded militarily, would we then come to Taiwan's
defense? Have we given Taiwan a card it wanted all along,
which is the capacity to know that no matter what it does, the United
States would, in fact, be there to defend it?
The answer to that question is the reason that we have carried this
ambiguity through President Ford, President Carter, President Reagan,
President Bush, the President's father, and President Clinton.
In a subsequent interview on CNN, the President reiterated that we
maintain the "one China" policy, and he hopes Taiwan will
not declare independence. But he remained vague as to what we would do
if Taiwan did declare independence and
China attacked.
To remove the strategic ambiguity runs the risk of decreasing Taiwan's
security rather than increasing it and of eliminating the flexibility
that we will need to determine how to respond in any given situation.
Notwithstanding President Bush's efforts to clarify that the United
States does not want Taiwan to declare independence, the
new policy has the automatic impact, if it is in place, and if it is the
declaration that was made, of emboldening
Taiwan and, frankly, reducing our
control over events.
Although I have argued that we need to inject more clarity into our
engagement with China, I personally believe that on this question our
interests and Taiwan's are better served by the
ambiguity that has existed and would be better served by maintaining it.
It not only deters a Chinese attack, but it discourages Taiwan from
misreading what the United States might do.
President Bush has said that the United States has an obligation to
defend Taiwan. Certainly we want to help Taiwan
preserve its thriving democracy and robust, growing economy. I have said
previously that I think this is enough of a message to the Chinese, that
no American President could stand idly by and watch while that democracy
that has been gained is set back, by force or otherwise. Nevertheless,
we need to press both Taipei and Beijing to reinvigorate the
cross-strait dialogue, without any misinterpretations about our role.
So let us be clear: The
Taiwan Relations Act does not commit
the United States to come to the defense of Taiwan in
the event of an attack. The
Taiwan Relations Act commits us to
provide Taiwan with the necessary military
equipment to meet its legitimate self-defense needs. The arms package
that the Bush administration just approved for Taiwan, I
believe, is the right mix and the right measure, and it will
significantly increase the Taiwanese defensive capacities. I support
that package.
It may be the case that we would send American forces ultimately to
Taiwan's
defense if there were an attack, but that decision should not be made by
an American President in advance during a television interview.
A decision of this magnitude, which holds the potential for risking
the lives of American military men and women, should be made in response
to the circumstances at the moment, on the ground, in the air, and, most
importantly, in consultation with the Congress of the United States in
the due performance of its responsibilities with respect to the
engagement of our forces overseas.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs,
U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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Product Name:
WASHINGTON FILE
Document
Type: TEXT
Keywords: CHINA; TAIWAN;
KERRY; PRESIDENT BUSH 1C/1D
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Thematic Code: 1C/1D
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Language: ENGLISH
Word Count: 1580
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