Follow us on social

Pelosi Taiwan visit

Pelosi defends Taiwan visit amid Chinese show of force

The speaker said her trip “in no way contradicts” long-standing US policy. But experts aren’t so sure.

Asia-Pacific

After weeks of speculation, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi landed today in Taiwan, where she is expected to meet with President Tsai Ing-wen tomorrow morning.

Following through on claims that its military would “not sit idly by” during Pelosi’s trip, Beijing announced that it will conduct “live-fire exercises” in the waters around Taiwan starting on Thursday. Commentators said the move is a notable escalation, but the timing of the exercises — starting a day after the speaker is set to leave Taipei — could indicate the limits of how far China is willing to go in order to express its dissatisfaction with the trip.

Pelosi defended her controversial visit in an op-ed in the Washington Post. Among other things, Pelosi cited Beijing’s 2019 crackdown on Hong Kong and the Pentagon’s recent assessment that China is “likely preparing for a contingency to unify Taiwan with the PRC by force.”

“Our visit — one of several congressional delegations to the island — in no way contradicts the long-standing one-China policy, guided by the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, the U.S.-China Joint Communiques and the Six Assurances,” she wrote. “The United States continues to oppose unilateral efforts to change the status quo.”

Michael Swaine, an East Asia expert at the Quincy Institute, pushed back on the idea that Pelosi’s visit is simply an extension of previous U.S. policy. “Anyone who says that this visit will not provoke a major crisis with Beijing or is ‘nothing unusual’ understands neither Beijing nor the history of the relationship,” Swaine said, adding that the trip is “nothing short of reckless and stupid.”

“This situation has the potential to become an even worse version of the 1995-96 Taiwan crisis, given the fraught state of current U.S.-China relations, and China’s vastly improved military capabilities,” he added.

Pelosi also argued that her trip is meant to fight back against creeping autocracy, echoing the Biden administration’s oft-stated policy of democracy promotion. “Indeed, we take this trip at a time when the world faces a choice between autocracy and democracy,” she wrote. “As Russia wages its premeditated, illegal war against Ukraine, killing thousands of innocents — even children — it is essential that America and our allies make clear that we never give in to autocrats.”

Some observers argued that this framing, while attractive on paper, has little practical value when it comes to the intricacies of geopolitics.

“A theory that United States must ‘never give in to autocrats’ is not a strategy for handling multiple ongoing security threats in a multipolar world,” tweeted Ross Douthat, a conservative columnist for the New York Times.

In addition to the military exercises near Taiwan, China is expected to impose economic sanctions on Taipei, possibly accompanied by a series of cyber operations. Any of Beijing’s potential moves will be geared toward showing the people of Taiwan that “there are risks and consequences for relying on [the U.S.] instead of working with Beijing,” according to Ryan Hass of the Brookings Institution.

As the situation develops, there is one question on everyone’s mind: How can officials stop the crisis from getting out of hand? For Swaine, the answer is straightforward.

“Washington and Beijing must now pivot to defusing the coming crisis by activating trusted interlocutors, offering clear signals of intent and deescalation, and recognizing that both sides have contributed in various ways to this crisis—and so both sides must contribute to its resolution,” he said.

(shutterstock/ Al Teich)
Asia-Pacific
Why American war and election news coverage is so rotten
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. | Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. speaking wit… | Flickr

Why American war and election news coverage is so rotten

Media


Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed: everything else is public relations.”

keep readingShow less
Peter Thiel: 'I defer to Israel'

Peter Thiel attends the annual Allen and Co. Sun Valley Media Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, U.S., July 6, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Peter Thiel: 'I defer to Israel'

QiOSK

The trouble with doing business with Israel — or any foreign government — is you can't really say anything when they do terrible things with technology that you may or may not have sold to them, or hope to sell to them, or hope to sell in your own country.

Such was the case with Peter Thiel, co-founder of Palantir Technologies, in this recently surfaced video, talking to the Cambridge Union back in May. See him stumble and stutter and buy time when asked what he thought about the use of Artificial Intelligence by the Israeli military in a targeting program called "Lavender" — which we now know has been responsible for the deaths of an untold number of innocent Palestinians since Oct 7. (See investigation here).

keep readingShow less
Are budget boosters actually breaking the military?

Committee chairman Jack Reed (D-RI), left, looks on as co-chair Roger Wicker (R-MS) shakes hands with U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin before a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on President Biden's proposed budget request for the Department of Defense on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., April 9, 2024. REUTERS/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades

Are budget boosters actually breaking the military?

Military Industrial Complex

Now that both political parties have seemingly settled upon their respective candidates for the 2024 presidential election, we have an opportune moment to ask a rather fundamental question about our nation’s defense spending: how much is enough?

Back in May, Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, penned an op-ed in the New York Times insisting the answer was not enough at all. Wicker claimed that the nation wasn’t prepared for war — or peace, for that matter — that our ships and fighter-jet fleets were “dangerously small” and our military infrastructure “outdated.” So weak our defense establishment and so dangerous the world right now, Wicker pressed, the nation ought to “spend an additional $55 billion on the military in the 2025 fiscal year.”

keep readingShow less

Israel-Gaza Crisis

Latest

Newsletter

Subscribe now to our weekly round-up and don't miss a beat with your favorite RS contributors and reporters, as well as staff analysis, opinion, and news promoting a positive, non-partisan vision of U.S. foreign policy.