Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles bravely took one for the political class on Monday by volunteering to be Sarah Ferguson’s first interview in the chair at 7.30, and, as expected, he emerged missing limbs and leaving a trail of blood as Ferguson pressed him repeatedly about Australia’s position on the US position on Taiwan, and whether we endorsed President Biden’s abandonment of “strategic ambiguity” over the US response if China attacked Taiwan.
Problem is, it’s not quite as simple as Ferguson made it seem in the interview.
Biden has not, in his now-famous “that’s the commitment we made” comment, committed US military forces to the defence of Taiwan in the event of a Chinese attack. Instead, he said he was “willing to get involved militarily to defend Taiwan, if it comes to that”.
It’s lazy to assume this means a commitment of US forces. The US, for example, is militarily involved in the Ukraine. It is the major supplier of arms and munitions to the Ukrainian government, having provided over $5 billion in weapons systems, vehicles and aircraft since January 2021. It is also furnishing critical military intelligence to Ukraine, including information enabling Ukraine to target Russian generals, who have been killed in large numbers during the invasion.
Biden’s comments are consistent with the US providing extensive military and intelligence assistance to Taiwan in the event of a Chinese attack, without the commitment of US naval, air or land forces.
So what Marles was being pressed about was not a fundamental change in US policy, but a confirmation that the US would provide military support for Taiwan. That doesn’t mean he handled the interview well, but the distinction is very important. Why? Because guaranteeing that the US and Australia will commit forces to defend Taiwan gives Taiwan itself an incentive to act more riskily.
We have been here before. In the Taiwan Strait Crisis of the mid-1950s, Nationalist forces in Taiwan placed troops and built defensive structures on small islands in the Taiwan Strait. Communist Chinese coastal artillery heavily shelled the island of Quemoy and the Nationalists responded by mounting air raids against mainland China. President Eisenhower made a secret pledge to defend some islands in return for a Nationalist withdrawal.
The Nationalists used this American guarantee to dig in their forces, rebuffing US requests to withdraw, even turning down a US offer to blockade China’s coast opposite Taiwan in exchange. The US later retracted its pledge in an April 1955 meeting with Taiwan’s premier, Chiang Kai-shek.
Strategic ambiguity also deters China. In the 1995-96 Taiwan Strait Crisis, China conducted military exercises and missile tests near Taiwan, and the United States deployed two carrier battle groups to the east of Taiwan. Unsure about exactly how far the US would go, China did not deploy large numbers of air superiority fighters or warships, and its vessels did not approach or lock their radar on US ships. It gave advance warning of the location of its missile firings so that no foreign vessels would be harmed. And its missiles did not carry warheads.
Ending strategic ambiguity would be a a major change. But Biden has not abandoned long-standing US policy. His “commitment” to “get involved militarily to defend Taiwan” remains what it has been for decades. It is a form of co-belligerency: assisting the war effort of one of the belligerents against its adversary through military supplies furnished on an intergovernmental basis.
Marles was correct to “welcome President Biden’s remarks”. His so-called “freedom of navigation” patrols, as Crikey has reported before, are another matter altogether.
A mate’s daughter is married to an indigenous Taiwanese doctor. Having talked to her several times over the years it seems the Taiwanese are quite relaxed with their interaction with China and many wish the west would butt out to a certain extent. There’s much trade and reciprocal tourism, and a lot of familial interaction as well.
Every time I read about Chinese ‘expansion’ in the South China Sea (one island base), I can’t help but think of the 200 US bases circling China as documented by Pilger. I also think we should keep up our normal reconnaissance and trade routes in the area, but then not get all in a huff when the Chinese reciprocate on our coastline, as long as they stay in international waters who cares.
Agree. Tsai Ing-Wen and the US are the ones stirring the pot. War is not desired by China. They are, with the exception of political system, the same people with families crossing borders. Cicil Wars are always the worst wars as they put family members against each other. The sooner they get rid of the DPP in Taiwan the better. Both sides will accept the status quo.
It would be good to have media that had a think before they go for the big story, particularly where national security is the issue, but at least we now have an acting PM who maintains a sensible position, even though he lost a bit of bark doing so
“… the media think ….”? Now there’s novel concept.
More retro.
Many in the Fourth Estate once did, when Nation Review gave way to the milchwhite National Times.
Michael Leunig, Bob Ellis, Germaine Greer, Phillip Adams, Richard Beckett a.k.a. Sam Orr, Mungo MacCallum, John Hindle, Francis James, Patrick Cook, Morris Lurie, John Hepworth, Fred Flatow and Jenny Brown a.k.a. Zesta (now Jen Jewel Brown).
How many of the above have not been canx or deemed nonU?
Deceased excused.
Thanks, Clinton, for the historical facts about previous China-Taiwan skirmishes in a war that has not formally ended – sort of gives the lie to the justification for our war on China (that the free world needs to counter a new-found Chinese aggression and that China has changed recently.).
Australia’s Strategic Pundits should keep a close eye on Americas statements to Taiwan, as a guide to the ANZUS Treaty, and Americas so called commitment to come to our aid, in the event of invasion buy another country. Its is not assured that America will come to our defence, other than by strong words. Such a descion would, I assume, be up to the American Congress.
Mmm, not sure about that. The yanks love their little patch called pine gap.
And NW Cape et. al. But it would take a while to get there as the US would provide us with equipment whilst we provided the cannon fodder.
The bases, from heritage vintage – Pine Gap to hi-tek ULF in the NW, make the whole of this ‘largest island/smallest continent’ an unsinkable aircraft carrier for US hemispheric interests – you gotta hemisphere they’ll have an interest in it.
What I really look forward to is the increased intake of US r&r troops (coz that worked so well in the 60s) as well as storage of, unspecified, munitions at the already well established training & receiving base being in such proximity to the Port of Darwin, with the extensive facilities & anchorage leased to China.
For an unfeasibly lengthy period.
Good luck reacquiring possession, post term.
We can’t even shut down an overweening ally’s egregious target…sorry, facility – approaching its 60th birthday in 2026.
Nor inspect what goes on there – forget that Five Ayes folderol.
More like Polyphemus.
As there is no “commitment” under ANZUS for the Yanks to “come to our aide” you can be sure they will adopt their usual “America First” approach and find a way to weazel out.
The issue between the PRC and Taiwan is an internal Chinese matter and the West would be smarter to stay out of it. The Chinese Civil War was never ended and nobody should ever get involved in another country’s Civil War.
Better that Australia becomes more like Singapore and focus on business and trade to guarantee our apparant psychological need for “security”. The last time we were threatened was in the 1940’s.
Russia thinks their Ukraine adventure is a ‘civil war’ I think, so maybe we shouldn’t be involved in that either.
Neither the US nor Australia recognise Taiwan as a nation, so I find this posturing curious.
To a certain extent it is a Civil War but not completely. Ukraine does have a nasty Nazi heritage and did reneg on its Minsk Accord agreements concerning the Ethnic Russian areas of Donetsk and Luhansk. NATO refusing to even acknowledge Russia’s security concerns was just the final straw. The Ukrainian Ambassador to Germany was recently sacked due to his public support of Nazi Collaborator Stepan Bandera.
Hopefully over soon after the Russians take Donetsk. I’m reading of more and more pressure on the Comedian to pull his head in, accept reality and talk to Russia. The Wests Economic Coercion has hurt the West far more than Russia and the Non-Western world just sees the Wests position as pure hypocrisy (which it is) given the Wests invasions of dog knows how many Sovereign nations with consequent war crimes that will never be investigated.
Oh come on Lexus, it is in our DNA. Biggest Aussie Band in the World ACDC Spoilin’ for a fight. I will do the listening. The pundits can do the fighting. LOL