May 17, 2021

Taiwan, frontline state in Cold War II

By Alan W. Dowd
Landing Zone
Taiwan, frontline state in Cold War II
Taiwan, frontline state in Cold War II

The free world must show that it’s able and willing to defend a small patch of free government.

A growing number of diplomats, historians and researchers have concluded that the United States and the People鈥檚 Republic of China (PRC) are in the early phases of a new cold war.

Henry Kissinger, for example, says the two powers are in 鈥渢he foothills of a cold war.鈥 Historian Niall Ferguson  it 鈥淐old War II,鈥 noting, 鈥淭here was a first world war. Then there was a second. They were not identical. But they were sufficiently similar for no one to argue about the nomenclature. Similarly, there was Cold War I 鈥 And now we are in Cold War II. This new Cold War is not the same as Cold War I. But it is sufficiently similar to deserve the name.鈥 

If this is indeed Cold War II, then Taiwan is this generation鈥檚 West Berlin: a tiny island of freedom under constant, immediate threat from a communist behemoth. Now, as during Cold War I, it鈥檚 imperative that the free world defend this patch of free government. Now, as during Cold War I, showing readiness and willingness to repel an attack will go a long way toward preventing such an attack. 

Saber-rattling 

Before getting into those issues of military readiness and political will, it鈥檚 important to understand what Beijing is doing to erode Taiwan鈥檚 sovereign status, undermine the peaceful status quo, endanger America鈥檚 allies, and thus threaten America鈥檚 security. In 2015, Xi Jinping鈥檚 regime issued a military strategy describing 鈥渢he Taiwan issue鈥 as key to China鈥檚 鈥渞eunification鈥 and declaring 鈥渞eunification 鈥 an inevitable trend in the course of national rejuvenation.鈥 In 2019, Xi declared that democratic Taiwan 鈥渕ust and will be鈥 absorbed by the communist mainland, demanded that Taiwan unify with the mainland under a 鈥渙ne country, two systems鈥 approach, and warned, 鈥淲e make no promise to abandon the use of force.鈥 

These are troubling words. First, Taiwan has never been ruled by the PRC, so 鈥渞eunification鈥 is inaccurate. In a very real sense, a Taiwanese nation 鈥 culturally, politically, economically distinct from the PRC 鈥 has been built over the past 70 years. That explains why 67 percent of Taiwan鈥檚 population identifies as Taiwanese, only 2.4 percent identifies as Chinese, and more than eight in 10 Taiwanese oppose Beijing鈥檚 idea of unification. Indeed, while Xi considers Taiwan the PRC鈥檚 34th province, President Tsai Ing-wen of Taiwan calls the island democracy 鈥渁 sovereign independent country.鈥  If Xi鈥檚 words are worrisome, his actions are downright dangerous.   

According to the Pentagon鈥檚 , the PRC has positioned 412,000 ground troops, six amphibious brigades, five air assault brigades, five airborne brigades, 257 warships, 250 bombers and 600 fighter-jets based in the Taiwan region. The PRC has some  opposite Taiwan, up from 200 in 2000.  
 
Xi is rattling sabers by ordering  around the island and across the median line; conducting  around the island; approving large-scale training exercises using  of Taiwan鈥檚 presidential complex, Taichung Airport and foreign ministry; greenlighting interference in Taiwan鈥檚 ; conducting  on the east and west sides of Taiwan; and deploying  around Taiwan. Beijing  in April that such deployments will become routine in order 鈥渢o safeguard national sovereignty.鈥 
 
Xi鈥檚 words and actions point toward a move against Taiwan. U.S. military leaders based in the region  that Beijing could strike Taiwan 鈥渨ithin the next six years.鈥

Playbook

Washington can help prevent that by following the playbook that kept Cold War I from turning hot: clarity of commitment plus deterrent strength. In short, it鈥檚 time to shift from the 鈥渟trategic ambiguity鈥 that characterized the past 40 years 鈥 best captured by the lawyerly vagueness of the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA) 鈥 to strategic clarity. Toward that end, the Obama administration approved arms packages for Taiwan totaling more than . In 2015, after a PRC bomber menaced Taiwan, two Marine Corps F-18s landed on the island -- the first such landing in 30 years 鈥 citing what the Pentagon called 鈥渁 mechanical issue.鈥 In truth, Washington was reminding Beijing that Taiwan is not alone.  

Similarly, after PRC warships maneuvered near Taiwan in 2018, the Trump administration authorized a Navy vessel to refuel in Taiwan. Another Navy vessel visited in 2019. In addition, President Donald Trump dispatched a cabinet official to Taiwan (the highest-level government contact since 1979), spoke with Taiwan鈥檚 president by phone, increased freedom of navigation operations (FONOPs) through the Taiwan Strait, and approved some  in defensive weapons for Taiwan. 

 Taiwan 鈥渁 critical economic and security partner,鈥 President Biden invited Taiwan鈥檚 top diplomat to his . Biden sent a U.S. ambassador to  (the first sitting U.S. ambassador to visit the island democracy since 1979). Secretary of State Antony Blinken has warned that an attack on Taiwan would be 鈥渁 grievous mistake,鈥 and the Pentagon recently expressed 鈥渞ock solid鈥 support for Taiwan.

Underscoring that support, the Biden administration 鈥 in its first 75 days in office 鈥 sent warships through the  on four separate occasions, deployed a package of B-52 bombers to Guam, created a joint U.S.-Taiwan Coast Guard working group, steamed two aircraft carrier strike groups into the South China Sea for combined maneuvers, and followed that with expeditionary strike-force operations in the South China Sea involving a third carrier strike group and an amphibious ready group. Freedo of navigation operations throughout the South China Sea continue apace. And the Biden administration is  moving ahead with a Trump administration proposal to reactivate the First Fleet to augment the Seventh Fleet. 

Looking ahead, Washington should provide defensive weapons, as American Legion  explain, 鈥渙f such quality and in such quantities so as to enable the government of the Republic of China (Taiwan) to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability.鈥 These would include anti-ship, anti-aircraft and anti-missile systems to deter invasion, non-digital communications systems to prepare for cybersiege, rapid-deploy mines to hinder amphibious attack, and vertical-takeoff F-35Bs to overcome PRC attacks on airfields. 鈥淪uch aid is not an act of war, even if a dictator should unilaterally proclaim it so to be,鈥 President Franklin Roosevelt observed, recognizing that deterring aggression does not constitute aggression.  
 
Enhanced and tailored defensive assets would partially fill in the 鈥渄eterrent鈥 box of the playbook. Washington also needs to invest more in America鈥檚 own deterrent strength. America鈥檚 deterrent was credible for much of Cold War I 鈥 but not the early phases, when Moscow greenlighted the invasion of South Korea. We may be facing a similar situation today in Taiwan.

Recently, near the end of his tenure commanding U.S. Army-Pacific, Gen. Robert Brown  that his PLA counterparts 鈥渄on鈥檛 fear us anymore.鈥 This is regrettable but understandable. Deterrence, after all, only works if an adversary fears the consequences of aggression and believes the costs of aggression to be greater than any potential benefits of aggression.

Owing to the mismatch between America鈥檚 expanding military commitments and  military investments, the calculus is rapidly shifting in Beijing. Today鈥檚 defense budget is , less than half what it was for most of Cold War I. Thus, America鈥檚 navy, which plays the lead role in deterrence in a maritime domain like Taiwan鈥檚 neighborhood, deploys just 298 ships. And those ships are dispersed around the world, while China鈥檚 350 warships are concentrated in its neighborhood. At the height of the Reagan rebuild, by comparison, America鈥檚 navy boasted 594 ships. 

Today鈥檚 Navy may be more ambidextrous than yesterday鈥檚, but deterrence is usually about presence. And it lacks the ships to present all the places it鈥檚 needed. 鈥淔or us to meet what combatant commanders request,鈥 according to former Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan鈥疓reenert, 鈥渨e need a Navy of 450 ships.鈥   

As for the 鈥渃larity鈥 box, Washington could sharpen its position on Taiwan by elevating Taiwan鈥檚 international status. For example, given that no country has done as well as Taiwan  while , America and the rest of the free world can learn a lot from Taiwan鈥檚 pandemic preparedness and response efforts. 

Toward that end, Washington could call for creation in Taipei of an international early-warning center for pandemics 鈥 and then, in a kind of deterrent diplomacy, dispatch personnel from the Centers for Disease Control, Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency, National Center for Medical Intelligence and Military Infectious Diseases Research Program to Taipei to learn from Taiwan. Other countries would follow America鈥檚 lead. Not only would this enhance the free world鈥檚 ability to handle the next virus, it would enhance Taiwan's sovereign status.  

Further up the ladder, Washington will likely need to contemplate replacing the TRA with something clearer and firmer. One such option is the (TIPA), which has been introduced in Congress. The TIPA would authorize the use of force 鈥渢o secure and protect Taiwan against 鈥 direct armed attack鈥 by the PRC. There鈥檚 risk in this, to be sure. But the history leading up to World War I shows there鈥檚 greater risk in leaving defense guarantees opaque. And the history leading up to World War II 鈥 which shaped Cold War I 鈥 shows that making the necessary commitments and investments to deter war and defend allied territory is far less costly than waging war and liberating allied territory. 

Defended 

Tsai reminds us that Taiwan, like West Berlin during Cold War I, sits 鈥渙n the front lines of freedom and democracy. American Legion resolutions rightly  Taiwan as 鈥渁 long-time friend鈥 and 鈥渄emocratic ally.鈥 In other words, America鈥檚 commitment to Taiwan is a reflection of America鈥檚 ideals. Helping Taiwan defend itself is also in America鈥檚 interests; even a brief war between Taiwan and the PRC would directly affect America鈥檚 third- and ninth-largest trading partners. And failing to come to the defense of Taiwan would create a deep chasm of doubt among treaty allies across the region: Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand. Beijing would exploit those doubts to great effect. Indeed, a conquest of Taiwan would give Xi reason to believe he can move against other places with impunity. Recall that China has territorial disputes with Japan, the Philippines, South Korea and other U.S. partners; that Xi has already broken  related to Hong Kong鈥檚 independence; and that Beijing has flouted international  rejecting its claims in the South China Sea.  
 
Yes, Taiwan is remote. Yes, it鈥檚 in the crosshairs of a military juggernaut. Yes, that juggernaut has conventional military advantages. But each of these factors held in West Berlin 鈥 and yet the free world held onto West Berlin, which President John Kennedy called 鈥渁 defended island of freedom.鈥 It remained free only because it was defended.  

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