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US politics seen behind Pelosi trip

Domestic electoral calculations had lot to do with top American lawmaker’s visit to Taiwan, observers say

By HENG WEILI Minlu Zhang in New York contributed to this story.

United States House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s trip to Taiwan was driven by both US domestic politics and a history of foreign meddling, observers said of the contentious visit.

David Stockman, a former US congressman and budget director during the Reagan administration in the 1980s, said the visit had “everything to do with US domestic politics and nothing whatsoever to do with the safety, security and liberty of the American homeland”.

“At least now the stupidity of the whole affair has been made starkly evident by Nancy Pelosi’s utterly reckless election-season gambit. Her trip had no other purpose than to bolster the (Democrats’) flagging prospects come November,” he wrote in a piece on antiwar.com website on Aug 3.

Stockman said that without Washington’s “constant diplomatic support and weapons sales, leaders of Taiwan would have eventually recognized the handwriting on the wall and made some kind of affiliation arrangements with Beijing”.

Washington policymakers did not “lose” China in 1949 “because it was never theirs to lose. Nor did America’s security ever depend upon the decades of domestic political machinations over the status of the Chinese province of Taiwan”, he wrote.

David Sacks, a Council on Foreign Relations research fellow, told Yahoo Finance Live of Pelosi’s visit: “I think a lot of it is trying to burnish her legacy. You know, if the polling that we see is correct, she won’t remain the speaker after the midterm elections.”

Australian journalist Caitlin Johnstone decried last week what she saw as US bipartisan support for Pelosi’s trip.

“In reality, though Democrats tend to lean more toward supporting aggression against Russia while Republicans lean more toward favoring aggression against China, they’re both just manufacturing consent for the same unipolarist agenda of total global domination,” Johnstone wrote on her website.

“They pretend to be on opposing sides, but if you ignore the narratives and just look at the actions, what you see is a steadily escalating ‘great power competition’ designed to facilitate the US empire’s longstanding agenda of securing unipolar planetary hegemony at all costs.”

Underlining that point, 26 Republican senators sent a letter supporting the excursion by Pelosi, a Democrat.

“We support Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi’s trip to Taiwan. For decades, members of the United States Congress, including previous speakers of the House, have traveled to Taiwan,” said the statement, which was signed by Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.

Johnstone added, “The drums of war are growing louder and louder, and the psychopaths who feed off it are growing more and more aroused.”

Former US ambassador to China Max Baucus told CNN: “My view, frankly, is that she should not have gone. The goal of US foreign policy is to reduce tensions with China, not increase tensions. Her visit clearly is increasing tensions.”

Tom Watkins, president and CEO of TDW and Associates, a business and education consulting firm in the US, told China Daily that after Pelosi’s Taiwan trip, “the world nervously awaits what China’s rolling response will entail”.

“Her visit was a clear strategic provocation,” he said, adding that few people believe her departure from Taiwan marks the end of a “burgeoning crisis” between China and the US, but rather the beginning.

“The fear that must be in the front of all rational minds is that the fastmoving situation could lead to an accidental encounter that could spin out of control. With the tension and low trust between the US and China, the potential of a miscommunication or ‘accident’ could lead to irreversible consequences,” Watkins said.

On Aug 3, the United Nations reiterated its support for the one-China principle, noting that it follows UN General Assembly Resolution 2758 of 1971.

“Our position is very clear. We abide by General Assembly resolutions, by the one-China policy, and that is the orientation that we have in everything we do,” UN SecretaryGeneral Antonio Guterres said.

On Oct 25, 1971, the UN General Assembly passed the resolution recognizing the government of the People’s Republic of China as the only lawful representative of China to the UN.

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2022-08-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://chinadaily.pressreader.com/article/281668258754475

China Daily