Www.brookings.edu Untying the Knot Richard C. Bush Brookings Institution Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 United States Policy on Taiwan Office of Taiwan Coordination U.S. Department of State Foreign Service Institute, March 17, 2009 Add photo depicting the.
Advertisements

STRENGTHENING FINANCING FOR DEVELOPMENT: PROPOSALS FROM THE PRIVATE SECTOR Compiled by the UN-Sanctioned Business Interlocutors to the International Conference.
Chapter 1 Principles of Government
International Relations Theory
INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY GOVERNANCE PROJECT RESEARCH PARTNERSHIP.
NIHE: Opportunities and Challenges of Reform Donald Hoodless Chairman Northern Ireland Housing Executive.
Trade Negotiating Concepts & Good Practices Trade Negotiating Concepts & Good Practices Geza Feketekuty.
Prospects for Cross-Strait Relations Week 11. Week 11: Teaching Outline Economic and cultural ties Continuing Conciliation Without Formal Political Agreement?
Principles of Government
Last Topic - Separation of Powers
The Cost of Fiscal Disunion in Europe and the New Model of Fiscal Federalism by Guido Montani University of Pavia, Italy “The peculiar federal problem.
PRESIDENT PUTIN’S FEDERAL REFORMS Since 2000 – from ‘centered controlled federalism’ to ‘quasi federalism’(?) … the danger of the country disintegration.
Collaborative Skills Enhancement South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project Session 1 Wednesday, January 21, 2004.
Kant and Perpetual Peace 24 September What does “perpetual peace” mean?
Eastern Region Presentation
US-Taiwan-China Relations in a New Era National Press Foundation October 14, Drew Thompson Director of China Studies and Starr Senior Fellow The.
Political Interaction across the Taiwan Strait Week 6.
 Taiwan formally calls itself the Republic of China (ROC), tracing its political lineage to the ROC set up in 1912 after the revolution that started.
Japan and Taiwan Pushing the Limits Brian Bridges.
Principles of Government
Principles of Government
Political Science BALLB Ist sem UNIT - 1
From Contract to Relationship: The Employment Relations Approach of New Zealand James Wilson, Chief of the Employment Relations Authority Craig Smith Chief.
Germany and the European Union
People and Government. Principles of Government  Population, the most obvious essential feature of a state. ◦ State: a political community that occupies.
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1
Objectives Define government and the basic powers every government holds. Describe the four defining characteristics of a state. Identify four theories.
What is government? Every person must write a word or phrase on the board.
Principles of Government Magruder Chapter One. Government and the State Section One.
Unit 1 Basic Political Theory and Historical Roots.
THE UNITED NATIONS OUR ONLY HOPE FOR PEACE? WHAT IS THE UNITED NATIONS? The United Nations officially came into existence on October 24, 1945 with 51.
Cherepnina Elena Tyumen State University 2005 year.
Principles of Government. WHAT IS GOVERNMENT? The institution and processes through which public policies are made for a society Government makes and.
TERMS AND IDEAS GOVERNMENT - institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies. PUBLIC POLICIES- things the government decides.
Principles of Government
Political and Economic Systems
Citizenship Issues C.I.4 U.S. Domestic and Foreign Policy Students are able to: 4.2 Describe U.S. foreign policy. Students may indicate this by: – Defining.
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1. Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc.Slide 2 Chapter 1, Section 1 Why do we Need Government? Promote Inalienable.
LIBERAL-PLURALISM Key features: societal power is decentralized, widely shared, diffuse and fragmented, deriving from many sources, i.e. power pie divided.
Chapter 2: Comparing Political Systems By: Alyssa Wright Ashley Smith Matthew Jacob.
How do we define the underlying principles of American government? LESSON 1 Principles of Government.
Introduction Negotiation is something that everyone does, almost daily 1-1.
Chapter 1 The Comparative Study of Politics Comparative Politics: Structures and Choices 2e By Lowell Barrington.
Political Concepts An Introduction To Political Theory and Statehood.
Aim: How do we examine the principles of Government and the State?
American Government Politics in Action. Government- The institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies. Government is the.
1 Demystifying Court and Case Management Part 2 – Using US models and international standards within the development context Heike Gramckow, Ph.D. Deputy.
What does it mean to impeach a president
A “Greater China”? between China’s mainland, Hong Kong, and Taiwan.
Chapter 18: Foreign Policy and National Defense  Foreign policy — especially policy concerning wars or crises — has traditionally been different from.
FEDERALISM. Key Characteristics of federalism Rule of Law Democracy Subsidiarity Freedom Equality.
The Supreme Court. The Supreme Court stands at the top of the American legal system. Article III of the Constitution created the Supreme Court as one.
FACULTY OF LAW, UNIVERSITY OF OSLO The principle of integration and its dilemmas Hans Chr. Bugge Professor of Environmental Law University of Oslo.
PP 620: Public Policy and Health Administration Unit One Seminar Kris R. Foote, J.D., M.P.A., M.S.W. Kaplan University.
Chapter 1: Principles of the Government Section I: Government and the State Section II: Forms of Government Section III: Basic Concepts of Democracy.
0 Cross-Strait Bilateral Investment Protection and Promotion Agreement Investment Commission, MOEA Executive Secretary Mr. Fan Liang-Tung.
POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS
Principles and Purpose of American Government
Principles/Articles.
Chapter four The subjects of public international law
Principles of Government
Creation of the Constitution
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1
What does Popular Sovereignty mean?
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1
MODULE ON FACILITATION
Government and Politics
Presentation transcript:

Untying the Knot Richard C. Bush Brookings Institution Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies

The Taiwan Strait Paradox Shared Economic Interests Extensive Private Interchange Common Ethnic and Cultural Heritage BUT Political Hostility Military Build-up

The PRC Hypothesis It’s Lee and Chen, stupid! BUT In office, Lee and Chen have been careful not to rule out unification totally. They certainly opposed one country, two systems (1C2S). They insisted that the ROC or Taiwan was an independent sovereign state.

The PRC Hypothesis Both have insisted Beijing should acknowledge that Taipei is essentially equivalent, that Taiwan have an international role, and that the PRC renounce the use of force. In addition, both have been frustrated that Beijing has rejected Taipei’s views outright and ignored its moderation.

The PRC Hypothesis To be sure, Lee and Chen did act provocatively at times. They also took initiatives that were motivated by domestic politics. Yet Beijing incorrectly read their opposition to 1C2S as a rejection of unification. For Lee and Chen, however, how Taiwan might be a part of China has governed whether it should be a part of China.

The Taiwan Strait Knot (TSK) The TSK is a knot formed by two twisted strands of rope. Each strand represents a core substantive issue: –The first issue is sovereignty –The second is security The strands are twisted because they are interrelated.

TSK: Sovereignty Stephen Krasner tells us that sovereignty can take four forms: –Domestic sovereignty; –Westphalian sovereignty; –International legal sovereignty; and –Interdependence sovereignty. The first three, particularly Westphalian sovereignty, are analytically important.

TSK: Sovereignty Many observers focus only on international sovereignty, on whether the ROC is a full member of the international community. But when it comes to sovereignty, for cross-Strait relations, it’s Westphalian sovereignty that matters more.

TSK: Sovereignty Westphalian Sovereignty: –A government’s absolute right to rule within the territory under its jurisdiction unless it chooses to vest a higher authority with its powers. –The key is non-subordination. –This is the concept that underlies the stance that the ROC is an independent, sovereign state.

TSK: Sovereignty This claim is fundamentally antithetical to the 1C2S approach. Under 1C2S: –Central government is the exclusive sovereign; –The Special Administrative Region (SAR) is subordinate to central government and acts internationally only at its discretion; and –The SAR has autonomy and nothing more. In practice, Beijing’s system for Hong Kong limits political outcomes to what it can tolerate.

TSK: Security Taiwan and the PRC are locked in a security dilemma. –Each fears the intentions of the other. –Each builds up its capabilities to hedge against pre-emption. –Each reads the other’s hedging as hostile. –Mistrusting the other and fearing exploitation, each is afraid to make a concession.

TSK: Security Yet the cross-Strait security dilemma is special. –What China fears is not military action by Taiwan but a political initiative that will irreversibly change the status quo and close the door on unification. –In addition, Taiwan must live with the fear of abandonment by its de facto ally, the United States.

TSK: Security The essence of the security dilemma is that each side understands the value of peace but mistrusts the other too much to pay the price to gain it. –Each worries that if it makes a concession, the other side will exploit its good will. –Beijing’s demand that Chen Shui-bian accept the 1-China principle is an example.

Tightening the Knot Several factors in the dispute –Domestic politics: In Taiwan: –Identity and the fear of outsiders –The DPP’s history as opposition party –Taiwan’s unconsolidated democracy In China: –Leadership politics –Nationalism

Tightening the Knot Decision-making systems: –Misperception –Miscalculation The Leverage Game: –The International System –The United Front The U.S. Factor –Dual Influence and Dual Deterrence

Untying the Knot If the knot is to by untied, three things are required: –Ways to reconcile substantive differences over sovereignty and security, which are linked. –Ways to mute the effect of the aggravating factors. –A skillful integration of substance and process.

Untying the Knot: Substance Concerning the sovereignty issue, is there a way for Beijing to get what it wants (unification) and for Taipei to get what it wants to preserve (sovereignty)? There are models of political union that are composed of sovereign entities: confederation, federation, etc.

Untying the Knot: Substance Such unions are difficult to construct and hard to preserve, but sharing sovereignty is possible. Both the KMT and President Chen have expressed a positive attitude towards such unions. It is the PRC that is opposed, for some important reasons.

Untying the Knot: Substance There have been some ideas on the security side: –Agreement to end the state of hostilities –Allowing Taiwan to keep its armed forces –Jiang Zemin’s missile-withdrawal idea –The interim-agreement proposal –CBMs Yet all of these founder because of mutual mistrust.

Untying the Knot: Process Even if theoretically there is common ground, mistrust makes it difficult for the two sides to move there. Perhaps it is necessary to use process to drive substance, instead of using substantive concessions to begin process.

Untying the Knot: Process Setting preconditions for dialogue, while understandable, only compounds mistrust: –One China Principle –1992 consensus Recall that Beijing set a precondition after Lee Teng-hui’s U.S. trip but then ignored it for Koo Chen-fu’s 1998 visit.

Untying the Knot: Process Instead, the two sides should establish a private, authoritative channel to: –Reduce mistrust; –Build mutual understanding and assurance; and –Explore methods of starting public dialogue. This sort of channel existed before.

Untying the Knot: Process As trust is built and as dialogue resumes, a mutually agreed set of principles could create a framework for discussions. This would: –Set limits; –Define areas of fundamental consensus; and –Establish an agenda for future action. In process terms, this approach is different than an interim agreement.

Untying the Knot: Process How to deal with the aggravating factors? –For the leverage game: diplomatic truce and an end to PRC intervention in Taiwan politics. –To manage the Taiwan politics of cross- Strait relations, there needs to be a mechanism of transparency and consensus building.

Untying the Knot: Process What role for the United States? Different forms of “intermediation”: –Messenger –Intellectual facilitator –Process facilitation –Mediation –Serving as a guarantor

Untying the Knot: Process I believe that the lower end of this scale is more appropriate. On mediation, –Do both sides trust Washington? –Would both sides trust the U.S. throughout? –Would the Congress support the Executive Branch? –How to deal with the fact that the United States is a party to the dispute?

The Near Term If solving the dispute is not possible, stabilization is the next best thing. A window of opportunity has opened. Beijing need not fear constitutional change in Taiwan. Communication and trust-building is as important for stabilization as it is for solution.

The Near Term Preconditions are an obstacle to communication and trust-building. The U.S. approach of dual deterrence also contributes to stabilization.

A Final Word The group that has the most to lose from mismanagement of the Taiwan issue is the people of the island. They have finally gained the power to make choices about their future. The U.S. will play a role, but it is the people of Taiwan who will have to choose. To make good choices, Taiwan must strengthen itself.