The risk of war over Taiwan is at its highest since the 1996 cross-strait missile crisis, a mainland foreign relations expert has warned.
Shi Yinhong, professor of international relations at Beijing’s Renmin University, noted how tensions in the Taiwan Strait have steadily escalated amid growing US support for Taiwan. Beijing sees the self-ruled island as a breakaway province and has made reunification a much more pressing goal in recent years.
This goal — which Beijing aims to achieve within a decade — could mean a massive use of force, or the threat of a massive use of force, Shi told an international relations forum in Beijing on Thursday (Jan 20).
Warning that confrontations over Taiwan might lead to armed conflict or even a war in the strait, Shi said a serious and careful assessment of the situation was more necessary now than at any time in the past 25 years, in a reference to the Taiwan Strait missile crisis of 1996.
In 1996, as Taiwan was preparing to hold its first direct presidential election, Beijing held a series of military exercises and fired missiles in the waters surrounding the island, prompting the US to deploy carrier strike groups to international waters near it.
"The Chinese government is unlikely to give the United States and Taiwan an impression that
All parties must assess the situation and be prepared in case there is war over Taiwan, he said.
This came as former Singapore prime minister Goh Chok Tong said that the US and China should negotiate "guard rails" and create a direct and open communication channel so its leaders could contact each other quickly to avert conflict over Taiwan.
"My biggest concern is whether Taiwan becomes a casus belli," Goh told the third Hong Kong Forum on US-China Relations via video link on Wednesday.
"I do not think the mainland wants to invade Taiwan and reunify it through force. However, if it sees no prospect for peaceful reunification, it may believe it has no choice."
Goh said China and the US should set up a "red telephone" similar to the communication lines used by US and Soviet Union leaders in 1962, when the two powers came close to a nuclear war in what became known as the Cuban missile crisis.
Concerns over a possible war in the strait have grown since last year, with a top US commander warning that the People’s Liberation Army could invade Taiwan within six years, and the Taiwanese defence minister saying cross-strait tensions were at their worst level in 40 years as he warned of the risks of an accidental strike.
Cui Hongjian, a senior research fellow at the China Institute of International Studies in Beijing, said the situation was becoming ever more serious, with Lithuania having taken the lead to confront Beijing over Taiwan, and others in Europe following suit.
"It is difficult to avoid the trend of Taiwan issues becoming more long-term and explicit issues in Europe," Cui said. This was due to political changes in Europe but was also related to the overall competition between China and the US, which uses its alliance system to contain Beijing, he said.
Jia Qingguo, a professor of international studies at Peking University, said China and the US were almost on the brink of military conflict over Taiwan.
In the short term, the room for any improvement in US-China relations was very limited, he said, while the likelihood of a deterioration was high, and the possibility of a turn towards cooperation unlikely.
However, in the medium and long term, stability and a strengthening of cooperation in some areas could be expected, given the common interests in bilateral and multilateral issues.
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This article was first published in Asia One . All contents and images are copyright to their respective owners and sources.
Khmer Daily
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