Chinese, US defence chiefs agree to improve dialogue but stand firm on Taiwan
- Wei Fenghe and Lloyd Austin discuss concerns over the island, the war in Ukraine and North Korea
- China halted military dialogue with the US after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi went to Taipei in August
The talks ran for about 1½ hours and followed Wei and Austin’s first face-to-face meeting in Singapore in June.
That consensus was to avoid military conflict and improve crisis communications by preventing an escalation of the rivalry and confrontation between the two powers.
Austin also restated the US commitment to the one-China policy and “reaffirmed the importance of peace and stability across the [Taiwan Strait]”, according to the Pentagon statement.
“He underscored his opposition to unilateral changes to the status quo and called on [Beijing] to refrain from further destabilising actions towards Taiwan.”
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Wei told Austin that the US, not China, was to blame for the current situation and reiterated that the “Taiwan issue is the core of China’s core interests” and a “red line” that should not be crossed, the Chinese defence ministry statement said.
Beijing sees self-ruled Taiwan as part of its territory and has not ruled out the use of force to take control of the island. It saw Pelosi’s visit to Taipei as a breach of its sovereignty and responded with large-scale military drills around Taiwan, and by halting dialogue with the US on defence and climate change and cooperation on fighting the international drugs trade.
Defence ministry spokesman Senior Colonel Tan Kefei, who was at the talks, told a briefing it was Beijing’s view that Washington’s “wrong strategic judgment” had caused the suspension of dialogue.
Zhou Chenming, a researcher from the Yuan Wang military science and technology think tank in Beijing, said the Chinese defence officials’ remarks suggested growing concern over US activities in the region.
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“If McCarthy follows Pelosi to lead a group of US lawmakers to visit Taiwan again, everything Xi and Biden talked about will be a waste,” Zhou said.
“The PLA is also concerned that the US is likely to deploy its most advanced F-22 Raptors and new-generation F-35s to Okinawa [in Japan] permanently, which would definitely send the wrong message to Taiwan’s independence-leaning forces given the proximity of the two islands.”
Alfred Wu, an associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, said McCarthy was likely to make the trip to Taiwan, noting anti-Chinese sentiment in the US.
In Tuesday’s talks, Austin also raised “concerns about increasingly dangerous behaviour demonstrated” by PLA aircraft in the Indo-Pacific region that increased the risk of an accident, according to the Pentagon statement.
He said the US military would continue to fly, sail and operate wherever international law allowed.
On Saturday, Austin said China was following Russia in seeking a world where “might makes right”.