After reports of McCarthy’s plans to visit Taiwan as early as within the next couple of months, Beijing warned against official interactions with the country. Now, Beijing’s threats appear to be pushing McCarthy to moderate his enthusiasm.
Pelosi’s visit was followed by a massive uptick in Chinese cyber, air force, and naval activity around the island, which amounted to a blockade exercise. Beijing launched ballistic missiles over Taiwan and canceled eight dialogues with the United States, including on military, climate, and counternarcotics issues.
Among the suspended talks were those on combating the overdose crisis, which killed 107,000 Americans in 2021. Most of those deaths can be traced to illegal fentanyl and its precursors, trafficked from China through Mexico.
Tsai’s administration reportedly provided intelligence to McCarthy about the increased threat from China that could result from his visit, which along with his office’s failure to publicly confirm his plans, suggests that he’s in the process of a flip-flop.
The Financial Times reported on March 8 that Tsai “has convinced U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to meet in California rather than Taipei to avoid an aggressive Chinese military response, as tensions run high between Beijing and Washington.”
The Financial Times cited Taiwanese officials, one of whom said, “There might be policies even more irrational than in the past emanating from Beijing. If we can try to control this together, the risks it brings for everybody can be contained better.”
One official defended Tsai’s trip to the United States, which could similarly increase the risk from Beijing, by noting that the risk must be managed, but that “pushing the status quo backward is not the way.”
If McCarthy fails to visit Taiwan, in contrast to Pelosi, the status quo would indeed be pushed backward. Beijing’s bullying strategy of military buildup, diplomatic retaliation, threats, and incrementalism would win the day.
Although McCarthy’s office claimed that his visit with Tsai in the United States wouldn’t affect his plans one way or another to visit Taipei, his failure to reaffirm those plans when asked appears to be a flip-flop.
This differs from the actions of Pelosi, who pushed forward with a visit in the teeth of military threats from Beijing, and President Joe Biden, who has said on four occasions that he would defend Taiwan militarily from an invasion by China.
We need a new strategy to roll back China and return Taiwan to the ensured independence that every democracy deserves. If Beijing succeeds, it could use Taiwan, including its computer chip industry and strong economy, to strengthen China against us.
To defend ourselves, we need to strengthen our economic and military power, and that of our allies, to the point that Taiwan is fully secure from attack. Then, perhaps Speaker McCarthy wouldn’t be so scared to visit.