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Experts: Pelosi's trip was detrimental to relations

By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington | China Daily Global | Updated: 2022-08-05 11:30

The Taipei 101 skyscraper commands the urban landscape in Taipei, Taiwan. [Photo/Xinhua]

The visit of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan has ratcheted up the tension between the United States and China, and its damage to bilateral relations will not be easily fixed, experts said as they weighed in on the trip's fallout.

Disregarding China's staunch opposition, Pelosi visited the Taiwan region Tuesday night, a move that the Chinese Foreign Ministry said was "definitely not a defense and maintenance of democracy, but a provocation and violation of China's sovereignty and territorial integrity".

Relations between the top two economies are "teetering on a precipice" after the visit, which could further muddle Washington's already complicated relationship with Beijing, US sources reported Thursday.

Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a think tank in Washington, said the Biden administration was already encountering "significant" challenges and obstacles to improving relations with China.

Those relations had become strained during Donald Trump's presidency, and they had not improved much after Joe Biden became president, according to Carpenter.

"Pelosi's trip makes matters even worse," Carpenter told China Daily on Thursday.

He said the top US lawmaker's visit to Taiwan, especially her meeting with the island leader Tsai Ing-wen, has "severely" exacerbated tensions, and the damage to US-China relations will not be easily repaired.

Given the current situation, there is far too great a danger of an accident or miscalculation, and the risk of war is greater than it has been in at least two decades, he said.

For Stephen Roach, former US Federal Reserve economist, Pelosi's trip to Taiwan is like "pouring salt in an open wound for China".

"We're on a trajectory of escalating conflict, and this will certainly make matters worse. It plays well to local politics in the United States and in Taiwan, but it does not play well to geostrategic forces that are pushing these two nations apart," Roach, a Yale University senior fellow, said in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday.

"This visit, if anything, pushes that point of coming back together again further apart, rather than bringing it closer together," he said.

Douglas H. Paal, who served as the director of the American Institute in Taiwan from 2002 to 2006, said the consequences of Pelosi's visit will be damaging for restoration of effective diplomacy, which is needed to prevent calamitous conflict.

Jon Taylor, chair of the political science and geography department at the University of Texas-San Antonio, also said Pelosi's visit has chilled relations more.

"She might think that she's standing on principle by visiting Taiwan, but if China's reaction during the past day is any indication, her short trip will help to keep China-US relations in the freezer for the foreseeable future," he said.

"Pelosi's trip was counterproductive, and China is right to be angry over the visit," Taylor told China Daily.

The Chinese military on Thursday conducted joint combat exercises and training around the Taiwan island on an "unprecedented scale", firing new models of rockets that hit targets with precision in the eastern part of the Taiwan Straits, according to Chinese media reports.

Taylor said it would go a long way if bilateral relations could be pursued in the spirit of respectful, diplomatic engagement. That would require that the US place people into areas of responsibility who possess a nuanced understanding of the relationship.

"I want to believe that both sides will choose a rational approach to calm things down. Our economies are too deeply intertwined for a breakup," he said. "Neither country can afford for the world's most important bilateral relationship to remain mired in animosity right now."

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