Zürcher Nachrichten - As Pelosi eyes Taiwan trip, US anxious on China red lines

EUR -
AED 4.258168
AFN 81.74056
ALL 99.006564
AMD 447.650135
ANG 2.07502
AOA 1063.237455
ARS 1358.329122
AUD 1.790088
AWG 2.089951
AZN 1.970459
BAM 1.976871
BBD 2.339334
BDT 141.700345
BGN 1.957018
BHD 0.437122
BIF 3408.852114
BMD 1.159474
BND 1.498491
BOB 8.034744
BRL 6.372234
BSD 1.15865
BTN 100.500507
BWP 15.668206
BYN 3.791663
BYR 22725.68076
BZD 2.327337
CAD 1.592009
CDF 3335.804852
CHF 0.94264
CLF 0.028655
CLP 1099.633075
CNY 8.324436
CNH 8.320446
COP 4735.289807
CRC 585.346621
CUC 1.159474
CUP 30.726048
CVE 110.874726
CZK 24.831283
DJF 206.061533
DKK 7.459658
DOP 68.930861
DZD 150.883945
EGP 58.767911
ERN 17.392103
ETB 156.036569
FJD 2.613223
FKP 0.86089
GBP 0.856167
GEL 3.154082
GGP 0.86089
GHS 11.940547
GIP 0.86089
GMD 82.900787
GNF 10035.242854
GTQ 8.914012
GYD 242.396776
HKD 9.101606
HNL 30.259528
HRK 7.53043
HTG 152.070882
HUF 402.872993
IDR 19058.84579
ILS 4.022886
IMP 0.86089
INR 100.126045
IQD 1518.910296
IRR 48842.821288
ISK 142.394621
JEP 0.86089
JMD 184.688544
JOD 0.822103
JPY 169.174162
KES 150.157781
KGS 101.353755
KHR 4661.083365
KMF 495.673498
KPW 1043.52571
KRW 1583.092953
KWD 0.354602
KYD 0.965504
KZT 605.158041
LAK 25021.438416
LBP 103888.826341
LKR 348.628947
LRD 231.548919
LSL 20.858693
LTL 3.423624
LVL 0.701354
LYD 6.301758
MAD 10.591802
MDL 19.905424
MGA 5150.969399
MKD 61.510518
MMK 2434.618936
MNT 4154.502832
MOP 9.368477
MRU 46.053993
MUR 53.057266
MVR 17.861646
MWK 2012.846179
MXN 22.123897
MYR 4.939229
MZN 74.15966
NAD 20.858623
NGN 1797.775018
NIO 42.634429
NOK 11.687244
NPR 160.801014
NZD 1.934309
OMR 0.445813
PAB 1.158564
PEN 4.175302
PGK 4.773884
PHP 66.29981
PKR 328.884626
PLN 4.275034
PYG 9247.567268
QAR 4.221061
RON 5.046487
RSD 117.245917
RUB 91.017138
RWF 1660.9458
SAR 4.350337
SBD 9.670506
SCR 16.416455
SDG 696.267764
SEK 11.111931
SGD 1.487599
SHP 0.911164
SLE 26.030051
SLL 24313.583978
SOS 662.633618
SRD 45.035134
STD 23998.760651
SVC 10.138059
SYP 15075.334356
SZL 20.858675
THB 38.026669
TJS 11.441298
TMT 4.058157
TND 3.389431
TOP 2.715603
TRY 46.001766
TTD 7.874029
TWD 34.423613
TZS 3124.78103
UAH 48.554024
UGX 4180.559429
USD 1.159474
UYU 47.364849
UZS 14479.331196
VES 120.129363
VND 30395.598016
VUV 139.028787
WST 3.198535
XAF 663.03266
XAG 0.032318
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.133535
XDR 0.823229
XOF 661.48856
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.34578
ZAR 20.677702
ZMK 10436.654585
ZMW 26.920284
ZWL 373.349997
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

As Pelosi eyes Taiwan trip, US anxious on China red lines
As Pelosi eyes Taiwan trip, US anxious on China red lines / Photo: Drew Angerer - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

As Pelosi eyes Taiwan trip, US anxious on China red lines

A potential visit to Taiwan by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is stirring alarm in President Joe Biden's administration which fears the trip may cross red lines for China -- and that there is no exit path.

Text size:

China on Monday warned it was "getting ready" for a Pelosi visit to the self-ruling island next month and that the United States would "bear all responsibility for all serious consequences" if she goes.

Biden was open last week about concerns, saying the US military opposed travel by Pelosi, a fellow Democrat who is second in line to the presidency after the vice president.

Congress is constitutionally an equal branch of government with lawmakers free to travel where they wish. But the administration worries the nuance is lost on Beijing, which sees rising American support for Taiwan as part of a plot to push declared independence for the territory it claims.

The trip could come at an especially fraught time as President Xi Jinping, China's most powerful leader in decades, prepares to cement his rule later this year at a major party meeting amid economic headwinds.

Pelosi has not confirmed a visit but told reporters last week it was "important for us to show support for Taiwan," while denying Congress was pushing independence.

Taiwan enjoys bipartisan backing in divided Washington and China's warnings have only fueled calls for Pelosi to go ahead.

"Speaker Pelosi should go to Taiwan and President Biden should make it abundantly clear to Chairman Xi that there's not a damn thing the Chinese Communist Party can do about it," Republican Senator Ben Sasse said.

The Biden administration has identified Beijing as the biggest global competitor but has also increasingly spoken of "guardrails" to prevent tensions from spiraling out of control, with the two powers' top diplomats holding cordial talks this month in Bali.

- Risk of 'dramatic' response -

The Biden administration faces "a real problem because if they back away, if they try to discourage Pelosi from going, they look weak and like they're giving way to Chinese pressure tactics -- and China is a bully," said Robert Sutter, a China expert at George Washington University.

China has reacted inconsistently to congressional visits to Taiwan "but this one looks like it's pretty serious," he said.

"They might feel that they have to do something dramatic if Pelosi actually lands in Taipei."

Ahead of the party meetings, Xi may calculate that the trip "has crossed his threshold" and it is time to show strength on Taiwan, Sutter added.

China's defeated nationalists fled in 1949 to Taiwan, which has since grow into a flourishing democracy and technological leader. CIA chief Bill Burns said last week that Xi appears committed to the option of using force, despite lessons from Russia's struggles in Ukraine.

The United States in 1979 switched relations from Taipei to Beijing and successive administrations have been careful to recognize only "one China" by not sending top-ranking officials to Taiwan.

A previous House speaker, Newt Gingrich, visited in 1997 but the Republican was from the rival party of the White House and Beijing's reaction was relatively muted.

Gingrich on Monday criticized the Pentagon for warning against Pelosi's visit, writing on Twitter: "If we are so intimidated by the Chinese Communists we can't even protect an American Speaker of the House why should Beijing believe we can help Taiwan survive?"

Pelosi is a longstanding critic of China, befriending the Dalai Lama and in 1991 outraging her Beijing hosts by unfurling a banner in Tiananmen Square in memory of democracy protesters killed there two years earlier.

- Ex-officials call for rethink -

As Beijing rises, Washington has been shedding some earlier reticence on Taiwan. Biden has said the United States is ready to defend Taiwan militarily in an invasion -- going beyond just providing weapons -- although the White House has walked back his remarks.

Mike Pompeo, who was secretary of state under Donald Trump, on a visit to Taipei in March called on the United States to recognize the "unmistakable, already existent reality" of Taiwan's independence.

Mark Esper, a defense secretary under Trump, said last week after his own visit to Taiwan that the One-China policy "has run its course," noting that most Taiwanese no longer identify as Chinese.

But former national security advisor Condoleezza Rice, speaking after Esper at the Aspen Security Forum, said the One-China policy has "actually served us pretty well" by keeping down tensions.

"Let's not make this into the Soviet Union 2.0. Let's remember that this was a China that was on an integrationist path and still has actually a lot at stake in what happens to the international economy," Rice said.

I.Widmer--NZN