Thayer Vietnam: The Context for Foreign Policy and Domestic Politics
US politics and Foreign Policy
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Transcript of US politics and Foreign Policy
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US POLITICS AND FOREIGN
POLICYDavid J. Lorenzo
Foreign Policy InstituteTaipei, ROC
March 4, 2011
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OUTLINE PART ONEDiscussion of domestic US politics
1. Ideology2. Actors3. Issues and trends4. Obama administration and critics5. Exercise
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REVIEW OF BASIC ELEMENTS: IDEOLOGICAL ORIENTATIONSThe US contains several ideological traditions.
This means that, intellectually, political discourse is not always consistent.
That does not mean, however, that the range of acceptable political positions, or the landscape covered by political parties, is very wide. Both are surprisingly narrow, though at certain times (1930s, 1960s and today) that scope widened to include socialist and much more rightist alternatives.
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LIBERALISMPerhaps the most important political tradition is
liberalism. This tradition can be traced to Locke and other early modern European thinkers.
As a tradition, it emphasizes the concepts of individualism, freedoms, rights, procedural safeguards, limited government, private property.
These concepts are embedded in traditional American political discourse, in important documents (Declaration of Independence) and structurally in the Constitution.
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FORMS OF LIBERALISMIn the US, liberalism is expressed in at least two forms:
1. A classical form that tends towards strict individualism. It places emphasis on the smallest government possible and the benign workings of the market. Government should provide law and order, military defense, courts and justice, and generally defend rights.
2. A form of New Liberalism that looks more favorably on collective action through state institutions. It is more suspicious of markets and places emphasis on government as a regulator and the provider of important social goods, such as pensions, healthcare and job security.
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CLASSICAL LIBERALISM Contemporary classical liberalism informs several
different strands of political activism Pro-business activists: emphasize the free market as a
solution to many problems (education, healthcare, infrastructure), few regulations of economic activity, low taxes, support for businesses (advantageous trade agreements, support for farmers and industries in the form of protectionism and subsidies)
Libertarians: share the business emphasis on small government and low taxes, but also emphasize the need to remove government from individual lives, including support for business and agriculture.
Fiscal conservatives: government should not spend money on social welfare programs or in promoting and supporting businesses. Run government strictly like a business. Not adverse to government regulating social matters (abortion, religious affairs).
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JOHN LOCKE
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CIVIC REPUBLICANISMCivic Republicanism has its roots in Greek and
Roman political philosophy and in Renaissance thinking.
It employs the concepts of virtue, the common good, community, civic involvement, consensus, and opposition to parties and interest groups.
We find such concepts in important documents (some of the Federalist Papers) and speeches, as well as various movements (some of the 19th century utopian movements, and in the emphasis on communitarianism in the 1960’s and 1990s).
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CHRISTIAN POLITICAL DISCOURSEChristian discourse is importantly influenced
by the Reformation, the English Civil War and the various religious “Great Awakenings” that have taken place in the US (the latest in 1980s and 1990s).
This discourse emphasizes the special character of the US as a “Christian nation,” personal morality, the importance of the Bible as a guide to political and personal life, and community standards.
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CHRISTIAN POLITICAL DISCOURSE It is found in important speeches and
documents, and helped conceptualize and motivate participation in important movements, such as the 19th century abolitionist movement, the early 20th century temperance movement, and the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.
It is also important to the ideas, rhetoric and appeal of important strands of American social conservatism. These oppose 20th century social developments regarding abortion, gay rights, and the attempt to institute laws that recognize ethnic, religious and value pluralism in the US.
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DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Mass-based party that is strongest in large cities, the north and northwest, the east and the west coasts
It has several wings, but tends towards New Liberalism and some forms of Civic Republicanism. It has support from unions, generally people with higher education levels, urban dwellers and some younger people.
It tends to support a larger role for the federal government, defense of minority rights, more regulation of the economy, and a foreign policy that leans more on bilateral and multilateral cooperation and use of international organizations.
Democrats were on the defensive after 9/11 because they did not necessarily want to use military force in Iraq and are critical of too much military spending.
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REPUBLICAN PARTYA mass-based party with several wings. It generally tends towards
classical liberalism, but encompasses people who hold both the business and libertarian versions, as well as those who subscribe to Christian Political Discourse.
It has more support among the business community, the lower
middle classes, people in rural areas and in the middle of the country, people with lower levels of education and people with strong religious convictions.
It generally supports low taxes, devolvement of power to state and local governments, a strong military and a proactive and military-based foreign policy with regard to threats.
It has a better reputation with regard to military and security affairs than do Democrats, but the Bush administration’s handling of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, as well as some of its internal security measures, damaged that reputation among some voters.
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“TEA PARTY”A loose group of politically active people who are
concerned with the deficit and the size of the federal government.
While they label themselves independents and critics of the Republican Party, they associate with important members of that party and tend in general to move the Republicans further to the right on fiscal matters and structural issues regarding the federal government.
They have injected energy and populist rhetoric into politics, though the degree to which it is really a grass-roots party is in question (Koch brothers’ funding).
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OTHER ACTORSBeginning in the 1980s, political talk radio and later
talk shows on cable television became important political influences in injecting political issues into the political mainstream
and mobilizing ordinary citizens behind various causes.
Most recently, comedy shows have also become important
Conservatives: Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Michael Savage, Sean Hannity
Progressives: Jon Stewart, Keith Olbermann
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RUSH LIMBAUGH AND GLENN BECK
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KEITH OLBERMANN AND JON STEWART
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ECONOMIC ISSUES1. De-industrialization and loss of jobs2. Financial crisis and recession 3. Health care4. Education policy5. Social Security6. Deficits 7. Tax policy 8. Distribution of wealth and income
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POLITICAL ISSUES Power of the federal government, Civil liberties and security, Campaign finances, Budget deficits at the national and state
levels, Regulation of businesses and banks, Tax policy, Public funding versus privatization of services
and pensions Role of unions, US role in world affairs, particularly Iraq and
Afghanistan
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CAUSES OF DEFICITS AT THE NATIONAL LEVEL Structural attempts to keep the
economy expanding in an economy whose manufacturing sector is adversely affected by globalization
Lobbying Politics of re-election Military expenditures
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OBAMA ADMINISTRATIONGenerally centrist with regard to social
and economic policies. Possibly slightly to the left on social policies and spending (though the latter is changing) and slightly to the right on regulations.
General approach is bipartisanship– attempts to gain the cooperation of more moderate Republicans for centrist policies.
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CRITICS ON THE LEFT Obama is not doing enough to use federal spending
to lift the economy out of the recession and create jobs
Policy of bipartisanship is a failure, as Republicans do not want to participate. They will take his concessions but given none of their own.
He has not done enough to regulate financial institutions.
He has not removed the US from Iran or Afghanistan, has not closed Guantanamo Bay, has not done enough to curb military spending.
In general, he is not as progressive as he appeared to be during the 2008 campaign and does not defend, or promote, progressive positions on the economy or social matters.
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CRITICS ON THE RIGHT Administration spends too much money Administration is not doing enough to tackle
the structural causes of deficit spending, such as entitlement programs
(Some) Administration should have allowed banks and Chrysler to fail rather than bail them out.
Administration is not doing enough to cut regulations that stymie job creation and economic growth
Health care bill will strangle growth and unconstitutionally requires people to buy health insurance.
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DEFENDERS OF THE ADMINISTRATION The administration inherited an economic,
fiscal and regulatory mess from the Bush administration.
The country has to get a handle on health care costs. The bill was the best that could be delivered given the circumstances, and looks very much like the program the Republican Mitt Romney put in place in Massachusetts.
Civility and compromise are what the US needs in a time of crisis and political polarization
The US has to fulfill its commitments to Iraq and get rid of Al Qaeda in Afghanistan before it leaves
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2012 ELECTIONS Depending on development in the next 8
months, Obama may have one or more challengers in the Democratic primaries
The Republicans are re-energized. But they have no viable frontrunners, in part because the activities of the Tea Party has pushed them to the right. The most popular candidates within the party (Palin, Huckabee) do not appear to be electable, and those that may be electable (Romney) do not appear to have much support in the party. But this could quickly change.
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EXERCISEOutline which elements of American
politics are relevant to Taiwan and the promotion and defense of Taiwan’s interests in the US.
Why are they relevant to Taiwan? How would you use these elements to
defend and promote Taiwan’s interests?
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OUTLINE FOR PART 21. Important foreign policy players2. Connections between domestic policy
issues and foreign policy3. Important foreign policy issues4. US-Taiwan-PRC5. Exercise
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FOREIGN POLICY ACTORSExecutive Branch President National Security Council and Staff Secretary of State Secretary of Defense
Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs
Director of the CIA Director of the NSA Secretary of Homeland Security
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FOREIGN POLICY ACTORSCongress Senate
Majority Leader Minority Leader Foreign Relations Committee Armed Services Committee Budget Committee
House Speaker Foreign Affairs Committee Armed Services Committee Budget Committee Ways and Means Committee
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MAJORITY LEADER HARRY REID AND SPEAKER JOHN BOEHNER
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FOREIGN POLICY ACTORS AT THE FEDERAL LEVELThe Executive Branch generally has the
advantage in foreign policy matters. This is due to the need for leadership, quick decision making, and unified decision making.
Congress has attempted to take back power at times in the past (Treaty of Versailles, War Powers Act), but power always gravitates back to the Executive, a process accelerated during crises.
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STATESOfficials at the state level do not have much
influence over foreign affairs. They do travel abroad to solicit business for state industries, but any agreements they may make must be approved by the federal government.
Local officials and opinion leaders, as well as ordinary voters, are important in that they can be mobilized to put pressure on their members of Congress. Some groups associated with particular countries (Israel, Eastern European countries) are very good at mobilizing such support and lobbying Congress.
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MORE FOREIGN POLICY ACTORSEditorial staff of major newspapers: New York Times,
Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Dallas Morning News, Boston Globe
Think Tanks: RAND, New American Century, Carnegie Institute for Peace, Foreign Policy Research Institute, Brookings, American Enterprise Institute, Center for International and Strategic Studies, etc. Full list at: http://thinktanks.fpri.org/
Many thinktanks employ important former members of administrations who continue to wield influence and who may return to government in the future.
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LOBBYISTSLobbyists are very important influences.
They are able to communicate the views and interests of interest groups in a forceful and skillful manner. They most often lobby Congress because that is where laws are written and it is more open to outside input than the executive branch.
Like thinktanks, lobbying firms often employ former members of Congress and other former government officials.
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ORDINARY CITIZENSVoters vote not on the direct basis of elite policy
positions, but through an interpretation of those positions provided by deeper narratives that draw on understandings of American history and values.
While these narratives are durable, they are also multiple and large numbers of people change the narratives they accept in reaction to events and conditions.
There are four narratives, two that see the US as exceptional and two that see the US as not exceptional.
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NARRATIVE TYPE 1:Because they are exceptional in the sense that their
values are superior to what others now hold, Americans should go out into and change the world in their image
Domestic Applications: people can be socialized into American values. Melting point Americanism.
Foreign policy world must be converted to Western, democratic (and often Christian) values
US has an obligation to defend those who have converted to such values
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NARRATIVE TYPE 2Because they are exceptional in the sense of having
superior values and institutions, Americans are vulnerable to corrosive influences from the outside world
Domestic Application: American culture is exclusive to particular cultural groups– others should be, as for as possible, kept out. Nativists, Know-Nothings
Foreign Policy Application: Most other (non-Western) countries cannot develop values like those of the US or act in ways that are beneficial to the US: therefore there is no need for the US to become routinely involved in foreign affairs.
Can justify use of military overseas in defense of country and to punish enemies-- Mead’s “Jacksonianism”
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NARRATIVE TYPE 3Americans are not unique in the sense that
American values are those naturally shared by most cultures and peoples
Domestic Applications: importance of equal worth and protection for all citizens, multi-culturalism.
Foreign policy: share American resources, expertise and experience overseas, benefit from trade and cultural relations
Goal: help countries develop, modernize and reach potential in Western-type terms and help US to expand economically.
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NARRATIVE TYPE 4Americans are not unique in the sense that their values
are not superior. There is a common core of humanness that is not exhausted by any single set of cultural or ethical elements
Domestic Applications: Libertarians, pluralists, others suspicious of government role in social and moral spheres
Foreign Policy: rejection of most military efforts, alliances, or attempts to form other peoples in Western image. Provide humanitarian aid, do best by taking care of own localities. Allow nations to develop according to their own values so long as they do not bother the US or harm other nations.
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SUMMARY OF NARRATIVE POSITIONS ON FOREIGN POLICY1. Because they are exceptional, Americans should go out into and change the world in their image. America is what the world should aspire to be.
3. Because Americans are similar to others, they can share their experience and resources to the world’s benefit by helping everyone embrace and practice universal human values
2. Because they are exceptional, Americans are vulnerable to influences from the outside world, which will corrupt them. They should therefore remain at home and engage in foreign affairs only if tangibly threatened
4. Because they are similar to others, Americans have nothing to offer and may do harm by trying to mold others. They should remain at home and allow others to develop peacefully according to their own understanding of human values.
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OBAMA Like Bush, as time goes on Obama is increasingly
engaging in policies most compatible with Narrative 3 and to some degree Narrative 1.
But also like Bush he is facing the prospect that many ordinary Americans are migrating to Narrative 2 who, with his initial Narrative 4 supporters, are skeptical of what is happening in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Consequently he is being criticized by large numbers of people who are impatient with a foreign policy they consider either more militaristic or more activist than he promised.
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CONNECTIONS BETWEEN DOMESTIC POLICY AND FOREIGN POLICYThe most important domestic policy issues in terms
of their effects on foreign policy are debates over the size and power of the federal government and over the federal deficit.
The power of federal government is connected with foreign policy as both cause and effect. The federal government has grown in power importantly because of foreign policy affairs, and presidents often turn to foreign policy to strengthen their positions.
Debates over the deficit may affect how activist nature of American foreign policy in the future.
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FOREIGN POLICY AND DEBATES OVER THE SIZE OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT The power of the federal government and president in
general has grown over the past century. This power has been spurred in part by foreign policy and military responsibilities.
Challenges to the power of the federal government mean, in part, challenges to its supremacy over foreign policy. If the federal government is to be scaled back, it must be placed in a situation in which it cannot use foreign affairs as an excuse for and a means of accumulating power.
Part of challenge is also argument against size of budget and deficits and money spent on foreign aid (very little) and military and military operations (a huge amount). This argument has creating a situation in which people who have argued for a smaller national government are increasingly moving to realize they must choose between such a government and a large and active military, which they have often supported.
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FOREIGN POLICY AND FEDERAL GOVERNMENT However, the challenge to the federal government
as too powerful is reminiscent of the arguments in the 1970s that the president is too powerful. Attempts to curb that power not successful.
This is because what moves foreign policy is largely outside the control of domestic politicians. Global events will help determine how the US engages in foreign policy.
It is also the case that security usually trumps other concerns .
Whether other values have the same potential (such as democratization, human rights and humanitarian concerns) remains to be demonstrated. At this time, they do not appear to have such power.
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PRESSURES ON THE US TO DISENGAGE FROM AN ACTIVIST FOREIGN POLICYTherefore, there are two sets of pressure now
attempting to push the US towards a less activist foreign policy:
Narratives that argue (for different reasons) that the US should not be actively engaged in the world because such activity will either harm the US or harm the world.
Policy arguments that hold that the size and power of the federal government should be scaled back and that its budgets should be reduced dramatically to cure budgetary problems.
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CONSTANTS IN US FOREIGN POLICY Intolerance of Great Powers obtaining a
foothold in the Americas Formal anti-colonialism Ambivalent attitude towards alliances
and international structures Promotion of free trade Value-laden discourse coupled with a
realist assessment and action plan
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CONTEMPORARY ISSUES: TERRORISMThe US continues to focus on terrorism.
Because terrorism is no longer state-bound, this leads to a fluid approach.
Like the Cold War, the War on Terrorism creates a dualistic understanding of the world. Nations were with the US or against it. This led to cooperation with authoritarian regimes that the US is now moving away from (particularly those in the ME that are now experiencing internal unrest).
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IRAQ AND AFGHANISTANThe Obama administration has pledged to
remove US troops from those areas in the next few years.
This may be feasible in Iraq, though the current upheavals in the region may create complications.
Afghanistan is different. If the goal is to leave a friendly and stable country behind, that will not be reached for some time. The Taliban is still important, and Al Qaeda is still at large. There are pressures to leave from both the public and the Afghan government.
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GLOBALIZATIONThe US has experienced globalization in
the same fashion as have other Western early industrializers: through de-industrialization and the growing importance of the service and banking sectors.
Successive administrations have attempted to deal with globalization through both multi-lateral and bilateral trade agreements. The momentum appears to be to enter into bilateral agreements rather than larger scale (regional or global) agreements.
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ALLIANCES AND RIVALRIESThe US is still deeply committed to NATO,
though that organization is still undergoing a post-Cold War transition. The status of SEATO is more ambiguous.
Relations with Russia fluctuate. It is no longer seen as a great military rival, but also not seen as a reliable international partner.
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WORLD ORDERThe US would like to continue to perpetuate the
immediate post-Cold War world order, in which it was dominant and in which Cold War institutions (NATO, World Bank, IMF) continue to play an important role.
It continues to view the UN skeptically, as it has since the late 1960s.
It supports the dollar as the world’s reserve currency, but it is not clear for how much longer it will continue in that role.
It continues to see itself as a kind of enforcer of order, though its involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan necessarily limits its ability to play that role.
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MIDDLE EASTGiven its public commitment to democratization the
US has to appear supportive of aspirations for democracy in the Middle East.
However, both the general level of instability entailed in the uprisings, and the particular threats to regimes that have cooperated with the US, leads to hesitancy. The US would not want to trade a friendly, though authoritarian regime in Egypt, for example, for a democratic Islamist regime.
Thus, though the public face of the War on Terrorism attempts to delink terrorism from Islam in general, there is still a broad tendency to distrust Islamic governments in the Middle East (where Wahabbi influences are the strongest).
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EFFECT OF EVENTS IN MIDDLE EAST ON US POLICY IN EAST ASIA ASST. SEC. KURT CAMPBELLI think there are a number of reactions in Asia to the
developments in Egypt. One of them is obviously a concern for whether there will be spillover effects in other parts of the Middle East and what that might mean to regional stability as a whole. I think other countries that have centralized authoritarian leaders are always worried about what the consequences will be and whether there are follow-on effects.
And I think there probably is a recognition that such an event really takes an enormous amount of focus from the United States Government, given our strong commitments to the region and also to the people of Egypt, and they are going to want to see that the United States can continue a strong engagement in Asia at the same time that there is deep challenges in Egypt and elsewhere in the Middle East.
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IMPORTANT CONTEMPORARY ISSUES FROM STATE DEPARTMENT SOURCES 21st Century Statecraft Afghanistan Global Climate Change Democracy and human rights Food Security Health Iraq Middle East Peace Non-Proliferation Pakistan Sudan Yeman
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US IN PACIFIC REGION (FROM STATE DEPARTMENT SOURCES)The United States' interests in the East
Asia-Pacific region concern promoting regional stability, fostering democracy and human rights, encouraging economic prosperity, furthering cooperation on fighting transnational issues and international crime, and preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
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US-TAIWAN RELATIONS One China policy plus Taiwan Relations Act
Accepts that there is one China and that Taiwan is part of China, but holds that the integration of Taiwan with the mainland must be consensual and peaceful
Is required by statute to defend and provide arms to Taiwan in the face of attempts to force integration by non-peaceful means
Relations in a different form Embassy, consulates and ambassador present,
but called by different names Restrictions on travel to the US on the part of
high ranking ROC officials
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US AND THE PRCThe US is ambivalent about the PRC:
Positive views: Counterweight to Russia Partner in keeping North Korea in hand Partner in dealing with terrorism Successful integration into the world market Historical sympathies towards China in general
Negative views: Lingering anti-Communism Human rights, democracy, Tibet Economic competition– trade and raw materials Growing military power and political influence in the Pacific
region Perceived arrogance
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US AND TAIWANThe US has some equally ambivalent views regarding
Taiwan:
Positive views: Historical sympathies (WWII, Cold War) Democracy Successful economic integration Bullied by China
Not so positive views: Provokes China, will drag US into a war History of authoritarianism (ambivalence towards CKS) Unruly politics
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EXERCISE 2Outline a strategy to promote the
interests of Taiwan in the US. What would be your overall strategy? What narrative should you create to
promote Taiwan’s interests? How would you use American foreign
policy positions in arguments promoting Taiwan’s interests?
What would you attempt to avoid or downplay?