The
Honorable Henry J. Hyde: Let me begin by
thanking the Heritage Foundation, and especially Ed Feulner, for
their kind invitation to speak to such an important audience on the
subject of China, Taiwan, and East Asia.
In the
new century, the world will be reinvented once again, as it was in
the one just past. The known and the comfortable may vanish;
enemies may become friends and friends enemies; unseen dangers and
unguessed opportunities lie in wait. Knowing this, we would be wise
to step back from our focus on the present and consider what the
future may bring, for if we are to prevail and to safeguard the
heritage of freedom we have been given, we must prepare ourselves
to meet whatever challenges lie ahead.
Our
scope must be a broad one. For better or worse, the United States
has become the principal guarantor of stability and order in the
international system, a responsibility which we may revise but from
which we cannot escape. That responsibility requires us to
anticipate the impact of major developments not only on our own
interests but on the international system as well.
To do
that, we must begin with a view of what is to come. As always,
consensus will be elusive. A hundred observers likely would produce
a hundred different forecasts of the next few decades, ranging from
the bleak to the optimistic. Yet, amid this competition of
viewpoints, there is one development on which near unanimity
reigns: China's certain emergence as a world power.
How
quickly that emergence will take place and the path it will follow
are subjects of great disagreement, even among the experts; but few
doubt that the impact on the United States and the world will be
profound, from the economic and technological to the cultural and
political. It is my hope that China's contribution will prove to be
overwhelmingly positive, but neither individuals nor nations can
operate in this world solely on hope. We must consider the
possibility of less positive outcomes as well.
Over
the past two decades, our view of China has swung widely, from
strategic ally to strategic competitor, from close collaborator to
confrontational antagonist. In the aftermath of September 11, our
relationship with China appears to have shifted course once again
and in a more positive direction.
While I
trust and expect that this marks the inauguration of a genuinely
cooperative relationship with China, I believe it would be a
profound mistake
to cast off the experience of the past or to allow our current amicability to relieve us of the need to consider less sunny possibilities.
THE CHALLENGE OF CHINA
Prior to September
11th, there were many troubling signs that the regime in Beijing
was moving toward policies that are not only inimical to stability
in the international system but which appear to be aimed at
undermining U.S. interests around the world. This is no accident:
If Beijing's ambition is to unilaterally revise the status quo in
East Asia or elsewhere more to its liking, it must first target the
influence of the United States.
Once
distant and abstract, the challenge posed by a powerful China was
made tangible last year by Beijing's aggressive behavior regarding
the U.S. surveillance plane forced down on the island of Hainan.
The suddenness of the confrontation, and the unwarranted hostility
toward the U.S. emanating from that country, offer a preview of the
increasingly unpleasant possibilities that may lie in wait.
If a
challenge is to come, it might well be in East Asia, where the
impact of China's emergence will first be felt. And it will center
on Taiwan.
The
regime in Beijing appears determined to bring about Taiwan's
subordination, a determination so strong that, at times, it has
even seemed willing to risk an armed confrontation. Its strategic
planning and war gaming assume an increasingly prominent place for
conflict with the U.S., especially in the Taiwan Strait. As China
grows stronger and bolder, the potential for an actual clash seems
only to increase.
For
this and other reasons, there are those in the U.S. who regard our
ties to Taiwan as a major liability, a relic of the Cold War which
is not only dangerous but is an unnecessary obstacle to better
relations between the U.S. and China. To some, the choice is not a
difficult one: China is 50 times the size of Taiwan and good
relations with Beijing are a self-evident necessity.
Not
surprisingly, there are some in the U.S. who advocate that the U.S.
and China should reach an accommodation over Taiwan. This line of
argument has taken many forms over the past three decades, ever
since President Nixon traveled to Beijing in 1972, but the
recommendation is essentially the same: We should back off from
Taiwan in return for improved relations with Beijing.
Although some have
grown used to regarding Taiwan as a liability, this approach
obscures Taiwan's true importance. For a free and uncoerced Taiwan
is of immense strategic importance to the U.S. and to the world as
a whole, perhaps an irreplaceable one. In fact, a free Taiwan is
the key to the possibility of genuinely close relations between the
U.S. and China and a guarantee that China's growing impact on the
international system will be a positive one. It may even hold the
key to China's destiny.
However, before I
elaborate on this open-ended assertion, let me first set the
context of U.S. policy toward China and the world. As I noted at
the beginning of my remarks, China's growing presence in the
international system poses a number of possible dangers. A closer
examination reveals that the challenge is only partly due to
China's enormous size and economic dynamism. The real problem lies
in the nature and policies of the ruling regime.
The
most worrisome specter facing the world is of a China grown
powerful but still controlled by an authoritarian government. By
definition, nondemocratic regimes have too few restraints on their
freedom of action. The most extreme example was Mao's
experimentation with ruinous economic and social policies that
ultimately led to the starvation of millions and decades of chaos.
When the regime's experiments were confined to China itself, the
result was horrific domestically, but of little direct threat to
the wider world. But a powerful China venturing out into the world
will have the means to affect far more than just the lives of its
own citizens.
There
can be little doubt that the authorities now ruling in Beijing are
a vast improvement over the Maoist dictatorship that preceded them.
In the two decades since the Chinese leadership began to abandon
its Marxist past and relax its stranglehold on the economy and on
society, the Chinese people have used the narrow freedoms granted
them to create an increasingly vibrant economy and freer,
wealthier, and more secure lives for themselves.
Unfortunately, the
economic liberalization that has so dramatically transformed China
has not yet produced a commensurate political liberalization.
Although the regime has allowed the Chinese people a greater zone
of freedom in their personal and public lives, these freedoms are
strictly limited and may be narrowed or withdrawn at the whim of
the authorities. Even these modest freedoms require a grateful
docility from the population. Innocent efforts to organize outside
of the Party's control are still repressed quite brutally.
Religious groups and human rights activists suffer systematic
persecution. One need only recall the images of unarmed students
being shot down in Tienanmen Square to know the regime's attitude
toward attempts at actual democratization.
Many
observers believe that the gradually expanding economic reforms
have put China on an irreversible course toward a true market
economy and toward increasing personal and political freedoms. In
their eyes, liberalization is an inevitability. I very much hope
this is the case.
But can
anyone even remotely familiar with the history of the 20th century
claim to believe in the irreversibility of progress? Did not Hitler
come to power in the most advanced country in Europe, preceded by
several decades of liberalization throughout the continent? In the
end, none of these were able to prevent Germany's return to a pagan
past or to stop Hitler from making real his murderous
fantasies.
However, were the
regime in Beijing to allow an extensive political liberalization,
perhaps even a full-scale democratization, the challenges posed to
the outside world by a powerful China would greatly diminish.
Allowed to determine their own affairs, the Chinese people, as is
the case with all free peoples, would likely focus their efforts
and attention on improving their own lives and those of their
families and countrymen rather than on urging their government to
engage in foreign adventures. The prospect of conflict with the
outside world would be greatly reduced and perhaps eliminated
altogether. In fact, we might reasonably hope not merely for the
absence of threats but the genuine pursuit of cooperation with the
United States and with the rest of the world.
A
democratic China is a joyful prospect and would be the best
possible outcome, both for the Chinese people and for the world.
Can we do anything to improve its odds?
Although certainly of inherent worth in themselves, the limited instruments we possess, such as broadcasts of uncensored news, support for democracy groups, exposure of the regime's human rights abuses, and so forth, appear to be grossly inadequate to the task. After all, China is a giant and ancient country, and democratization by remote control is unlikely to prove effective.
AMERICA'S NATURAL ALLIES
However, the U.S.
can also bring to bear a unique strategic asset of immense value,
but one that has lain too long dormant: our natural alliance with
the peoples of the world.
All
over the world, the populations in unfree countries look to the
U.S., not only because of our power and our material prosperity,
but because of our ideals. Our country was founded on universal
principles, ones we believe are applicable to every people. As
Americans, we are inheritors of democracy and the rule of law,
which evolved over centuries of bloody struggle with tyranny.
Democracy assigns intrinsic value to human beings, to every member
of the human family. Our Declaration of Independence, our country's
birth certificate, explicitly states that the source of human
dignity is our "Creator" and that the right to life and liberty is
"unalienable." Even as I speak, the power of these ideals continues
to inspire legions of brave and often isolated individuals around
the world to take on seemingly impossible odds.
That is
true in China as well. When the courageous people in Tiananmen
Square erected their Statue of Freedom, when they quoted from
America's founding documents, they were not looking for the U.S. to
come to their assistance in their unequal struggle with the regime.
They did so in order to clearly demonstrate that the goals they
sought for their country were shaped with the same ideals as those
with which America has become identified and which are, indeed, a
universal aspiration.
I spoke
of an "alliance" between the United States and the people in unfree
countries. I do not use the term lightly; it is not just a figure
of speech. Although our global responsibilities require us to deal
with regimes around the world, and even to cultivate good relations
with them, our enduring allies are the people they rule over. We
are allies because we share a common aim, which is freedom. And we
have a common opponent: oppressive regimes hostile to
democracy.
We
rejoice when an unfree people secures their freedom, but we should
understand that this represents more than merely a confirmation of
our ideals. Simply put, freedom around the world should be welcomed
not only because of our altruistic hope for others but because it
advances America's strategic interests as well. And the advancement
of those interests comes not by imposing our agenda on others but
by helping the oppressed liberate themselves.
The Soviet Union
provides the clearest example of this principle. For nearly half a
century, by means of an enormous investment of labor
andtreasure, we
succeeded in blocking Soviet expansion, while our economic and
technological advances pressured the regime into competing at an
increasing disadvantage. But what ultimately destroyed that empire
was the determination of its subject peoples to liberate
themselves. In securing their freedom, they fatally undermined the
Soviet Union and in so doing gave the free world an incalculable
strategic victory.
The
example of the Soviet Union provides us with many profound lessons.
Perhaps the most important is the power of words and symbols to
inspire millions to a common cause.
For its
subject peoples, to defy the Soviet regime was to take a very
serious risk. To secure its rule, the regime trained its vast
powers on all who would dissent, dividing and isolating the
population in an effort to deny hope to any challengers. But the
West was able to provide hope anyway, with the role of two
individuals being especially critical. The first was the election
of Pope John Paul II. His initial message to his countrymen in
Poland told them: "Be not afraid." From that beginning, a mass
movement took shape, Solidarity was born, and the Polish regime
began its unstoppable slide to oblivion. Poland is now free.
Equally
significant was the election of Ronald Reagan. Against the advice
of many, Reagan refused to tame his remarks about the Soviet
Union.
When he called the Soviet Union "an evil empire," he was openly derided by many in the West as an ideologue or a warmonger. But veterans of the democracy movement in the former Soviet Union point to that statement as a turning point in their struggle. For it was the first time that a Western leader had called the Soviet Union by its real name, had openly stated that the regime was illegitimate and proclaimed it mortal. It was an unambiguous statement that, at long last, America was casting its lot with the people and not with the regime, a declaration that we would never abandon the oppressed merely to secure better relations with their oppressors.
That infusion of
hope, the unambiguous declaration that America was openly aligning
itself with those who were struggling against impossible odds, was
a major element in setting in motion the events which dissolved the
Soviet Union, almost without a shot being fired. Decades of
pressure by the West on the Soviet Union was essential to its
demise, but it was the victory of our allies within-the unfree
peoples of the Soviet Union-which actually vanquished the
empire.
In
China, the regime is employing a new version of the old Soviet
strategy toward advocates of political liberalization, including an
attempt to isolate the population from the outside world and
prevent free communication and organization. Essential to its
continued tenure in power is the elimination of any hope that a
change of regime is possible.
That is
where the U.S. can play an essential role. The knowledge that the
United States strongly supports their efforts is of immense
importance to members of the beleaguered Chinese democracy
movement.
How can
we best demonstrate our support? By publicly proclaiming that it is
and will remain the goal of the United States to help the people of
China peacefully bring to power a democratic government that they
have chosen in free and fair elections. Our President should make
this statement openly, and the Congress should do so as well. We
should repeat it at every opportunity until the people of China and
the regime know that it is an enduring objective.
This
does not mean that we should break our ties with the regime or seek
conflict. To the contrary, our relations should proceed as normal
and even be enhanced. We should not threaten any intervention, nor
impose any sanctions. Our economic ties, which are essential to
China's modernization, should continue and even deepen. The regime
will thus have no legitimate basis for complaint. But even as we
continue our necessary relations with it, we should feel free to
talk directly to the people-to our allies.
Our
goal should be to convince the Chinese people that their victory is
inevitable, to give them hope that the current regime and its vast
powers of coercion are destined to fade. When they become confident
of that future, the regime will have lost its power to make the
population helpless by denying them hope. And once again, their
victory will be freedom's victory, hopefully without a shot ever
being fired.
TAIWAN IS KEY TO CHINA'S DEMOCRACY
So what is Taiwan's
role in all of this? It is, quite simply, the key to this future.
The regime in Beijing attempts to hold on to power and justify its
acts by insisting that only its unchallenged rule can guarantee
continued peace and development. It says that democracy in China is
not only impossible but that any attempt to establish it would
bring a return of the upheaval and chaos of the past.
But
these assertions are untrue, and Taiwan is the proof of it. For
decades, experts in the West and in China itself said that
democracy was alien to Chinese culture, that it could never be
applied successfully in that vast country. But all of this was
disproved in 1996, when for the first time in China's five
millennia of recorded history, a democratically elected government
took office in Taiwan. This was an epochal event, one of the great
triumphs of the century, but one that I regret was too little
recognized around the world.
This
historic accomplishment was further enhanced four years later when
a ruling party peacefully gave up power after losing at the polls.
Elections are rare enough in this world, but peaceful transfers of
power are rarer still and are the indisputable mark of the
establishment of a genuine democracy and political freedom. With
this transfer of power, Taiwan demonstrated that at last it had
become a true democracy. And let me emphasize that it is a Chinese
democracy.
And
what happened? The sky has not fallen; progress did not give way to
chaos. Instead, as political freedom and democracy grew stronger,
so did Taiwan. For the reality is that political freedom and
progress are not only compatible; they are two halves of the same
thing, and together they thrive.
The
advent of democracy does not mean that change has ceased; it is
only beginning. Democracy brings with it a dynamism which some
mistakenly see as instability. As proof, the political situation in
Taiwan lately has been undergoing significant changes. Political
realignments are taking place; old and familiar structures are
disappearing and new and untested ones are taking their place. Many
might view this as a cause for concern, but it is actually a sign
of strength, an indication that change and adaptation are possible,
that the political system is responding to the ever-changing
demands of society. As in America, political dynamism is a fact of
life, and a welcome one, for it means that our system is
working.
What
does this mean for China? Taiwan's economic success was essential
in convincing Beijing that a Western, market-oriented economic
model would work in China. Now it is time for Taiwan's democratic
model to have the same effect, only this time the audience is the
Chinese population.
Taiwan's experience
is proof that democracy is not only possible in China, it already
exists. It demonstrates conclusively that an authoritarian regime
is not necessary for stability or for progress, that democracy will
actually enhance these. This great truth is not limited to Taiwan;
it embraces all of China.
Thus,
instead of backing away from Taiwan, we should hold its democracy
up as an inspiring example to all of China. We must encourage it,
not only because we have a duty to support freedom, but because it
provides tangible hope that the world's largest nation, with its
ancient and profound civilization, will one day free itself from
the constraints which, for millennia, have bound its long-suffering
people. I have no doubt that the embrace of liberty will inaugurate
a wholly new and wondrous era for the Chinese people, one in which
they will astonish the world.
Again
let me stress my hope and expectation that the advent of democracy
in China will be a peaceful one. We do not seek conflict. China is
not now our enemy, nor need she ever be. Only tragedy could come
from such a foolish mistake. To avoid that fate, our efforts to
encourage democracy must include helping China become fully
integrated into the world, from enhanced trade and personal
exchanges to the Internet and the rule of law.
The
closer and more unconstrained the connections between China and the
outside world, the more certain the advance of freedom. China's
accession to the World Trade Organization is an important step
toward this objective because free trade not only promotes economic
prosperity, it advances political change as well by giving each
citizen greater freedom over their own lives.
In the
end, China's fate is in the hands of her own people. Their freedom
must be won largely through their own efforts, but America does
have an important role to play in this momentous struggle. Our help
can take many forms, but in the end, nothing will be of greater
importance than our resolute commitment to democracy and freedom in
China through the trials that lie ahead and our pledge to the
Chinese people that we shall remain with them until they are free,
however long the struggle.
AN
OPEN DOOR TO A NEW WORLD
As for East Asia,
the stakes posed by China's rapid development could not be higher.
The peaceful, prosperous, and benevolent system the U.S. has
created and sustained for over half a century, that network of
uncoerced relationships that forms the foundation for the region's
embrace of the modern world and the betterment of the lives of
hundreds of millions of its people, could be torn apart by a
powerful China bent on domination. But instead of assaulting it, a
democratic China would very likely seek to join that system, for it
represents an open door to a new world, one which can guarantee
that China's miraculous transformation will continue and allow the
Chinese people to assume their rightful place among the free
nations of the world.
In the depths of America's civil war, our greatest president, Abraham Lincoln, characterized the conflict as being not just for the present but for the "vast future also." That vast future is what I speak of here today. For by helping the Chinese people achieve their long-delayed freedom, we will ensure our own, and that of all the generations to come.
About the
Speaker
The Honorable Henry
J. Hyde, a Republican from Illinois, is serving his fourteenth term
in the U.S. House of Representatives.
A
member of the International Relations Committee since 1982,
Congressman Hyde currently serves as its chairman. From 1985 to
1991, Hyde served as the ranking Republican on the House Select
Committee on Intelligence.
Since 1975, Congressman Hyde has been a member of the House Judiciary Committee, and served as its chairman from 1995-2001.
A U.S. Navy veteran, Congressman Hyde holds degrees from Georgetown University and Loyola University School of Law.