Tuesday, November 22, 2011

US House body votes to adopt new laws on Taiwan

TAIPEI TIMES

November 19, 2011
The US House of Representatives’ Committee on Foreign Affairs voted unanimously on Thursday to adopt two new laws to substantially boost US relations with Taiwan.

While the bills may pass the full House, they are likely to fail in the Senate where US President Barack Obama’s administration has the votes to defeat them.

Nevertheless, the bills are an indication of just how much bipartisan support Taiwan enjoys on Capitol Hill.
 
“This legislation is designed to address the drift and lack of strategic thinking that has hurt the relationship [between the US and Taiwan] in recent years,” committee Chairperson Ileana Ros-Lehtinen said.

She said there were a growing number of policy revisionists and apologists who wanted to use Taiwan as a “bargaining chip” to placate China.

“It was due to concern over these voices of appeasement that I felt it necessary to further strengthen and clarify our relations,” Ros-Lehtinen said. “These concerns have only been amplified by the administration’s regrettable and shortsighted decision not to sell the next generation F-16C/D fighters to Taiwan, despite growing evidence of China’s increasing military threat to the island.”

“Taiwan needs those F-16s and she needs them now to defend the skies over the Taiwan Strait. And Taiwan needs diesel submarines, and she needs them now to protect her territorial waters from the rapidly expanding PLA [People’s Liberation Army] Navy,” she added.

The bills are the Taiwan Policy Act of 2011, H.R. 2918, “to strengthen and clarify the commercial, cultural, and other relations between the people of the US and Taiwan,” and the Taiwan Airpower Modernization Act, H.R. 2992, “to provide Taiwan with critically needed multirole fighter aircraft.”

“The bills considered and adopted today will help ensure that Taiwan’s peace, prosperity and security will be maintained for the next three decades and beyond,” Ros-Lehtinen said.

The second bill — if passed by both the House and Senate — would require Obama to sell 66 advanced F-16C/D aircraft to Taiwan.

“While the recent agreement by the US to upgrade Taiwan’s existing fleet of F-16s is a step in the right direction, Taiwan also urgently needs new advanced combat aircraft to help meet the growing menace from communist China,” Ros-Lehtinen said.

Ros-Lehtinen said that it was “long past due” for the White House to “cease its dithering” and sell Taiwan the F-16C/Ds.

Howard Berman, the ranking Democrat on the committee, said he was a strong supporter of Taiwan and that both of the bills would “bolster our bilateral relationship with an important friend and ally.”

Formosan Association for Public Affairs president Bob Yang later said: “This is a powerful signal to the people of Taiwan and the Taiwanese-American community in the US.”

He said the bills recognized the importance of the US-Taiwan relationship for peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region and for safeguarding freedom and democracy.

The Taiwan Policy Act contains more than 20 provisions that will “broaden and deepen” the bilateral relationship between the US and Taiwan in many ways, including trade and commercial ties, participation in international organizations and through the sale of defensive arms.

House Foreign Affairs Committee passed two bills strengthening the U.S.-Taiwan alliance

NEWS
House Foreign Affairs Committee
U.S. House of Representatives
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Chairman
CONTACT: Brad Goehner and Andeliz Castillo, (202) 225-5021
Alex Cruz (South Florida press), (202) 225-8200
For IMMEDIATE Release – November 17, 2011
Ros-Lehtinen Says Bills Passed by Committee Today Supporting Sale of Advanced F-16 Fighter Aircraft to Taiwan Help Ensure Peace, Security
Administration refused to include new-model planes in recent arms sale
(WASHINGTON) – Earlier today, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed two bills strengthening the U.S.-Taiwan alliance and enhancing Taiwan’s security and defense capabilities. The Committee adopted H.R. 2918, the Taiwan Policy Act of 2011, and H.R. 2992, the Taiwan Airpower Modernization Act of 2011, as amended. Both bills support the sale of F-16 C/D fighter planes to Taiwan. The bills were authored by Committee Chairman Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) and Congresswoman Kay Granger (R-TX), the Chairman of the Appropriations Subcommittee on State-Foreign Operations, respectively.
“By building on the firm foundation laid by the Taiwan Relations Act over three decades ago, the Taiwan Policy Act will serve to move relations between the peoples of the United States and Taiwan to new levels in the areas of security, trade, and international travel,” Ros-Lehtinen said after both bills, as amended, were adopted by the Committee by voice vote.
“This Committee showed its support for the people of Taiwan, for the sale of F-16 fighters to this island democracy, and for the spirit of the Taiwan Relations Act by taking favorable action today on this legislation,” she continued. “The bills considered and adopted today will help ensure that Taiwan’s peace, prosperity and security will be maintained for the next three decades and beyond.”
Ros-Lehtinen also discussed the Administration’s “regrettable and short-sighted decision not to sell the next generation of F-16 C/D fighters to Taiwan, despite growing evidence of China’s increasing military threat to the island.” “Taiwan needs those F-16s and she needs them now to defend the skies over the Taiwan Strait,” she said. 
 
NOTE: H.R. 2918 seeks to further diplomatic relations with Taiwan and encourages the President to approve the sale of F-16 C/D fighter aircraft to Taiwan, and authorizes that sale. The bill also seeks to add Taiwan to the visa waiver program, permit senior Taiwan leaders to meet with U.S. officials in all executive branches, and sign a comprehensive extradition agreement among other items.
H.R. 2992 expresses the sense of Congress that a strong Taiwan is necessary for peace and stability in Asia. The bill also directs the President to sell no fewer than 66 F-16 C/Ds to Taiwan.
Ros-Lehtinen’s full statement from today’s markup is available here.
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