US to invite Taiwan for world's largest naval exercise RIMPAC next year
Dec 29, 2021
Hong Kong, December 29 : The US will be inviting Taiwan's participation in the 2022 Rim of the Pacific Exercise (RIMPAC), the world's largest naval exercise, amid escalating tensions with China.
The 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) signed by US President Joe Biden on Monday said that the invitation would supplement US efforts to support the self-governed democratic island in the face of "increasingly coercive and aggressive behaviour" by China, reported CNN.
The NDAA authorizes appropriations for national security programmes across the US Defense, Energy and State departments. Section 1246 of the act deals with Taiwan, which split with mainland China more than 70 years ago but which Beijing considers part of its territory and leader Xi Jinping has vowed to bring under China's control.
Washington has been committed to the island's autonomy since the passage of the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, which provides for the US to supply Taipei with the means to defend itself against aggression from Beijing.
Citing that 1979 law, the 2022 NDAA says "the United States should continue to support the development of capable, ready, and modern defence forces necessary for Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defence capability," including "as appropriate, inviting Taiwan to participate in the Rim of the Pacific exercise conducted in 2022," reported CNN.
The sprawling exercise is expected to take place next summer with the participation of more than 48 military units from 20 nations and 25,000 personnel, according to a December statement from the US Navy's 3rd Fleet in San Diego, which oversees RIMPAC.
The US Navy has not disclosed specific invitees to RIMPAC 2022, but a potential invite to Taiwan would be the first-ever extended to the island. Any potential invite could take a variety of forms, from ships or aircraft to a handful of observers, reported CNN.
The US Indo-Pacific Command in Hawaii on Tuesday did respond to a request for comment on a possible Taiwan invite.
Traditional RIMPAC participants include a range of US allies and partners, including key Pacific powers like Japan and Australia, both of which are seeing increasing tensions with China and showing support for Taiwan.
"RIMPAC involvement is a political statement as much as a professional opportunity. The invitation, should it take place, marks Taiwan as a friend and partner of the United States," said Carl Schuster, former Director of Operations at the US Pacific Command's Joint Intelligence Center, who called the NDAA language "a strong politico-strategic statement that has its roots in China's escalating aggression against Taiwan" and other nations in the Indo-Pacific region.
Any Taiwanese involvement in RIMPAC would "send a strong political signal to Beijing that its behaviour created this and has raised the potential cost should it choose the military aggression route," Schuster said, reported CNN.
Meanwhile, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said Beijing was opposed to using what it called "domestic legislation" to try to "engage in political manipulation" concerning China, when asked about the sections on China in the NDAA.
"We urge the US to abandon outdated Cold War zero-sum thinking and ideological prejudices," Zhao said.
RIMPAC 2022 will be the 28th version of the event. The US, Australia and Canada founded the exercises in 1971 as an annual event, but in 1974 they were moved to a biennial basis as more nations were invited to participate, according to the US Navy.