US Military Response to Chinese Invasion of Taiwan
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- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 3
- Time for argument
- One week
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- Two weeks
- Point system
- Winner selection
- Voting system
- Open
Full resolution: "If necessary to maintain its independence from an invading China, the United States ought to mount a conventional military defense of Taiwan."
Burden of proof is shared. Whichever participant makes the better case, on balance, ought to be awarded victory.
We never bring up your history at UN discussions of alliance,Yet at any opportunity you demonise the nations that dare respond with defiance,You spread far and wide how we treat Uyghurs, let our worst moments define us,
But are you about to act like the Islands that you colonised had soveiregnty somehow worth more than Taiwan's?…Let me guess? You had Iraq's sovereign blessing to hang Hussein on the noose?
How Trade with China Benefits the United States
It supports US jobs. American companies exported $164 billion in goods and services to China in 2019, constituting 7.4 percent of US exports. While expanding foreign trade can disrupt US employment, trade with China also creates and supports a significant number of American jobs. Exports to China support nearly 900,000 US jobs, and Chinese companies invested in the United States employ over 160,000 workers.
It helps US companies compete globally. In addition to exporting goods to China, US companies do a significant amount of business on the ground there. According to official US data, sales by American companies invested in China reached $379 billion in 2019, the last year of available data. That is more than double the value of US exports to China. Companies can then reinvest in R&D and develop cutting edge technologies, which contributes to the United States’ position as a leader in innovation.
Investment in China is increasingly important for US companies to access the growing Chinese market. For many products, it is critical for companies to be close to customers.
Commercial relations with China will only become more important. The IMF predicts that China will grow 4.4 percent in 2022 and 5.1 percent in 2023, while the world economy will grow only 3.6 percent. With China being a driver of global growth, it will be difficult for any multinational company to be globally competitive without being successful there. Policies that hinder US-China commercial relations may come at the expense of US companies vis-à-vis their other foreign competitors that are investing heavily in the China market.
1996: Third Taiwan Strait Crisis
With presidential elections looming in Taiwan, the PRC conducted military exercises and ballistic missile tests in the Taiwan Strait, prompting stern warnings from the United States. As tensions rose, the United States sent two carrier battle groups into the Strait, which may have helped calm the situation. Lee Teng-hui was re-elected President in Taiwan’s first ever direct presidential election.1997: Jiang Zemin’s Visit to the United States
Chinese President Jiang Zemin came to the United States, the first state visit by a Chinese leader in over a decade. The trip suggested that U.S.-China relations were getting back on track.1998: Clinton’s Visit to China
The year after Jiang Zemin came to the United States, President Bill Clinton paid a return trip to China for a summit meeting. During his visit, he stated that the United States held to a “three no’s policy” regarding Taiwan. By this he meant that the United States does not support Taiwan’s independence, “two Chinas” or “one China, one Taiwan” policies, or Taiwan’s membership in international organizations where statehood is required.1999: Bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade
During NATO airstrikes on Serbia, U.S. planes accidentally bombed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, killing three and wounding twenty. This sparked a wave of anti-U.S. demonstrations throughout China, with multiple attacks on U.S. diplomatic properties, in particular the embassy in Beijing. Tensions eased after an apology from President Bill Clinton and the visit of a special envoy to Beijing.
The Chinese today are not seeking to destroy Americans’ way of life, as the Soviets were said to be doing in the 1940s. Indeed, the Chinese accept fundamental aspects of our capitalist marketplace, and they have similar interests in halting climate change, fighting terrorists, and combatting pandemics. China should be regarded as a serious rival as well as a crucial partner.
The United States exercised formal colonial rule over the Philippines, its largest overseas colony, between 1899 and 1946. American economic and strategic interests in Asia and the Pacific were increasing in the late 1890s in the wake of an industrial depression and in the face of global, interimperial competition. Spanish colonialism was simultaneously being weakened by revolts in Cuba and the Philippines, its largest remaining colonies.
- China is not a threat to the United States, as evidenced by history and trade benefits.
- US commitment to Taiwan has been inconsistent, and Taiwan would be fine if China absorbed it.
- The United States is a hypocritical bully and therefore has no moral standing on this matter.
- War would be catastrophic.
“This will be a Cold War II or World War III, the semantics don't matter the death toll and unnecessary loss of just everything (worlwide [sic] relations, peace, collaboration even in science, all of it) are just not needed.”
RFD given here:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1HO-fbavy6ECvmmx7CeO0EkTTZm--EIlZReGRSTDc1hQ/edit
IF NECESSARY to MAINTAIN its INDEPENDENCE from an INVADING CHINA, the UNITED STATES OUGHT to MOUNT a CONVENTIONAL MILITARY DEFENSE of TAIWAN
PRO opens with a fair summary of the liberal consensus underpinning US foreign policy since WW2: increased global prosperity by maintaining global free trade, increased global liberty by supporting democratic governments worldwide. The potential consequence of non-intervention are described as a loss of economic relevance and international standing. Solid presentation.
CON self-destructs on arrival by a) failing to engage PRO's argument, b) choosing to respond in verse, c) choosing to represent China's POV and d) demonstrating little understanding of the present geopolitical order or the US/Chinese relationship within that order.
Let's recall that this is a public policy debate addressing US foreign policy. That is, both PRO and CON are looking to influence American decision-making rather than Chinese. CON gives no thought to the advantages of the present world order, particularly to Americans at the top of that order. CON gives no credit to peace, prosperity, or individual liberty but only proceeds to entitle China generically across global policy by pointing out US failures. The argument seems to be that so long as America is shown to be less than perfect in any geopolitical theater, China may not be criticized. The impacts to life, liberty, and prosperity, American, Chinese, Taiwanese, and globally are essentially ignored. CON pretends to represent China's point of view but never gets around to stating China's most basic position regarding Taiwan- that Taiwan is a rebellious but fundamentally Chinese state overdue for incorporation. Why would any USFG official be persuaded by a laundry list of irrelevant and mostly past grievances? I'm a big fan of style in DART debate, but the necessities of persuasion must dictate the form. By definition, the use of verse obscures the clarity of prose- prioritizing deliberate ambiguities and musicality over semantic precision. US military, intelligence, state dept officials demand semantic precision and would dismiss any policy proposal delivered in verse out of hand.
In the second round, PRO effectively calls out CON's whataboutism, arguing that the US need not be blameless in order to maintain the most effective, sustainable solution. CON correctly loses confidence in his verse but fails to improve his argument. Still not arguing to any US interest, CON deceptively minimizes impact- China is inactive, little harm to Taiwan and restates the hypocrisy argument.
PRO effectively counters CONs assertion of Chinese policy as non-threatening by recalling the Cold War, Korea, Vietnam and most recently Hong Kong's loss of civil and economic freedom, to the deficit of all. I agree with PRO that CON failed to undermine PRO's original case in any substantial way.
CON seems to agree by switching back to poetry and barely mentioning Taiwan in the final round- mostly just a string of unjustified Chinese threats without any consideration for American interests, and therefore without any consideration for American decision-making on the global stage.
Ultimately, PRO gave several good reasons for the US to defend Taiwan which CON did not engage. CON tried to represent the Chinese perspective rather than address any US interest in non-engagement.
Arguments to PRO
If that really is all you saw, then you only read his R2 and part of his R3, which might explain your consternation.
"You know what I didnt see? Pro saying anything other than hypocrisy is okay."
I agree that is all you saw which is why you lost this debate since there was plenty more to Jeff's argument and when we are deciding on public policy, fear of hypocrisy is mostly a minor consideration. If mere hypocrisy is the worst result from a public policy decision then that is one damn successful policy. As Penn Gillette often quips, "The advantage of hypocrisy is that it doubles your chances getting something right."
You know what I didnt see?
Pro saying anything other than hypocrisy is okay.
Pretty sure I explained that at some length.
You barely responded to the warrants that Pro gave for this debate. What you focused on was whether China presents a threat to the US militarily in the status quo and that their trade relations with us matter quite a bit. That doesn't tell me why Pro's warrants and evidence don't uphold his claims, that just tells me that China hasn't been pushed over the edge yet. Considering that Pro's points are based on how China is likely to use its full control over Taiwan to exert wider control that affects the world order, I needed to see some reasons why that brink (taking over Taiwan leads to substantial changes in China's behavior) fails rather than just telling me that China hasn't exerted that wider control yet.
And again, telling me that China was very tolerant of the US taking the role of the bad actor doesn't engage with the points on whataboutism from Pro in R2.
This wasn't a coin toss, dude. You had every opportunity to win this if you had focused more time on building up your impact calculus and establishing that the US putting itself in direct conflict with China over Taiwan is a big problem. Hell, I'm surprised you didn't just turn the whole argument Pro made about credibility against him, since the US would almost certainly drag other nations into direct conflict with China, particularly Japan, on the basis that we are defending the independence of a country we have largely kept at arm's length. If you really wanted to go the hypocrisy route, then attach a meaningful impact to it. I didn't see one, and I certainly didn't see you weigh your impacts against Pro's. You can claim that this is just Oro and I getting this wrong because we don't understand geopolitical impact, but I really didn't see you weighing yours at all beyond some points about trade losses.
There is a clear lapse in ability to judge geopolitical impact on this site's voting base.
I will be sure to avoid these debates, they are a cointoss. At least I lost to a high rated debater.
How do my Round 1 and Round 2 not explain that Taiwan being owned by China does not disrupt the world order and is just US overstepping despite China being very tolerant to US colonisation even at near its doorstep via Philippines?
My bad. I just shared with viewing permission.
Thanks for voting! What are the permissions on that RFD doc? I am unable to open it.
I never claimed to be capable of leading a country, though I have an RFD and none of that comment addresses it. Don’t mind if you disagree, but I generally appreciate specific responses to how I went through the debate rather than generalizations.
All I can tell is that Oromagi and yourself would make very irrational leaders of a nation, you understand geopolitics all wrong if you think his rebuttals had any weight vs what I said.
I don't mind it, it tells me to avoid these debates because you can literally say any nonsense and it counts as valid, the weighting is quantitative and not qualitative so no strength can defeat talking a lot of nonsense. As for the real world application, I stand by what I said. US should not assist with military forces.
Thanks for the reminder. I've read through it, just have to find the time to sit down and write out an RFD. Should have it up before the voting period ends.
You asked for this ping after a week. Thank you in advance if you are able to find the time.
Focus on Round 2
Cool, thank you!
I’ll post a vote. Might be a bit, but if I haven’t said anything in a week, PM or tag me again.
Does anyone plan to vote?
‘Chinese military response to US invasion of China through Taiwan’
Autarkic - definition of autarkic by The Free Dictionary
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/autarkic
Define autarkic. autarkic synonyms, autarkic pronunciation, autarkic translation, English dictionary definition of autarkic. or au·tar·chy n. pl. au·tar·kies or au·tar·chies 1. A policy of national self-sufficiency and nonreliance on imports or economic aid.
I very much appreciate the image to set the tone bit. I enjoyed imbedded images in debates so much on a certain other site.
You may enjoy this too.
Enjoy the show
I would also like to share this PDF version of my argument. It has no changes to character count whatsoever, but it is formatted in a way that I think is easier on the eyes than DART's. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1fi_q7uIE39cl6JoGzY_0KdeZL2roe-kc/view?usp=sharing
Due to character restraints, I did not include the usual pleasantries at the beginning, so let me say here: thank you to my opponent for accepting this debate, and thank you in advance to any who read and/or vote.