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China, Taiwan, and the
Battle for Latin America
Daniel P. Erikson and Janice Chen
When longtime Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega triumphed in
Nicaragua’s presidential election in November 2006, the shockwaves from
his historic victory extended to China and Taiwan. Leaders in the two rival
East Asian capitals knew that, in 1985, a much younger Ortega had swept
into the presidency and unceremoniously broke relations with Taipei in
favor of an alliance with the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Though
Nicaragua’s formal diplomatic ties to China ended abruptly when Ortega
was voted out of office in 1990, his return to power now represents a fresh
opportunity for Beijing to usurp one of Taiwan’s precious remaining allies.
The re-establishment of a Chinese embassy in Managua could potentially
serve as a valuable beachhead for China to facilitate diplomatic inroads
into Central American countries that are friendly to Taiwan, thereby mak-
ing Beijing’s dream of enforcing global recognition of the “One China”
policy one step closer to reality.
While increasing economic and political ties between China and
Latin America have attracted significant attention from U.S. policymak-
ers in the past few years, the extent to which Beijing’s foreign policy is
shaped by its desire to isolate Taiwan internationally is often overlooked.
Yet, this crucial dimension of Chinese foreign policy is indispensable to a
full understanding of China’s rising influence in the global system, and its
possible repercussions for U.S. national interests. Today, in some of the
most remote corners of the world, a fierce contest for diplomatic recogni-
tion and political influence is being fought between Taiwan and the PRC.
Daniel P. Erikson
is Senior Associate for U.S. policy at the Inter-American Dialogue.
He is coeditor of
Transforming Socialist Economies: Lessons for Cuba and Beyond
.
Janice Chen
is a joint-degree candidate at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
and Georgetown University Law Center. She was an intern at the Inter-American
Dialogue during the summer of 2006.
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In particular, Latin America has emerged as the crucial battleground where
a dozen struggling nations, mainly in Central America and the Caribbean,
have become ensnared in the cross-strait dispute. The strategically signifi-
cant “swing states” among them face growing pressures to abandon their
longstanding relationships with Taiwan in favor of cementing diplomatic
ties with China. Meanwhile, officials in Washington have yet to fully con-
sider the possible implications for U.S. policy of this intensifying competi-
tion in their own backyard.
ADIOS
TAIPEI,
HOLA
BEIJING
At first blush, the diplomatic whims of Latin America appear to be
a world away from such exotic concerns as the decades-long conflict sim-
mering in the Taiwan Strait. The dispute over Taiwan’s sovereignty stems
from China’s claim that the island, where the nationalist government of
the Republic of China (ROC) fled in 1949 after losing a lengthy civil war
against the Communist Party, is rightly a province of the PRC that must be
“reunited” with the mainland, by force if necessary. During the Cold War
the Republic of China on Taiwan was viewed as a satellite of the United
States and a key link in the chain of islands stretching from South Korea to
Singapore, which was central to the American containment strategy against
the spread of communist influence in the Pacific. The United States thus
contributed substantial infusions of
capital and technology that proved in-
strumental to Taiwan’s successful eco-
nomic development. Though President
Jimmy Carter normalized relations
with Beijing in 1979 and closed the
American embassy in Taipei, the U.S.
Congress simultaneously approved the
Taiwan Relations Act requiring the
United States to provide the island with the ability to defend itself against
mainland China. In the post-Cold War context, American officials and
military analysts consider the Taiwan Strait a major flashpoint for regional
and global security, a view reinforced by China’s rapid military expansion
over the past decade and the more than 800 missiles that it has deployed in
the 100-mile strait separating Taiwan from the mainland.
In addition to its campaign of military intimidation, Beijing has pur-
sued a sustained policy of isolating Taiwan diplomatically, most often by
American officials and
military analysts consider
the Taiwan Strait a major
flashpoint for regional and
global security.
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promising large sums of aid to the rapidly dwindling ranks of the latter’s al-
lies. Beijing rigorously promotes its “One China” policy, which means that
non-recognition of the Taiwanese government is a prerequisite for con-
ducting formal diplomatic relations with the PRC—in effect forcing other
governments to choose between Beijing and Taipei. Currently there are
only 25 countries in the world that officially recognize Taiwan; more than
half of these are located in the Western Hemisphere.
1
Although each of the
13 Latin American countries involved in this geopolitical chess match have
little individual clout, together they make up the most significant group
of states caught in the cross-strait tug-of-war. Taiwan is recognized by all
seven nations of the Central American isthmus, a prized contiguous bloc
that includes Guatemala, Belize, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras, Costa
Rica, and Panama. Not coincidentally, this group also represents the stron-
gest bulwark of support for the United States in the Western Hemisphere.
Several of these countries sent troops to Iraq as part of the U.S.-led co-
alition, and they have dutifully partnered with Washington in efforts to
contain regional adversaries such as Cuba’s Fidel Castro and Venezuela’s
Hugo Chávez. In November 2006, Panama won a two-year term as the
Latin American representative on the United Nations Security Council,
breaking a lengthy impasse between Chávez, who campaigned aggressively
for Venezuela to assume the post, and the United States, which backed
Guatemala—an ally of Taiwan—for the vacant seat.
Taiwan’s alliances in the Caribbean have been whittled down to just
four countries—the Dominican Republic, Haiti, St. Kitts & Nevis, and
St. Vincent & the Grenadines—plus St. Lucia which switched back to
Taiwan, for the moment at least, in May 2007, after a decade-long hia-
tus. St. Lucia and the Bahamas had both defected in 1997, and the is-
land nation of Dominica severed ties with Taipei in 2004. Not long after
that, Grenada—still grappling with the legacy of the communist takeover
that prompted U.S. military intervention in 1983—turned its back on
the staunch anti-communism of the Reagan era to open its arms to China
in 2005. Meanwhile, beginning when Chile’s socialist president Salvador
Allende formally recognized the PRC in 1970, the other South American
powers switched over one by one throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Today
Paraguay is the lone holdout on that continent against China’s diplomatic
overtures.
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FIGurE 1. TAIwAN’s shrINkING Pool oF FrIENds
2
TAIWANESE DIPLOMATIC ALLIANCES 1985-2005
Worldwide
Total
Latin America
& Caribbean
Of course, even Latin American countries without official relation-
ships with Taipei often try to maintain good “non-official” relations, which
may include opening reciprocal missions, often disguised as nonprofit foun-
dations or businesses, in their respective capitals. The lack of diplomatic
links has not prevented Taiwan from undertaking significant trade with
Brazil, Chile, and Mexico. However, the Taiwanese government believes
that the ability to conduct relations with sovereign states on an equal basis
is vital to the legitimacy of its own claim to sovereignty. Official allies also
support Taiwan’s repeated petitions to join international forums such as the
World Health Organization and the UN, which are perennially squelched
by China. And though Central America may share the famous Mexican
lament about being “so far from God, so close to the United States,” from
Taiwan’s point of view, this geographical happenstance makes the isthmus
a particularly valuable region in which to retain a bloc of allies. Central
America’s proximity to the United States justifies Taiwanese officials’ use of
refueling stops in America to meet “unofficially” with U.S. policymakers
while en route to official state visits in the south, a practice that has been
dubbed “transit diplomacy.”
3
Taiwanese influence in Latin American and Caribbean is sustained to
some extent by values-based affinities stemming from the anti-communist
orientation of most Central American governments during the 1970s and
1980s. In more recent years, these ties have been bolstered by the shared
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experience of political and economic liberalization.
4
After several decades
under the authoritarian rule of the Nationalist Party (
Kuomintang
, or
KMT), the island embarked on a path of political opening to become one
of the most vibrant, if sometimes unruly, democracies in East Asia, paral-
leling Latin America’s contemporaneous wave of democratic transitions. As
one of the so-called “Asian Tigers,” Taiwan is also perceived by many Latin
American policymakers as an enviable model for fomenting rapid econom-
ic, industrial, and technological development
.
Speaking in the Taiwanese
presidential palace during a recent vis-
it, President Leonel Fernández of the
Dominican Republic drew attention
to the country’s transformation from a
society fighting for mere survival to “an
economic miracle drawing respect, rec-
ognition, and admiration on a global
scale.”
5
Latin American officials openly
advocate emulating Taiwan’s path to
prosperity, and Taiwan in turn makes
itself readily available as a tutor to other
developing economies, annually deploying dozens of technical assistance
teams to provide expertise in fields ranging from agriculture, fishery man-
agement, and pest control, to nanotechnology. Perhaps most important,
Taiwan has long been one of the most consistent aid donors to countries in
Latin America that have been largely neglected by the international com-
munity. It is reportedly the single largest aid donor to St. Kitts & Nevis
and St. Vincent & the Grenadines.
6
Taiwan stood virtually alone among
the international community in continuing to support the government of
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in Haiti when most Western donors im-
posed a devastating bilateral aid cut-off from 2000 to 2004. When Aristide
was forced from power in 2004, Taiwan maintained smooth relations with
the interim government and is especially close to Haiti’s current president,
René Préval, who was elected in 2006. In the wider Caribbean, Taiwan also
offers significant resources for disaster relief, which follows naturally from
the island’s own frequent experiences with earthquakes and typhoons.
7
Over the decades, the use of aid funds as a diplomatic tool has been
interwoven with a purposeful cultivation of personal connections between
Taiwanese diplomats and local officials. In the words of one observer para-
phrasing a Chinese expression, the Taiwanese government is conscious of
the need to “warm the coals before starting the fire,” and carefully identifies
young bureaucrats and military officers early on in their public careers who
Taiwan is also perceived
by many Latin American
policymakers as an enviable
model for fomenting rapid
economic, industrial, and
technological development.
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are likely to become influential players in the future.
8
Ties are consolidated
through extensive use of both academic and military training exchanges, as
Taiwanese officials remain particularly aware of the still far-reaching influ-
ence of military institutions and personnel in Latin America. Over time
this approach has created networks of elites spanning the Central American
isthmus whose firsthand experiences and contacts in Taiwan presumably
reinforce their political sympathies toward the island. Of course, for all
the talk of mutual respect and cooperation, experience has also shown that
nothing is quite as effective at making and keeping friends as straight cash
payments funneled surreptitiously into private accounts—another staple
tactic of the KMT era that seems to have survived the death of the regime.
Meanwhile, China’s galloping entrance into the Latin American mar-
ket for energy resources and other commodities has been accompanied by
an accelerating pace of high-level visits by Chinese officials to the region
over the past few years. Though China’s foreign policy strategy toward the
developing world prioritizes South Asia and Africa over Latin America,
this last relationship has experienced explosive growth. In 2001, Chinese
President Jiang Zemin’s landmark visit to the region sparked a wave of visits
by senior officials and business leaders to discuss political, economic, and
military concerns. Since then, the volume of trade between China and the
region has skyrocketed. President Hu Jintao traveled to Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, and Cuba in 2004 and visited Mexico in 2005. The presidents of all
those and other countries have paid reciprocal visits to China.
China’s economic engagement with Latin America responds to the re-
quirements of a booming Chinese economy that has been growing at near-
ly 10 percent per year for the past quarter century. The economic figures
are impressive: in the past six years, Chinese imports from Latin America
have grown more than six-fold, at a pace of some 60 percent a year, to an
estimated $60 billion in 2006. China has become a major consumer of
food, mineral, and other primary products from Latin America, benefiting
principally the commodity-producing countries of South America—par-
ticularly Argentina, Brazil, Peru, and Chile. Chinese investment in Latin
America remains relatively small at some $6.5 billion through 2004, but
that amount represents half of China’s foreign investment overseas.
9
China’s
Xinhua News agency reported that Chinese trade with the Caribbean ex-
ceeded $2 billion in 2004, a 40 percent increase from the previous year.
10
China has promised to increase its investments in Latin America to $100
billion by 2014, although government officials have since backed away
from that pledge and several proposed investments are already showing
signs of falling short in Brazil, Argentina, and elsewhere.
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FIGurE 2. ChINA v. TAIwAN: TrAdING wITh lATIN AmErICA
11
T otal T rade with L atin America & C aribbean
0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
60.00
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
Yea r
Value in US$ (Billions)
China
Taiwan
For their part, Latin Americans are intrigued by the idea of China as
a potential partner for trade and investment. As a rising superpower with-
out a colonial or “imperialist” history in the Western Hemisphere, China
is in many ways more politically attractive than either the United States or
the European Union, especially for politicians confronted with constituen-
cies that are increasingly anti-American and skeptical of Western inten-
tions.
12
Nevertheless, most analysts recognize that Latin America’s embrace
of China—to the extent that this has actually occurred—is intimately
linked to its perception of neglect and disinterest from the United States.
Nervousness about China’s rise runs deeper among the smaller economies
such as those of Central America, which do not enjoy Brazil’s or Argentina’s
abundance in export commodities and are inclined to view the competi-
tion posed by the endless supply of cheap Chinese labor as a menace to
their nascent manufacturing sectors.
But even as China seeks to reassure the United States that its inter-
ests in South America are purely economic, Beijing has begun enlisting
regional powers like Mexico to aid its effort to woo Central American dip-
lomats. Pressure is also being placed on Paraguay by Argentina, Brazil, and
Chile, its partners in the South American Common Market (Mercosur),
which places certain constraints on member states’ bilateral foreign policy
prerogatives. Despite its avowals to Washington, China appears to be using
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its economic might as a means to achieve the patently political objective of
stripping Taiwan of its democratic allies in the Western Hemisphere.
BEYoNd ChECkBook dIPlomACY
?
In order to counter Chinese attempts to lure away its few remaining
allies, the government of President Chen Shui-bian has sought to broaden
and diversify the avenues for interaction between Taiwan and its Central
American and Caribbean partners since taking office in 2000. The most
visible instrument utilized by the Chen administration is the frequent and
highly publicized exchanges of official visits, with either the president or
vice president traveling to the region approximately twice per year while
a core roster of Central American and Caribbean heads of state stream
steadily through Taipei. Taiwan is also aggressively pursuing bilateral free-
trade agreements with Paraguay and member countries of the Central
American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). Negotiations were finalized
with Panama in 2003 and with Guatemala in 2005; a similar agreement
signed with Nicaragua in June 2006 was thrown into doubt following the
recent Sandinista election victory in November, but it was ultimately rati-
fied by the Nicaraguan legislature in December. Trade negotiations with El
Salvador and Honduras were completed in May 2007, while preliminary
talks with the Dominican Republic began in October. Negotiations with
Costa Rica are in the works. Since the free-trade agreement with Panama
went into effect in January 2004, trade between the two countries has
grown from around $130 million to $250 million annually.
13
Even though
most of this growth is made up of exports to Panama, and the trade balance
still heavily favors Taiwan, imports from Panama jumped from $6 million
in 2003 to $22 million in 2004 and $24 million in 2005—an impressive
increase by any measure. With CAFTA in place, Taiwanese manufacturers
hope to reduce their dependence on the Chinese market by using Central
America as a gateway to the United States.
The Chen administration has also increased diplomatic interac-
tions through multilateral channels. Taiwan holds observer status in the
Central American Integration System and the Forum of Central American
Presidents and Legislators. Its foreign service personnel in Washington
are in regular contact with the Inter-American Development Bank and
have lobbied hard—though so far unsuccessfully—to gain the same ob-
server status that China now holds. Similar efforts to become an observer
at the Organization of American States have not borne fruit, although
China won this status three years ago. In 2005, Vice President Annette Lu
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launched the Democratic Pacific Union, a group of states “committed to
promoting democracy, peace, and prosperity,” constituted by 26 member
states from around the Pacific Rim. The role of Taiwanese nongovernmen-
tal organizations is also expanding globally. Perhaps most notable is the
Tzu Chi Buddhist Foundation, which performs humanitarian aid work
throughout the developing world and operates offices in Asunción, San
Salvador, Santo Domingo, Guatemala City, Tijuana, Mexicali, Sao Paulo,
and Buenos Aires. While not a state agency, Taiwanese officials are well
aware that Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs) effectively augment
the diplomatic footprint by making Taiwan globally visible to populations
beyond foreign capitals.
14
FIGurE 3. ChINA v. TAIwAN: BIlATErAl ANd rEGIoNAl FrEE TrAdE
AGrEEmENTs
15
TAIwAN
ChINA
Finalized
Panama (2003)
Guatemala (2005)
Nicaragua (2006)
El Salvador
Honduras
ASEAN
Chile (2006)
Thailand (
partial
)
Under Negotiation
Costa Rica
Dominican Republic
Paraguay
Australia
New Zealand
Pakistan
Chile
Southern Africa Customs
Union
Gulf Cooperation Council
“Wish List”
United States
Japan
Singapore
New Zealand
Brazil
Iceland
India
Japan
South Korea
As a result of these diversified avenues of interaction, Taiwan’s politi-
cal alliances today—at least in Central America—are arguably more robust
than they were five years ago. There are nevertheless some disappointments,
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the most painfully obvious of these being the paucity of private-sector
investment in spite of repeated declarations of official commitment to
the cause. It is certainly not for lack of government initiative that Central
America has not been flooded by Taiwanese capital as everybody had
hoped. In 2000, Taiwan and Panama cooperated in the establishment of
an export-processing zone in Colon City, Panama, and similar “Taiwan
Parks” have been set up in El Salvador and Nicaragua. During a trip to
El Salvador, Guatemala, and Panama in September 2005, President Chen
unveiled the so-called “Jung Pang,” or “co-prosperity” initiative, consisting
of a $250 million fund set aside to encourage investment by Taiwanese
companies in allied countries.
16
The government also established a Central
and South America Research Center, several new investment consulting
missions abroad, and a central coordinating office to facilitate investment
projects by the Taiwanese private sector overseas.
17
But the ambitious pro-
grams have yet to translate into tangible results. In Paraguay, for example,
the shortage of skilled labor keeps an ailing industrial park largely vacant.
18
An analysis by the Taiwanese embassy in the Dominican Republic report-
edly cited a weak industrial base, high electricity costs, unstable power sup-
ply, high labor costs, and a deteriorating crime rate as factors contributing
to an unsound investment environment.
19
It seems, in short, that good old-fashioned cash, in the form of de-
velopment aid, is still indispensable to the maintenance of these ties. The
bulk of Taiwan’s official aid budget is disbursed through the International
Cooperation and Development Fund (ICDF), established within the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1996, which had a budget of $388 million
by 2000. The deputy foreign minister at the time estimated that about
80 percent of aid went to diplomatic allies, while the rest was used to as-
sist developing countries that “have the potential to become allies.”
20
The
frequent reciprocal official visits are tellingly almost always accompanied
by promises of aid in the form of grants and loans. In late June 2006,
Dominican President Leonel Fernández returned from a four-day trip to
Taiwan bearing the promise of a fresh infusion of $60 million in aid. In
July, a visit by the Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves of St. Vincent & the
Grenadines secured a $15 million loan for the construction of an inter-
national airport in Kingstown.
21
Less than two weeks later, the Taiwanese
ambassador to St. Kitts & Nevis announced another $14 million loan for
the expansion of the international airport in St. Kitts ahead of the 2007
Cricket World Cup.
22
Over the past few years, Paraguay has received from
Taipei over $30 million in grants for housing projects, $20 million for a
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new congress building, and more money for scholarships. Taiwan also be-
came Paraguay’s biggest bilateral creditor after two Taiwanese banks offered
that country a $400 million loan.
23
In October 2000, the foreign ministry
put forward a bill requesting a gradual annual expansion of the ICDF’s
budget up to $940 million.
24
In addition, various other “soft” funds are
reported to exist, as in 2003, when the Taiwanese media uncovered a secret
$100 million fund in the intelligence agency earmarked for “buying influ-
ence abroad.”
25
Taiwan’s internal political transformation has created new obstacles
to its foreign engagements. While a divisively partisan domestic political
arena has generally undermined the state’s ability to pursue a coherent for-
eign policy, heightened expectations for transparency and budgetary ac-
countability now preclude the use of certain tools of diplomacy that were
liberally employed in past decades, such as bribes and payoffs. At the same
time, the democratic transitions undergone by many of Taipei’s allies since
the height of the Cold War created a parallel source of opposition to such
practices. Reports of a number of questionable fund transfers have sur-
faced in the past few years. In October 2004, former Costa Rican President
Miguel Angel Rodríguez was forced to resign as secretary-general of the
Organization of American States after less than one month in office when
both he and then-President Abel Pacheco came under intense judicial scru-
tiny for allegedly receiving kickbacks from French telecommunications
company Alcatel. The widening investigation subsequently found that
both also received funds totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars from the
Taiwanese government for unexplained purposes, unleashing a firestorm of
domestic criticism for Chen’s government, to say nothing of considerable
international embarrassment.
26
News of the Costa Rican scandal followed closely on the heels of alle-
gations in September 2004 that $1 million was transferred to Panamanian
President Mireya Moscoso without a full accounting.
27
In February 2005,
Guatemalan media revealed that President Alfonso Portillo received three
fund transfers of $500,000 each from the Taiwanese government, one of
them in the form of a check made out personally to Portillo four days before
he assumed office in 2000.
28
Opposition legislators in Taiwan called repeat-
edly for an end to “checkbook diplomacy” and the “buying” of alliances in
light of these revelations, while civil society groups in Guatemala similarly
registered their outrage. “It would be embarrassing for Taiwan to be ex-
posed as a government that corrupts other governments,” declared Carmen
Aida Ibarra, director of the Mirna Mack Foundation in Guatemala, as the
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results of the investigation were unfolding in the press.
29
Under domestic
pressures for openness and accountability stemming from both sides of
the relationship, the networks of personal connections that held these ties
together over decades may begin to strain.
Meanwhile, China’s ever-expanding economic prowess has enabled
it to become competitive in the dollar diplomacy game. The Chinese
Communist Party has an advantage over Taipei in this endeavor, to the
extent that its foreign ministry operates unconstrained by the scrutiny of
either a legislature or an independent media, and the Party’s willingness
to dig into its deep pockets has already paid some dividends. Dominica’s
Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit switched recognition to China in 2004
after receiving a pledge of $112 million over a six-year period from Beijing.
And though in 2003 Grenadian Prime Minister Keith Mitchell said that
maintaining ties with Taiwan is “practical,”
30
by 2005 he had changed his
tune, signing a joint communiqué declaring support for the “One China”
policy. In exchange for ending this 15-year relationship with Taiwan,
Grenada received support from China for rebuilding and expanding its
national stadium for the 2007 Cricket World Cup; the construction of
2,000 housing units; new hospital facilities; agricultural support; a $6 mil-
lion grant to complete projects previously financed by Taiwan; and an ad-
ditional $1 million scholarship fund.
31
ThE “swING sTATEs”
Given the increasing weight of the Chinese economy in the global
system overall, all of Taiwan’s allies in the Western Hemisphere are under
continually building pressures to for-
malize their budding ties with Beijing.
However, several among them stand
out either as being especially suscep-
tible to Beijing’s overtures, or for their
heightened strategic importance. At
this juncture, the loss of even one of
these key allies would represent a dam-
aging reversal for Taiwan. The frequent
use of the phrase “domino effect” vivid-
ly conveys the dread of a chain reaction
that could severely cripple Taiwan’s claim to sovereignty.
32
Nicaragua is a
clear case in point. In July 2006, representatives of the left-wing Sandinista
The frequent use of the
phrase “domino effect”
vividly conveys the dread of
a chain reaction that could
severely cripple Taiwan’s
claim to sovereignty.
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Front of National Liberation (FSLN) declared in the midst of a heated
presidential election campaign that Sandinista frontrunner Daniel Ortega
planned to establish formal ties with Beijing and downgrade the Taiwanese
embassy to “trade representative” status if he triumphed at the polls. The
Taiwanese envoy in Managua at the time categorically rejected the proposal
as unacceptable. Since Ortega’s victory in November, Nicaraguan officials
have been careful to assure Taipei that cooperation between the two coun-
tries will continue, and President Chen attended Ortega’s inauguration in
January 2007. Still, it appears that Taipei may have to be prepared to make
major concessions to maintain its increasingly tenuous links to Managua.
Ortega’s presumably anti-American streak, coupled with the reality of the
PRC’s economic weight in the post-Cold War world,
33
point to some rocky
times ahead for the bilateral relationship.
Speculation surrounding potential “swing states” also tends to center
on Panama, one of the most strategically significant countries in Central
America, where President Martín Torrijos invited Beijing to aid in the ex-
pansion of the Panama Canal. Panama’s voters approved a referendum on
this massive infrastructure project last October, which will surely create
new economic openings for Chinese construction companies. Relations
between Taipei and Panama had cooled visibly when Torrijos assumed of-
fice; Torrijos turned down Chen’s request to visit Panama during a trip
to Latin America in 2005.
34
Much has also been made of the fact that
Hutchinson-Whampoa, a Hong Kong-based Chinese shipping company
with historically close affiliations with the China’s People’s Liberation
Army, already holds a 50-year lease on management of key port facilities
at both ends of the canal. Panama is a significant leader in the region, so
if the Torrijos government arrives at the conclusion that the benefits of a
relationship with Beijing are just too overwhelming to ignore, the rest of
the isthmus may well follow suit.
35
In the Caribbean, the divided island of Hispaniola is fast becom-
ing the locus of the competition for influence. Under the leadership of
President Leonel Fernandez, the Dominican Republic appears to be inten-
sifying its contacts with the PRC, despite continuing diplomatic exchanges
with Taiwan.
36
Loss of recognition by the Dominican Republic, one of the
most populous countries in the region with a booming economy, would
seriously weaken Taiwan’s foothold in the Caribbean. But the diplomatic
wrangling extends to the western side of Hispaniola where neighboring
Haiti is likewise under enormous pressure from China. The PRC contrib-
uted 125 riot police to MINUSTAH, the Brazilian-led UN stabilization
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force deployed in Haiti, and then subsequently leveraged its permanent
member status on the Security Council to prevent Taiwanese Premier Su
Tseng-chang from attending the inauguration of Rene Préval in May 2006.
37
Since MINUSTAH is currently the principal force preventing a complete
disintegration of the security situation in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian gov-
ernment had no choice but to bend to Beijing’s will. Haiti, the poorest and
most vulnerable nation in the Western Hemisphere, is thus caught in a war
of attrition between China and Taiwan that threatens to undermine inter-
national efforts to bring the country back from the brink of state failure.
As the sole Taiwanese ally in South America, Paraguay is another
possible candidate for withdrawal of support. Paraguay’s membership in
Mercosur prevents it from signing a free-trade agreement with Taiwan
without approval from all other Mercosur members, which presents a seri-
ous obstacle to the deepening of bilateral trade. Even without formal dip-
lomatic ties, China already buys a good proportion of Paraguay’s soy crop
while supplying about one-fourth of its imports,
38
so normalized relations
would undoubtedly bring significant trade benefits. Paraguayan recogni-
tion of Taiwan is in many respects a “holdover from the rabidly anti-com-
munist Stroessner regime.”
39
Given that Stroessner’s dictatorship has been
out of office since 1989, officials in Asunción may just decide at some
point that the time has come to eliminate this relic of a policy.
doEs wAshINGToN CArE
?
The United States has been reflexively wary of any potential Chinese
incursions into a region that it has long considered its domain. While for
the most part Washington does not see Chinese economic penetration
of Latin America as inherently antithetical to American interests, there is
genuine concern over how the accelerating interactions might lead to mili-
tary or strategic cooperation at a later stage. Few can doubt that China’s
capacity for mischief in the Americas has greatly increased over the past
several years. The deployment of Chinese peacekeepers in Haiti—the first
in the Western Hemisphere—has particularly inflamed these anxieties.
Beijing has already attempted to sell arms to Venezuela;
40
the Chinese gov-
ernment also reportedly conducts intelligence activities in Latin America
through visitors, students, and front companies, and there are concerns
about the PRC using Cuba as a listening post to monitor developments in
the United States.
41
In April 2005, then-Assistant Secretary of State for Western
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Hemisphere Affairs Roger Noriega testified before the House International
Relations Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere that “[r]ivalry with
Taiwan plays into China’s courting of Latin American countries. . . . A key
Chinese political objective is to isolate Taiwan, and China will actively
court those 12 countries in this Hemisphere that recognize Taiwan dip-
lomatically.”
42
Against this backdrop, conservative voices in Washington
argue that the United States has a vital interest in aiding Taiwan in main-
taining its alliances in Central America and the Caribbean, if only to check
the expansion of Beijing’s geopolitical reach. In the spring of 2006, U.S.
assistant secretary Tom Shannon traveled to Beijing to discuss China’s ac-
tivities in Latin America, marking the first such visit by a U.S. official for
this purpose. Some analysts advocate taking measured but proactive steps
in reaction to widening Chinese influence in Latin America, for example
by lowering tariffs on U.S. cotton exports to the region through the pas-
sage of CAFTA. Making Central American textiles more competitive in
the American market reduces U.S. dependence on Chinese imports while
strengthening the export sectors of Central American economies.
43
Aside from the strategic concerns articulated by the conservative side
of the political spectrum, there is also arguably a normative dimension to
U.S. support of Taiwan. Failure to protect a country that achieved eco-
nomic prosperity and political stability under its tutelage would under-
mine American credibility. Yet, on the whole, the United States finds itself
in an awkward position with respect to the cross-strait dispute. The U.S.’s
official position is, understandably, that other governments’ decisions to
maintain or sever diplomatic relations with Taiwan are for those govern-
ments to make.
44
Moreover, since Washington also officially recognizes the
PRC, it has little moral authority with which to lobby other governments
on Taiwan’s behalf, and little apparent motivation to do so.
While Beijing clearly hopes to win over diplomatic holdouts in Central
America and the Caribbean, there are some indications that China does
not view this as an urgent task, but rather as a long-term goal. The issue of
Taiwan’s recognition is certainly never absent from the calculations of the
Chinese leadership, and China will not feel its rise to power is complete
without returning Taiwan to the mainland’s political control.
45
As a matter
of pure financial leverage, the PRC undoubtedly has the capacity to outbid
Taiwan if it so desired. Yet observers have noted a recent softening in Beijing’s
stance toward Taiwan.
46
The apparent willingness to accept the status quo in
the short term may reflect, in part, the rising confidence of Chinese officials
that time will favor their ultimate triumph in the cross-strait conflict—and
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perhaps, consequently, that the project of pursuing new allies in the Western
Hemisphere can move to the backburner for the time being.
47
Indeed, de-
spite China’s stunning economic growth and newfound global influence,
more than two years have passed since it gained a new ally in Latin America,
which last occurred when Grenada threw its support to the PRC in January
2005. By contrast, in May 2007, the newly elected administration of conser-
vative Sir John Compton in St. Lucia reversed the prior government’s 1997
decision and resumed ties with Taiwan.
48
But if the estimation of Chinese officials is correct, Taiwanese diplo-
mats stationed throughout Central America and the Caribbean are fighting
a losing battle. The eventual turning of the diplomatic tide in the PRC’s
favor, and the resulting embrace of Beijing by Latin America’s remaining
holdouts, would leave Washington even more isolated in its support for
Taiwan while giving China greater influence over a crucial part of the de-
fensive perimeter of the United States. At present, the United States has
publicly reacted with nonchalance towards the prospect that Taiwan’s
hemispheric alliances will continue to unravel. But as China’s growing
reach into Central America and the Caribbean continues to undermine
Taiwan, Washington’s silence will become ever more puzzling to its closest
neighbors—and ever more pleasing to Beijing.
A douBlE-EdGEd sword
The Latin American and Caribbean nations at the center of the dip-
lomatic rivalry between China and Taiwan differ significantly from many
of their neighbors who have already recognized Beijing. In general, they
have smaller populations, weaker economies, and are disproportionately
represented in regions closer to the United States. Today, not a single ma-
jor Latin American country maintains diplomatic ties with Taiwan; most
with significant economies and abundant natural resources—including
Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and the Andean nations—established
ties with China many years ago. The nations that most recently dropped
their allegiances to Taiwan consist mainly of small island states, including
the Bahamas and St. Lucia in 1997, Dominica in 2004, and Grenada in
2005. Only St. Lucia has since recanted that decision. The pressure on the
remaining Caribbean countries outside of China’s fold will only continue
to build in the coming years, while Taiwan’s unbroken string of allies in
Central America will emerge as the next focus of the PRC’s diplomatic of-
fensive. Paraguay, the last holdout in South America, will likewise find its
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position to be increasingly incompatible with the desires of its Mercosur
partners, especially Brazil, to strengthen ties with China.
This intensifying attention from China and Taiwan is not necessarily
unwelcome for Central America and the Caribbean. Indeed, most of these
countries are struggling to achieve successful integration into the global
economy, and they are only too eager to both seek out new partners and
maximize the economic gains from existing relationships. Both China and
Taiwan have shown interest in funding infrastructure projects that have
fallen out of favor among Western donors, and the Latin American land-
scape is becoming host to an archipelago of bridges, roads, tunnels, and
stadiums built as by-products of the cross-strait competition. Moreover,
diplomatic relations with one partner does not preclude sustained econom-
ic trade with the other; many nations that recognize China still do business
with Taiwan, and the reverse is also true.
Still, the diplomatic competition between China and Taiwan in Latin
America and the Caribbean is rife with unintended consequences that have
proven to be a double-edged sword for many countries. Since 2004, the
UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti has come to the brink of losing its man-
date each time the renewal date approaches, because China seeks to use its
troop contribution and UN Security Council veto as an instrument to pry
Haiti away from Taiwan’s grasp. Paraguay, as the weakest member of the
Mercosur trade group, may be forced to revoke its recognition of Taiwan,
thus losing its most enduring trade relationship outside of the hemisphere.
Taiwan’s financial gifts have been at the center of several major corruption
scandals throughout Central America, and communist China is hardly a
force for greater transparency and good governance. Even countries that
switch their allegiance to China often find that the diplomatic pressure re-
mains intense. In Dominica, when opposition leaders flew Taiwanese flags
at their political rallies, the Chinese government formally protested, raising
concerns about freedom of speech. In February 2007, Grenada committed
one of its most grievous errors in recent memory when officials acciden-
tally played the Taiwanese national anthem at the inauguration of a new
national stadium built by China at a cost of $40 million. Prime Minister
Keith Mitchell watched in horror as the planned moment of triumph de-
scended into an unmitigated diplomatic fiasco, and he quickly ordered an
investigation into the matter, saying that “it has saddened and ached my
heart.”
49
Other Caribbean countries were both amused and troubled by the
incident, which they viewed as a cautionary tale that reflected the region’s
delicate balancing act.
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In the final analysis, the choice between China and Taiwan will re-
main a highly charged foreign policy decision for a narrow swathe of vul-
nerable Latin American countries for many years to come. For most of the
region, however, it is largely a settled matter, with China by far the victor.
External factors, including China’s future growth trajectory, the evolving
nature of the China-Taiwan relationship, and the dynamism of Taiwan’s
foreign policy, will all shape how individual countries in the region respond
to the range of economic incentives and coercive tactics that they will face.
The United States may become a more vigorous voice in advising the
Central American and Caribbean countries how to address this issue, but
for the moment, it has opted to refrain from clearly choosing sides. Setting
aside several notable exceptions, however, the fact remains that most small
countries in Latin America and the Caribbean have never been particularly
good at manipulating larger powers to get the best possible deal for their
own interests. In confronting the competing crosswinds from China and
Taiwan, the nations at the center of this diplomatic endgame will almost
certainly face choppy waters ahead.
n
ENdNoTEs
1 Countries with formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan: Paraguay, Guatemala, El Salvador,
Nicaragua, Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama, Belize, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, St.
Vincent & the Grenadines, St. Kitts & Nevis, Gambia, Burkina Faso, Malawi, Swaziland, Sao
Tome and Principe, Tuvalu, the Solomon Islands, Nauru, Kiribati, Palau, the Marshall Islands,
St. Lucia and the Vatican.
2 Figure 1 was assembled by the authors based on official government statements and news wire
reports.
3 The locations within the United States where Taiwanese officials are permitted to refuel are
seen as a barometer for the current status of the Taiwan-U.S. relationship. In May 2006, the
United States refused Taipei’s request to allow President Chen Shui-bian to refuel in either
San Francisco or New York on his way to Paraguay, offering only a transit stop in Alaska or
Hawaii. This snub was interpreted as a rebuke for Chen’s recent pro-independence rhetoric.
See Minxin Pei, “Crash Landing for Transit Diplomacy,”
Strait Times,
May 9, 2006,
<www.
carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=18337&prog=zch> (accessed
March 13, 2007).
4 Francisco Luis Pérez Esposito, “Taiwán y América Latina: Estrategia de Aproximación y
Situación Actual” (UNISCI Discussion Paper, Tamkang University, Taiwan, January 2004), 11.
5 Kleiner Lopez, “Santiago, en la mira empresas de Taiwán,”
El Diario Libre,
June 26, 2006,
<www.diariolibre.com/app/article.aspx?id=70571> (accessed June 31, 2006).
6 “Taiwan is Largest Aid Donor to Many Caribbean Nations,”
Caribbean Net News
, December
9, 2003, <www.caribbeannetnews.com/2003/12/09/taiwan.htm> (accessed June 6, 2006).
7 Cynthia Watson, “Adios Taipei, Hola Beijing: Taiwan’s Relations with Latin America,”
China
Brief
4, no. 11 (May 27, 2004): 8. (“Taiwan has been able to offer two particular types of
assistance to (Central America) repeatedly: earthquake and typhoon recovery aid. The Central
American states suffer from both of these natural disasters periodically, as does the island.
Taiwan’s strong response to these problems has translated into much-needed help for the
region such as when Hurricane Mitch hit in 1998.”)
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8 Interview with Teng Chung-Chian, Washington, DC, July 5, 2006.
9 Daniel P. Erikson, “A Dragon in the Andes: China, Venezuela, and U.S. Energy Security,”
Military Review
(July–August 2006): 83–89.
10 Larry Luxner, “In Caribbean and Latin America, Chinese Dragon Wakes Up,”
Seis Continentes
(Summer 2005), <www.luxner.com/cgi-bin/view_article.cgi?articleID=1378> (accessed August
24, 2006).
11 Directorate General of Customs, Ministry of Finance R.O.C., Bureau of Foreign Trade-
Trade Statistics (January 1989 to February 2007), <http://cus93.trade.gov.tw/english/FSCE/
FSC0011E.ASP> (accessed April 25, 2007).
12 Cynthia Watson, “A Warming Friendship: Part II of a Two Part Series on China, Taiwan, and
Latin America,”
China Brief
4, no. 10 (June 10, 2004): 2. See also Adm. Alejandro Kenney
(Ret.), “La Presencia de China en América Latina: Una Visión sobre la Seguridad desde el
Cono Sur,”
Military Review
(May–June 2006): 42.
13 Directorate General of Customs, Ministry of Finance R.O.C., Bureau of Foreign Trade-
Trade Statistics (January 1989 to February 2007), <http://cus93.trade.gov.tw/english/FSCE/
FSC0011E.ASP> (accessed April 25, 2007).
14 Teng.
15 Bilaterals.Org, <www.bilaterals.org> (accessed April 12, 2007).
16 Ramon Huang and Luis Huang, “Manufacturers Encouraged to Take Advantage of
‘Prosperity Project,’”
Central News Agency Taiwan
, May 22, 2006, <www.lexis.com/research/
retrieve/frames?_m=284482a4ec303f7899f391b0cd5de967&csvc=bl&cform=bool&_
fmtstr=XCITE&docnum=1&_startdoc=1&wchp=dGLbVlb-zSkAk&_md5=025c0c155b7970
159fd3031a20eea2bb> (accessed April 25, 2007).
17 “Taiwan to Set up Office to Boost Investment in Latin America,”
Asia Pulse Pty. Limited
,
January 30, 2006.
18 “Charity or China?”
The Economist
, May 13, 2006, <http://w3.lexis.com/lawschoolreg/
researchlogin04.asp> (accessed April 25, 2007).
19 “MOFA Confirms Dominican Grant Stands at US$50m,”
Taipei Times
, July 8, 2006, <www.
taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2006/07/08/2003317785> (accessed July 11, 2006).
20 Ibid.
21 “Taiwan assists financing of St. Vincent International Airport,”
BBC Monitoring/Caribbean
Media Corporation
, July 4, 2006, <www.lexis.com/research/retrieve/frames?_m=f36eb1
0928b4e9df5e8f0eb9dff2f815&csvc=bl&cform=bool&_fmtstr=FULL&docnum=1&_
startdoc=1&wchp=dGLbVlb-zSkAk&_md5=b306e57c4943f5f772f7f6b5c2f7b61c> (accessed
April 25, 2007).
22 “Taiwan funds airport expansion in St. Kitts and Nevis,”
BBC Monitoring Latin America
, July
15, 2006, <www.lexis.com/research/retrieve/frames?_m=b1d809d43811f440d02b8cef837a
ffd8&csvc=bl&cform=bool&_fmtstr=FULL&docnum=1&_startdoc=1&wchp=dGLbVlb-
zSkAk&_md5=48fd622a2968e262755721096080bca0> (accessed April 25, 2007).
23 “Charity or China?”
24 “Foreign Ministry Wants to Boost Aid Budget,”
Liberty Times
, October 13, 2000, <http://
th.gio.gov.tw/show.cfm?news_id=6465> (accessed Aug. 24, 2006).
25 “Taiwan is Largest Aid Donor to Many Caribbean Nations,”
Caribbean Net News
, December
9, 2003, <www.caribbeannetnews.com/2003/12/09/taiwan.htm> (accessed June 6, 2006).
26 “Taiwan Ensnared in Corruption Scandal Around Ousted OAS Chief,”
Deutsche Presse-
Agentur
, October 13, 2004, <www.lexis.com/research/retrieve/frames?_m=5a17ec4e2
d2e2679be25a55e7e28cb68&csvc=bl&cform=bool&_fmtstr=FULL&docnum=1&_
startdoc=1&wchp=dGLbVlb-zSkAk&_md5=4e7a3dbeebd6938fae8097d4dcda3571>
(accessed April 25, 2007).
27 James Aparicio, “Donaciones de Taiwan bajo la lupa.” Panama AFP/
El Nuevo Diario
,
September 20, 2004, <http://archivo.elnuevodiario.com.ni/2004/septiembre/20-septiembre-
2004/internacionales/> (accessed July 24, 2006).
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28 “Portillo recibió ‘tajada’ de Taiwan,”
El Nuevo Diario
, February 12, 2005, <http://archivo.
elnuevodiario.com.ni/2005/febrero/12-febrero-2005/nacional/nacional-20050212-02.html>
(accessed July 24, 2006); see also Joe Hung, “Time to Stop Buying Foreign Friendship,”
National Policy Foundation
, December 6, 2004, <www.npf.org.tw/PUBLICATION/NS/093/
NS-C-093-196.htm> (accessed June 6, 2006); Joe Hung, “Dollar Diplomacy Continued,”
The
China Post,
February 17, 2005 <www.npf.org.tw/PUBLICATION/NS/094/NS-C-094-024.
htm> (accessed June 6, 2006).
29 “Portillo recibió ‘tajada’ de Taiwan.”
30 “Taiwan is Largest Aid Donor to Many Caribbean Nations.”
31 Dan Erikson, “China in the Caribbean: A Benign Dragon?”
FOCAL Point Spotlight on the
Americas
4, no. 5 (April 2005).
32 See “Panama Trip Seen as Bid by Taipei to Avert Further Diplomatic Losses,”
South China
Morning Post
, August 9, 2006, <www.lexis.com/research/retrieve/frames?_m=eeb594fc
326dba6e12cda9996865aa01&csvc=bl&cform=bool&_fmtstr=FULL&docnum=1&_
startdoc=1&wchp=dGLbVlb-zSkAk&_md5=27e0f0600057b14e25879aa742ebff05>
(accessed April 25, 2007); “Taiwan Concerned About Shaky Ties with Honduras,”
Deutsche
Presse-Agentur
, August 8, 2006, <www.lexis.com/research/retrieve/frames?_m=5f536905
abd10fd08601fbda53c89052&csvc=bl&cform=bool&_fmtstr=XCITE&docnum=1&_
startdoc=1&wchp=dGLbVlb-zSkAk&_md5=229f5f9a761a365d578feb09b14e6523>
(accessed April 25, 2007).
33 See “Ayuda de Taiwan solo ha sido prebendaria,”
El Nuevo Diario
, June 27, 2006, <www.
elnuevodiario.com.ni/2006/06/27/politica/22744> (accessed June 29, 2006).
34 “Taiwan Tries to Save Ties With Three Latin American Countries with Aid,”
Deutsche Presse-
Agentur
, August 15, 2006.
35 Cynthia Watson, “Adios Taipei, Hola Beijing: Taiwan’s Relations with Latin America,” 8.
36 Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Michael Lu indicated that Chinese officials were often
seen meeting secretly with Dominican officials.
Taipei Times
, July 8, 2006. United Evening
News in Taiwan also reported that Fernandez was actively making contact with the PRC, often
meeting with Chinese officials on the sly, furtively avoiding Taiwanese embassy officials when
this happened. “Taiwan donates US$50 Mil to Dominican Republic,”
China Post
, July 8,
2006, <www.chinapost.com.tw/news/archives/200678/85511.htm> (accessed April 25, 2007).
37 “Taiwan Vice Foreign Minister to Attend Haitian Presidential Inauguration,”
BBC
Worldwide Monitoring
, May 13, 2006, <www.lexis.com/research/retrieve/frames?_m=1dd70
b12a5e0a82f51499b85b79f2972&csvc=bl&cform=bool&_fmtstr=XCITE&docnum=1&_
startdoc=1&wchp=dGLbVlb-zSkAk&_md5=b2fe51d330e5b12a4af2d8e626e0a043>
(accessed April 25, 2007). Huang replaced Su on the trip after China threatened to boycott the
peacekeeping mission.
38 “Charity or China?’
39 Luxner.
40 Kelly Hearn, “China’s ‘Peaceful’ Invasion,”
The Washington Times
, November 20, 2005,
<www.washtimes.com/specialreport/20051120-124045-3471r.htm> (accessed June 20, 2006).
China has peddled fighter aircraft, long-range defense radars, and a communications satellite
to Caracas.
41 Peter Brookes, “China’s Influence in the Western Hemisphere,” (Heritage Lectures No. 873,
The Heritage Foundation, April 19, 2005), 4.
42 House International Relations Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere,
China’s Influence
in the Western Hemisphere
, 109th Cong., 1st sess., April 6, 2005, <http://usinfo.state.gov/eap/
Archive/2005/Apr/07-272076.html> (accessed January 31, 2007).
43 See John J. Tkacik, “CAFTA’s Covert Opponent: China,” The Heritage Foundation Web
Memo #778, <www.heritage.org/Research/TradeandForeignAid/wm778.cfm> (accessed June
12, 2006).
44 State Department Spokesperson Q&A, November 4, 2004, <www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/
ps/2004/37820.htm> (accessed June 12, 2006).
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45 Brookes, 2.
46 See Edward Cody, “China Easing Its Stance on Taiwan,”
The Washington Post
, June 15, 2005,
A14.
47 An official Taiwanese representative disputed this interpretation, comparing Chinese
diplomatic maneuvers to a duck paddling furiously under the water while appearing to glide
gracefully above the surface.
48 See Ernie Seon, “St. Lucia Tells China to ‘Cool It’ Over Recognition Wrangle,”
Caribbean
News Network
, April 27, 2007, <www.cananews.net/news/131/ARTICLE/10129/2007-04-
27.html> (accessed April 29, 2007).
49 “Grenada Goofs: Anthem Mix-up,”
BBC News
, February 5, 2007, <www.bbc.co.uk/
caribbean/news/story/2007/02/070205_grendiplomatic2.shtml> (accessed March 27, 2007).