Strategic Trust-Building

Threading the Needle: Proposals for U.S. and Chinese Actions on Arms Sales to Taiwan

The EastWest Institute has released a new report that offers several new ideas for managing one of the most contentious issues in the bilateral relationship between the United States and China—that of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan. Former U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz calls it "a bold and pathbreaking effort to demystify the issue."

Click to Download

Download the report in simplified Chinese.

Threading the Needle: Proposals for U.S. and Chinese Actions on Arms Sales to Taiwan is unique in a number of ways:

  • It is the first report by a U.S.-based think tank to conclude publicly that both the United States and China have, for their own reasons, not fully complied with their commitments to each other on the issue of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan.
  • It argues that the United States can simultaneously adhere to established U.S. law and policy, respect China's legitimate concerns and stand up for Taiwan. The conventional wisdom is that these three aspects are mutually exclusive, and the U.S. government can only achieve two of these objectives at the same time.
  • It recommends a set of unilateral and voluntary actions by the United States and China that are new and viable. It proposes that the United States cap its annual arms deliveries (as opposed to announced sales) at a level that complies with the key stipulation of the U.S.-China Joint Communique of August 17, 1982, adjusted for inflation. It also calls on China to remove one of its five short-range missile brigades aimed at Taiwan and to dismantle the underlying infrastructure. These two recommendations are unique because they are specific and broadly commensurate in scale and impact.

Co-author Piin-Fen Kok, director of EWI's China, East Asia and United States Program, said: "This report seeks to present a balanced assessment of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan and China's military buildup across the Taiwan Strait over the last 30 years, and provide some fresh thinking on how we can achieve a better status quo and reduced tensions in this area."

Co-author David Firestein EWI's vice president, added: "Any way forward must have the buy-in of all three stakeholders—the United States, mainland China and Taiwan."

Threading the Needle is the result of two years of research and discreet consultations with policymakers and scholars from the United States, China and Taiwan. It has received advance praise from key experts in all three places. Along with Shultz, they include: former U.S. National Security Advisor, General (ret.) James L. Jones; Ambassador Ma Zhengang, President of the China Arms Control and Disarmament Association; and Ambassador Stephen S.F. Chen, Convener of the National Security Division at Taiwan's National Policy Foundation.

Click here to view coverage of the report, in the Taipei Times

Click here to read about the report's launch event in Washington D.C.

Click here to listen to co-author David Firestein discuss the report in an interview with Radio France Internationale.

Click here to read Piin-Fen Kok discuss recommendations from Threading the Needle in the University of Nottingham's China Policy Institute blog.

Global Narcotics Flows and the Global Financial and Economic Crisis

Overview

The CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program and the EastWest Institute present:

A roundtable discussion with:
Viktor Ivanov
Director, Federal Drug Control Service of the Russian Federation
 
Moderated by:

Andrew Kuchins
Director and Senior Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Program, CSIS

Jacqueline McLaren Miller
Senior Associate, U.S. Global Engagement, EastWest Institute

Mr. Viktor Ivanov is on an official visit to the United States for the fifth meeting of the Counternarcotics Working Group of the U.S.-Russia Bipartisan Presidential Commission. His presentation at CSIS is a timely discussion on the growing threats posed by the rising narcotics industry. Russia is in the midst of a drug crisis - President Medvedev has called Russia's drug problem a threat to national security and a matter of urgent attention. The United States and Russia have a program of active counternarcotics cooperation, with special focus on the flow of drugs from Afghanistan.

Fresh off meeting with his U.S. counterpart in Chicago, Mr. Ivanov will offer his views on the present scenario in Russia and Eurasia and discuss the goals and challenges of combatting the narcotics industry and their effect on the global financial and economic downturn.

Seating is limited. Please RSVP to REP@csis.org.

Nuclear Disarmament: A Compass Point for Progress and Accountability

Overview

On October 24, 2011 (United Nations Day), the EastWest Institute, the Global Security Institute, and the Center for Non-Proliferation Studies will convene a high-level consultation at the United Nations with the Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon participating, to promote breakthroughs in accountability for reduction of nuclear weapons.

OBJECTIVES

  1. Evaluate progress made since October 2008 towards long-term goals in nuclear disarmament, specifically towards implementing the Secretary-General’s five-point proposal for disarmament and identify and advocate new opportunities for progress.
  2. Identify next steps for holding states accountable for their commitments to reduce their reliance on nuclear weapons.
  3. Mobilize international will to reconcile current nuclear postures, deployments and missions with political commitments.

OUTCOME AND IMPACT

 

A report from the consultation will highlight the main outcomes and recommendations of the consultation. It will be finalized and printed by mid-December 2011. The Partners will pursue a rigorous dissemination, advocacy, and outreach strategy to promote the findings and outcomes from the consultation. The Partners will:

> Circulate the findings and related publications under personal letters to all ministers of defense and all foreign ministers across the globe.
> Distribute the report to their high-level networks of government officials, parliamentarians, diplomats, policymakers, retired military professionals, and academics.
> Promote the findings through a series of high-level one-on-one advocacy meetings and roundtable presentations in major capitals.
> Publicize the outcomes, successes, and concrete actions in the international media

FORMAT

The consultation, to be held on 24 October 2011, will begin with opening remarks by the UN Secretary-General, reflecting on progress made towards his proposal, and two other high profile world figures to be followed by two morning plenary sessions with recognized experts. In the afternoon, three breakthrough working groups will be convened to discuss the next steps towards advancing the necessary framework to achieve a nuclear weapons free world, technical and political steps needed for greater accountability and verification, and addressing the causes and effects of the nuclear umbrella and advancing negative security assurances.

INQUIRIES

Please contact EWI in New York (Raymond Karam) or Brussels (Greg Austin).

Promoting International Security and Stability through Disarmament

Overview

The EastWest Institute, in partnership with the Permanent Mission of Kazakhstan to the United Nations, is hosting a consultation on Promoting International Security and Stability through Disarmament. The consultation will discuss how best to implement action point five of the 2010 NPT Review Conference Final Document. Panelists and participants will identify opportunities for cooperative action to promote “international stability, peace, and undiminished and increased security” and facilitate further progress towards disarmament.

The panel of experts will address the following questions:

  • What are the next steps in further reductions in the global stockpile of nuclear weapons? How can ongoing disarmament efforts be designed to ensure, rather than undermine, strategic stability at lower nuclear numbers?
  • How can nuclear and non-nuclear weapon states work together to decrease the role of nuclear weapons in security doctrines while balancing national security interests?
  • What role can non-nuclear weapon states play in building transparency and promoting confidence building measures in ongoing disarmament discussions?

 

Prioritizing the NPT Action Plan

Overview

On the occasion marking the International Day against Nuclear Tests, the EastWest Institute and the Permanent Mission of Kazakhstan to the United Nations will hold a high-level consultation on Prioritizing the NPT Action Plan.  The consultation will discuss the Final Document of the 2010 NPT Review Conference, which has outlined an ambitious 64-point action plan, as well as priorities and next steps in international efforts towards disarmament and nonproliferation.  Experts, policymakers, diplomats from the UN missions, and UN officials will discuss both the challenges and leadership opportunities for operationalizing the action plan of the 2010 Review Conference.

A full report to follow.

EWI's Eighth Annual Worldwide Security Conference

Overview

MANAGING BUSINESS RISK THROUGH POLICY ENTREPRENEURSHIP

October 3 – 5, 2011 | Brussels

SELECTED TOPICS

> Emergency Preparedness for an International Crisis in Cyberspace

> Confidence-Building Measures in Cybersecurity

> Measuring the Cybersecurity problem: towards a trusted international entity

> Building National Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Arabian Peninsula

> The G20 and Economic Security: Global Policies and Local Actions

> Meeting the Costs of Collective Security in Southwest Asia to 2020

CRAFTING NEW SOLUTIONS

The eighth annual Worldwide Security Conference (WSC8) aimed to:

> continue EWI’s tradition of articulating new goals for global security and the steps needed to achieve them,

> stimulate progressive improvement in the way global security is managed and reviewed,

> bring together leading policy makers, specialists, business executives, community leaders and journalists from around the world for debate and networking.

INTERNATIONAL PROMINENCE

The World Customs Organization has hosted and co-sponsored the Worldwide Security Conference for the last 6 years. The French Government, in its capacity as Chair of the G8, has agreed to co-sponsor the WSC8. This will continue the trend of G8 Presidential support from the Russian, German, Japanese, Italian and Canadian Governments in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010, respectively. The WSC is unique for its emphasis on bridging East-West divides by ensuring that fresh voices from Asia are prominent in the debates. The Council of Europe co-sponsored several workshops of WSC 6 and the Australian and Japanese Governments co-sponsored as special session of WSC 7.

WSC8 EVENTS

 
 
October 3, 2011| World Customs Organization Headquarters, Brussels
color:#365F91">8th Worldwide Security Conference:  Managing Business Risk through Policy Entrepreneurship
 
 
 
 
October 4-5, 2011| European Parliament and EWI office, Brussels (invitation only)
color:#365F91">Confidence-Building Measures in Cybersecurity
 
 
 
 
October 4, 2011| European Parliament, Brussels (invitation only)
color:#365F91">Towards a G20 Action Plan for National Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Arabian Peninsula
 
 
October 4, 2011| World Customs Organization, Brussels (invitation only)
color:#365F91">Shaping Collective Security in Southwest Asia: Are Breakthrough Measures Possible?
 
 

 

> Click here for the image gallery.

> Click here for conference's main day live blog.

> Click here for conference media coverage.

> Conference updates: Update #1 | Udate #2

SELECTED SPEAKERS

Francis Finlay, Co-Chairman, EastWest Institute
General (ret.) Harald Kujat, Former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of German Armed Forces and former Chair of NATO’s Military Committee
Christian Masset, Director General of Globalisation, Development and Partnerships, French Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Paul Nicholas, Senior Director, Global Security Strategy, Microsoft Corporation
Ambassador Marc Perrin de Brichambaut, Former Secretary General, OSCE
Dr. Jaroslaw Pietras, Director-General, Climate change, environment, health, consumers, education, youth, culture, audiovisual, Council of the European Union
Dr. Armen Sarkissian, President, Eurasia House International; Vice-Chairman, EWI’s Board of Directors
Jamie Shea, Deputy Assistant Secretary General for Emerging Security Challenges Division, NATO HQ  
Vladislav P. Sherstuyk, Adviser to the Secretary of the Security Council of  the Russian Federation; Director of Lomonosov Moscow State University Institute of Information Security Issues
Dr. Goran Svilanović, Co-Ordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental Activities
Ambassador Yaşar Yakış, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Turkey
Dimitri Zenghelis, Associate Fellow, The Royal Institute of International Affairs, Energy, Environment and Development Programme
 

Security Park | AllConferences.Com

The Security and Defence Agenda

Overview

The Security and Defense Agenda, a Brussels-based think tank, is organizing the 2010 Security Jam in collaboration with IBM to analyze and clarify the changing threats to international peace. Officially supported by both the European Commission and by NATO, the Jam will bring together thousands of representatives and experts from around the world to take part in an ambitious online debate to provide input into strategy reviews and rethinks being undertaken today.

The event is open to defense and security specialists and non-specialists alike with the aim of widening the security debate beyond purely military matters. The growing importance of NGOs in security thinking and practice will be reflected in the event's weeklong discussions.

The result of the Jam will be an official report with ten key recommendations. These recommendations will be officially presented to leaders of the EU and NATO, among others, in April 2010.

To learn more about the event, please visit the Security and Defense Agenda’s web site.

NATO-Russia Strategic Concepts

Overview

On Friday, January 29, EWI will host a roundtable discussion on new NATO-Russia strategic concepts with Ambassador Dmitry Rogozin, Head of the Mission of the Russian Federation in Europe, and Ambassador Hans-Friedrich von Ploetz, former Ambassador of Germany to the Russian Federation.  The purpose of the roundtable is to identify ways to strengthen the NATO-Russia relationship.   Discussion topics will include NATO’s open-door policy, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and its limited decision-making power, the Treaty on Convernational Forces in Europe and Anti-Ballistic Missile defence in Europe.  EWI Vice President Greg Austin and Senior Associate Jacqueline McLaren Miller will moderate the discussion.

Ambassador Dmitry Rogozin, Russian Ambassador to NATO.

From 2002 to 2004, Ambassador Rogozin was the Russian president’s special envoy dealing with relations between the European Union and the Kaliningrad exclave. He is a former leader of the Rodina (Motherland) party, the former Chairman of the Duma's Foreign Affairs Committee and the former Vice-Chairman of Duma’s Committee for Security.

Ambassador Hans-Friedrich von Ploetz, Member of Experts’ Group on NATO’s new Strategic Concept.

Ambassador Ploetz retired from the German Foreign Service in 2005, following a long and distinguished career as a diplomat.  Between 2002 and 2005 he was Ambassador of Germany to the Russian Federation and, prior to this, he was German Ambassador to the United Kingdom.  In the early 1990s he was Permanent Representative of Germany on the North Atlantic Council, having been promoted from the position of Deputy Permanent Representative.  Ambassador von Ploetz has also occupied a number of senior positions at the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs, heading departments dealing with transatlantic and European security issues. 

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