scholarly journals US policy on Taiwan 2002–2018

Author(s):  
YAN BINGLIANG

The Taiwan issue has always been the most sensitive and difficult in China – US relations. This article examines the US policy on Taiwan from 2002 to 2018 in the context of the Sino – US relations related to China’s territorial unification and sovereignty integrity. The article also concerns the global strategic interests of the United States. In particular, after the Trump administration came to power it fre- quently touched China’s bottom line of maintaining adherence to the One China poli- cy, which led to a rise of the Taiwan issue and aggravated the turmoil in the Taiwan Strait. The US policy toward Taiwan has changed not only on the issue of peace and stability across Taiwan Strait but also related to the increased risk of Sino – US mili- tary conflict. Therefore, it is very important to consider the US policy toward Taiwan during outlined period. The author adopts historical analysis and literature research methods, and based on a significant number of the scientific research results of Chinese and American scholars. The research content covers the Taiwan policy of the administra- tion Bush, Obama, and Trump. The author attempts to expose the strategic essence behind the US policy toward Taiwan, focusing on analyzing the relationship between US policymaking and the China and Taiwan’ relationship factors. The article finds that the US Taiwan policy can be generally regarded as subordination to the China strategy, but there are some cases different from it. On this basis, this article discov- ers variables of China – US relations, US – Taiwan relations, the United States Con- gress and Taiwan politics to prove the hypothesis that US Taiwan policy follows the China’s policy in the majority of cases.

Author(s):  
Pang Yang Huei

In Strait Rituals: China, Taiwan, and the United States and in the Taiwan Strait Crises, 1954-1958, this book argues that the Taiwan Strait Crises could be understood as an evolution towards tacit accommodation. Exploiting new materials from mainland China, Taiwan and the United States, a reevaluation of the international relations of all three parties via a simultaneous presentation of their disparate perspectives is made. At the heart of its argument, this book proposes that conflict resolution had become ritualized progressively as the protagonists implicitly constructed a framework of understanding. An uneasy peace was thus a product of a ritualization of discourses and maneuvers, embodied in verbal signaling and symbolic gestures. These exacting understandings laid the groundwork for a substantive change in the nature of Sino-American relations - from hostile nuclear confrontation in 1954 to tacit accommodation in 1958. In particular, this book highlights relevant aspects of “culture” to better understand the intricacies of the Sino-US-ROC relations. This aspect complements existing scholarship on realism, strategy, economics, ideology and domestic aspects of the Taiwan Strait crises. Strait Rituals will show the significance of “ritualization” in explaining the transition of “tacit communication” to “tacit accommodation.” It will demonstrate how both parties engaged in ritualized actions that facilitated the process of conflict resolution. Strait Rituals will establish how the US and China achieved a limited but shared understanding of the modus operandi of the other party through their ritualized actions in terms of their use of public symbols, identity issues, cultural images and official discourses on one hand, and military posturing, diplomatic canvassing for international support, and negotiations on the other hand.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (19) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yangbo Sun ◽  
Buyun Liu ◽  
Shuang Rong ◽  
Yang Du ◽  
Guifeng Xu ◽  
...  

Background Food insecurity is a global leading public health challenge that affects not only developing countries but also developed countries, including the United States. About 50 million Americans are food insecure. In this study we examined the associations of the adult food insecurity with all‐cause and cardiovascular disease mortality in a nationally representative sample of US adults. Methods and Results We included 27 188 US adults (age ≥40 years of age) who participated in the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2014. Food insecurity status was assessed using the Food Security Survey Module developed by the US Department of Agriculture. Mortality from all causes and cardovascular disease was ascertained through data linkage to the National Death Index through December 31, 2015. We used multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression with sampling weights to estimate hazard ratios ( HR s) and 95% CIs of all‐cause and cardiovascular disease mortality, according to food security status. During 205 389 person‐years of the period, 5039 deaths occurred, including 1084 cardiovascular disease deaths. After adjustment for age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, income, and dietary and lifestyle factors, participants with very low food security had higher risk of all‐cause and cardiovascular disease mortality, with multivariable‐adjusted HR s of 1.32 (95% CI , 1.07–1.62), and 1.53 (95% CI, 1.04–2.26), respectively, compared with those with high food security. Conclusions Food insecurity is significantly associated with increased risk of excess death from cardiovascular disease and all causes in US adults.


2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 2109-2136
Author(s):  
RUPING XIAO ◽  
HSIAO-TING LIN

AbstractThis article revisits the issue of the offshore islands in the Taiwan Strait during the Cold War. Benefitting from archival materials only recently made available, specifically Chiang Kai-shek's personal diaries, CIA declassified materials, Taiwanese Foreign Ministry files, and rare publications from the Contemporary Taiwan Collection at the Library of the Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo, this research examines the cloud of suspicion surrounding the secret contacts between Taipei and Beijing leading up to and during the 1958 offshore islands crisis, elucidating how such a political tête-à-tête, and the resultant tacit consensus over the status of the islands, gradually brought about an end to the conflict between Taiwan and Communist China. In hindsight, the crises over the offshore islands along China's southeast coast momentarily brought the United States closer to war with Communist China, while putting the relationship between Taipei and Washington to a serious test. The end result, however, was that, while these isles were technically embedded in the unfinished civil war between the Chinese Nationalists and Communists, they provided, ironically, an opportunity for secret communications and, ultimately, a kind of détente between the two supposedly deadly enemies across the Taiwan Strait. A close examination of the details of these crises, along with their attendant military, political, and diplomatic complexities, reveals an amazing amount of political intrigue at both the local and international levels that has not been fully realized until now.


Author(s):  
David Nieto

The present paper engages in a historical analysis and interpretation of the policies that have contributed to develop bilingual education in the United States. Departing from the U.S. interpretation of bilingual education, this study examines each of the educational programs that have been implemented in the country since the twentieth century, its pedagogical underpinnings, and the critical evaluation of its outcomes. The paper concludes with an analysis of potential interpretations and lessons that the US case may have for other contexts.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4451-4451
Author(s):  
Danielle Krol ◽  
Parshva Patel ◽  
Konstantine Halkidis ◽  
Gaurav Varma ◽  
Ravindra Sangitha ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: DVT and PE are common complications in hospitalized patients. Many hospitals have implemented EMR-based protocols to identify patients who could benefit from prophylactic anticoagulation, because of the increased morbidity, mortality, and cost associated with thrombotic disease. Several groups have sought to characterize the potential seasonal and winter variation in the incidence of DVT and PE, with several international studies supporting a so called "Winter effect" (Damnjanović et al., Hippokratia 2013); however, no study has demonstrated a "Winter effect" on patients within the US (Stein et al., Am J Cardiol 2004). Objective: (1) To compare mortality rates and length of stay (LOS) in hospitals by month to identify a "Winter effect" in patients diagnosed with either DVT or PE; and (2) characterize other factors that might influence mortality and LOS, using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS), Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Methods: The NIS was queried from 1998-2011. Inclusion criteria were a diagnosis of DVT (ICD-9 453.4X, 453.8X) and/or PE (ICD-9 415.1X) in patients aged 18 years or more. The sample was weighted to approximate the full inpatient population of the United States over the period of interest. Admission data was then analyzed to compare mortality rates over those years by month. Demographics, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), length of stay, hospital region, and admission type (emergent/urgent versus elective admissions) were assessed. Linear and logistic models were generated for complex survey design to assess predictors of mortality and LOS. Results: A total of 1,449,113 DVT/PE cases were identified in the NIS (weighted n = 7,150,613). 54.7% of admission were for females, 56.4% were white, and 49% of admissions were at a teaching facility. Mortality over the 12 months was 6.4% and was noted to be higher in four months: November (6.52%), December (6.9%), January (6.94%), and February (6.93%), as indicated in the graph below. A similar trend was noted on a regional basis with higher mortality noted in winter months for all hospital regions (Northeast, Midwest or North Central, South, and West). No significant trend was noted in DVT/PE hospitalization rates between regions over 12 months (p=0.7674). Mortality in the total cohort was found to be significantly higher in December, OR 1.10 (95% CI: 1.06-1.14), p<0.0001; January, OR 1.11 (95% CI: 1.08-1.15), p<0.0001; and February, OR 1.11 (95% CI: 1.07-1.15), p<0.0001 compared to June (Table 1). Mortality was significantly lower in the Midwest or North Central, OR 0.78 (95% CI: 0.72-0.83), p<0.0001; and West, OR 0.80 (95% CI: 0.73-0.87), p<0.0001 compared to the Northeast. Mortality was also significantly higher in teaching hospitals than in nonteaching hospitals (OR 1.16 [95% CI: 1.10-1.22], p<0.0001), with mortality higher in teaching hospitals in all months. Length of stay was also significantly increased in the winter months. Similar results were noted in the subgroups of patients greater than age 80 or with a CCI score of 2 or more. Conclusion: This national study identified an increased risk of mortality and increased LOS associated with hospitalizations for DVT/PE during the winter months (December, January, and February), supporting the existence of a "Winter effect" on hospital outcomes. Our data differs from previous reports on seasonal variation in DVT/PE in the US because of the database used (Bekkers et al., Clin Orthop Relat Res 2014). Since no regional variation was shown, decreased activity or cold temperature is unlikely to be the cause of this phenomenon. Alternative explanations should be sought. Figure 1. Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
S. Makhammaduly ◽  

The article analyzes the historical foundations, current state, and prospects of the development of dialogue between the shores of the Taiwan Strait. The research of US analytical centers on the prospects of the development of US-Chinese relations and the «Taiwan Question» is examined. Over the decades of virtually separate development, with the serious influence of the United States, radical changes have taken place in the political culture of the citizens of the Republic of China. The so-called “Taiwanese mentality” is being formed on the island, and the idea of Taiwan’s sovereignty is becoming more and more popular.


Subject Political and foreign policy outlook for Taiwan. Significance The Kuomintang, Taiwan's main opposition party, has seized on stalled cross-Strait relations and domestic discontent with Taiwan's president, Tsai Ing-wen, to re-energise itself after being trounced in January's presidential contest. Kuomintang mayors have sought to jump-start cross-Strait relations by conducting diplomacy in visits to China, and party leaders have attempted to harness public anger over pension reform to damage the president. Impacts Beijing will be reluctant to reward Tsai in the absence of official talks on further cross-Strait economic deals. The United States will press Tsai to resume official negotiations with China to avoid destabilising the Taiwan Strait. The Kuomintang will begin to rebuild grassroots support, but its current leader, Hung Hsiu-chu, will remain divisive. Beijing will use dropping numbers of cross-Strait tourists as a lever to press Taipei to resume cross-Strait talks.


1960 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 345-345

The Council of the ANZUS Pacific Security Pact met in Washington on October 26, 1959. New Zealand was represented by Prime Minister Walter Nash; Australia by Minister for External Affairs Richard G. Casey; and the United States by Secretary of State Christian Herter. The representatives of the three member nations voiced their concern that the destructive violence in Asia of the Chinese Communists and their threat of a “liberating” war in the Taiwan Strait should continue to pose a serious threat to the peace of the world; they reiterated their conviction in this context that any resort to force of arms by the Chinese Communists in the Taiwan area or elsewhere could only be regarded as an international problem affecting the stability of the region.


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