Bloomberg: Pelosi’s Taiwan trip left a fuming White House scrambling for a plan

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

© APA | U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

# 04 August 2022 09:20 (UTC +04:00)

Before U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi landed in Taipei for a controversial meeting with Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen, the White House was careful not to weigh in on the trip, stressing that the speaker of the House makes her own decisions, APA reports citing Bloomberg.

But behind the scenes, officials in U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration were fuming at her insistence on using the trip as a capstone for her career at a moment of highly delicate relations with Beijing.

To quietly persuade Pelosi to delay the visit, the White House dispatched senior members of the National Security Council (NSC), as well as State Department officials, to brief the speaker and her team on the geopolitical risks, people familiar with the conversations said.

When it became clear Pelosi could not be swayed, the administration instead planned for contingencies, setting up a scramble to ensure backchannels with Beijing were functioning and that any fallout could be minimized.

That included meetings between U.S. officials and their counterparts at the Chinese Embassy in Washington, people familiar with the matter said. They were granted anonymity to discuss the private deliberations.

But even as they tried to convince Pelosi’s team that now was not the right time to go, administration officials knew they had to plan for the possibility that she would do so and gird for any Chinese response.

The inability to persuade Pelosi to postpone adds another complication for an administration still figuring out its approach to China. And it left Biden officials in the uncomfortable position of being upstaged by one of the most powerful House speakers in modern times, who has never shied away from poking China and isn’t afraid of upsetting anyone that gets in her way.

When Chinese officials in Beijing summoned U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Burns to lodge a formal protest, Burns reiterated that the Biden administration wanted to avoid any escalation and was intent on keeping all lines of communication open, according to a State Department spokesperson.

Pelosi’s trip came amid expectations she will soon wind down her historic career as the first woman House speaker. While she will likely be re-elected to her San Francisco House seat, Republicans appear poised to capture the chamber’s majority. Pelosi cut a deal in 2018 with younger House members agreeing to limits on leadership terms.

Pelosi, 82, valued the discretion of her members about the trip and was especially displeased with leaks her team believed to have come out of the Biden administration to make her cancel the visit, people familiar with the matter said.

An NSC spokeswoman said allegations that the administration purposefully leaked it are false. NSC spokesman John Kirby on Tuesday called the leaks “unfortunate,” noting that the speaker should be able to travel on her own terms.

Information about the visit was tightly held, kept even from lawmakers accompanying Pelosi. They didn’t receive the complete itinerary for the trip — including confirmation of the Taiwan stop — until the day they left, and only after the delegation had boarded the plane.

The trip was initially to occur in April, but was postponed when Pelosi tested positive for COVID-19. Pelosi’s office continued to make clear to members set to be on that trip that it was merely on hold.

Communications between the speaker’s team and the White House were fraught, with tension added in late July when Biden told reporters the US military was opposed to Pelosi’s then unconfirmed travel plans.

The more the administration tried to weigh in behind the scenes, the more Pelosi dug in.

At one point, her team suggested she might consider delaying the trip if the president publicly asked her to. Biden advisers didn’t believe that was a good idea, not least because they were unsure that she would comply, people familiar with the exchange said.

On Monday, after days of treating the travel plans as a hypothetical, White House officials changed their tone. Before Pelosi landed in the region, Kirby warned Beijing not to overreact to a potential Taiwan stop or use it as a pretext to increase tensions.

On Tuesday, when she landed and China issued threats of military drills around the island, Kirby repeated his warnings and said the U.S. was prepared to manage whatever Beijing chooses to do in response.

The White House declined to say whether the president personally supported the speaker’s trip and whether he believes it benefits U.S. foreign policy objectives.

This year Biden has said he would support military intervention if China invaded Taiwan — a comment that was quickly walked back and clarified by his advisers. People familiar with the internal deliberations, however, said the president was probably speaking his mind then, while stressing that it would have no impact on the longstanding “One China” policy.

U.S. officials have spent the past 19 months carefully trying to recalibrate the relationship with China away from the unpredictability seen under the Trump administration.

They’ve emphasized the need for clear communications to avoid unintended consequences or a misunderstanding that could lead to conflict.

In her less than 24 hours on the ground, Pelosi met with human rights and business leaders. Her message, she said, was unwavering support for Taiwan in the face of Beijing’s threats.

The trip was consistent with her political brand, which she has built on her steely resolve to stand up to bullies. Throughout her career, she’s taken a tougher stance on China than virtually any of the U.S. presidents she’s dealt with.

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