讓美海防部隊回駐台灣
Return
of the U.S. Coast Guard to Taiwan
/ OSC
April
29, 2016
Recently
Admiral James Lyons (USN-Retired) proposed the return of the U.S. Coast Guard
to Taiwan [Strengthening
Taiwan’s defenses, The Washington Times]. The 1979 Carter termination of
the US-ROC Mutual Defense Treaty left the island out in the cold, but the U.S.
Congress replaced it with the Taiwan Relations Act in 1980. In 1996, the
Chinese imposed a partial blockade around and over Taiwan with their so-called
"missile tests" and the U.S. Navy reacted by sending two U.S.
aircraft carriers to patrol the international waters around Taiwan. This
partial blockade was an overt act of war by China (see reference here).
During
the last few years, the South China Sea and Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands have been
quietly inundated with Chinese maritime surveillance ships, but these particular
Chinese ships are not part of the Chinese PLA Navy (PLAN). Their military role
for combatant status is based on naval militias. These maritime militias have
been dubbed the "little blue men" of PLAN asymmetric warfare
strategies, because they are just tap dancing around an overt act of war (e.g.
blockades). American naval assets are seafaring vessels for its military
purposes, but the Chinese maritime militia occupy the twilight zone of both
civilian and military vessels. Americans, however, have a rough equivalency of
the Chinese maritime militia, because the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) has a dual
mission purpose of maritime policing and coastal warfare.
The
USCG sailor is subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), but the
USCG is under the Department of Homeland Security during peacetime. The
USCG, however, is transferred to the Department of the Navy during wartime. The
Coasties (USCG) are a U.S. maritime police force on the high seas, and the
continuous presence patrols by the USCG is directly beneficial to the Taiwan
maritime enforcement of their Taiwan fishery agreements.
Admiral Lyons has suggested returning
an American presence to Taiwan and surrounding waters for fishery patrols with
the Taiwan coast guard.
The USCG presence would send a clear message to the PLAN and their "little
blue men" about Beijing’s creeping expropriation of claimed areas around
Taiwan. Whether the Coasties would ever visit Taiping Island is another
matter for debate, but the Penghu Islands are too vulnerable to "salami
slicing" or "claim jumping" by the PLAN. Sooner or later the
Chinese invaders will attempt to take control of these nearby outer islands and
then blockade the bigger island of Taiwan. This would be boots on the ground by
Chinese nationals, and they would exercise actual control of the invaded areas.
The
Taiwan Relations Act provides for the provision of defense articles and
services by the United States, but the sound defense policy basis for the
Coasties would be the Truman
Statement of 1950. This enduring statement established a corollary policy
for the 7th Fleet containment of the Chiang Kai-shek. This action was a
kind of naval blockade of the ROC on Taiwan. Recently, the PLAN has attempted
to establish their own version of no-fly zones and exclusive maritime areas
around the seafaring peripheries of Taiwan. This PLAN strategy is like a game
of Chinese chess (weiqi or go for Learning from the Stones) and
each artificial island is another stepping stone towards the encirclement of
Taiwan and Penghu. The PRC has also recently announced the creation of special
maritime courts for the South China Sea and its artificial island claims
(Taipei Times). The USCG patrols would put Beijing on notice, and the USCG
would exclude the Chinese maritime militia from any claimed exclusive fishing
areas around Taiwan. The USCG enforces the long arm of maritime law with the
Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act (MDLEA), and the MDLEA offers itself as a very
unique tool of American naval lawfare against the PLA maritime militia.
This
U.S. law has been highly effective around Central American countries, and the
U.S. law allows for supplemental agreements for USCG customs enforcement on
behalf of the host nation. The USCG has its own maritime police
jurisdiction to intercept foreign vessels on the high seas, and the MDLEA
provides for American federal court jurisdiction beyond the 12 nautical mile
territorial limits around Taiwan and Penghu Islands. This anti-smuggling
mission allows for USCG maritime policing of international interdiction
activities (e.g. Taiwan fishery agreements), because there is a nexus of Taiwan
and Penghu areas for the US federal court purposes of the Taiwan Relations Act.
Here, the Fifth Amendment Due Process clause should recognize the USCG nexus of
activity between the U.S. Customs Area and WTO autonomous separate customs
territory of Taiwan and Penghu Island. This American nexus was established by
the Truman Statement of 1950, and its corollary policy for Taiwan and Penghu
allowed for the 7th Fleet to patrol the Taiwan Straits during the Korean War in
1950-53. In other words, there is sufficient international legal
authority for a USCG "virtual blockade" of the Taiwan Straits without
triggering a full-blown blockade with China (e.g. 1861 military practices of
coastal blockades include partial military blockades with maritime
interdictions on the high seas.
The
9th Circuit is more particular about the nexus requirement, and this federal
circuit for the Western Pacific would exercise a quasi-personal jurisdiction
over patrolled maritime areas in the fishing zones around the island of
Taiwan. (MDLEA Nexus) The international law of the sea works in
conjunction the domestic law of MDLEA. The USCG can stop and search any foreign
vessel on the high seas including stateless ships. The USCG patrols are
just maritime police activities, and U.S. anti-smuggling operations are really
required to exclude the PLAN naval militia from creeping expropriations of
Taiwan fishing areas. Therefore, the high seas jurisdictional nexus of U.S.
maritime activities is well-established for American law enforcement by USCG
drug-smuggling and potential customs interdictions of the PLAN naval militia
vessels in the Western Pacific.
Before
the U.S. maritime patrols proposed by Admiral Lyons could begin, the USCG needs
to establish an Acquisition & Cross Servicing Agreement (ACSA) with Taiwan.
The USCG visits to various ports in Taiwan is logistically necessary for
resupplying and refueling. For contingency and training missions, ACSA
provides for the logistics support, services, and supplies (e.g. base support
and logistical activities) by the Taiwan governing authorities. The related
federal law allows for "acquisition only authority" from the
Taiwanese logistics suppliers, but future joint-operations with the Taiwan
coast guard requires a bilateral agreement for mutual support by American
visitors from Taiwanese sources. In this era of tight defense budgets, there is
included authorization for the bartering of these services and supplies, too.
The ACSA process is a fast-track channel for securing this bilateral agreement
between the USCG and Taiwan, and USCG negotiation requires minimal supervisory
approval from the U.S. State Department.
Because
this is an executive agreement, there are no treaty formalities of Senate
ratifications. ACSA provides for mission conduct of contingency
operations by visiting forces, and the U.S. Department of Defense has statutory
authority for the negotiations of ACSA under the Undersecretary of Defense for
Acquisitions, Technology, and Logistics USD(ALT). The USCG is the requiring
activity, and the proper military authorities only need to initiate the process
for a typical completion of negotiations within a six-month period. The ACSA
logistics conduit, however, does not allow for any bypassing of the Foreign
Military Sales (FMS) for major weapons systems. The potential maritime
presence of the USCG requires the full cooperation of the Taiwan governing
authorities, and the ACSA negotiation and signing process allows for the rapid
return of American naval assets to the Taiwan and Penghu Islands.
The
author has a professional background in federal acquisitions and is in
the defense industry legal field.
回覆刪除美國會議員要求航母訪台 US representative calls for carriers to visit Taiwan