https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2021/03/support_taiwan_to_deter_china.html
How is it the U.S. does not claim Taiwan as a strategic ally nor consider Taiwan an adversary? Taiwan is what we want in a trustworthy ally: a rule-based, thriving democracy that upholds human rights. Unfortunately, we do not recognize Taiwan as a sovereign nation though it has its own government and its own defense and monetary systems. In fact, Taiwan, the keystone island strategically positioned between U.S. allies Japan and the Philippines, has the world’s 20th largest economy, is America’s 10th largest trade partner and produces 60% of the world’s semiconductor chips.
If defending Taiwan is one of our most vital strategic interests, the U.S. should immediately stop worrying about offending the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), act as the global leader that we are, shed the outdated strategic ambiguity on Taiwan, and acknowledge the reality that Taiwan is a nation.
History shows strategic ambiguity has led to conflicts
Strategic ambiguity, peppered with opaqueness in the mistaken and forlorn hope that it can deter adversaries, has invited miscalculations and unintended armed conflicts. In 1950, U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson’s speech to the National Press Club on January 12, 1950 made no mention of the Korean peninsula being part of the U.S. defensive perimeter. Six months later North Korea, encouraged by China, invaded South Korea. The resultant Korean War yielded three million deaths, including 35,000 U.S. servicemen
On July 25, 1990, U.S. ambassador April Glaspie told Iraq’s Saddam Hussein that “we (the U.S.) have no opinion on… Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreement with Kuwait,” A week later Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait drew the U.S. into a conflict that heads into its third decade and at a cost of thousands of U.S. lives and untold billions of dollars.