Third Taiwan Strait Crisis - Lee's 1995 Visit To Cornell

Lee's 1995 Visit To Cornell

The crisis began when President Lee Teng-hui accepted an invitation from his alma mater, Cornell University to deliver a speech on "Taiwan's Democratization Experience". Seeking to diplomatically isolate the Republic of China, the PRC opposed such visits by ROC (commonly known as Taiwan) leaders (Nathan and Ross 1998). It argued that Lee harbored pro-Taiwan independence sentiments and was therefore a threat to stability in the region. A year earlier, in 1994, when President Lee's plane had stopped in Honolulu to refuel after a trip to South Africa, the U.S. government under President Bill Clinton refused Lee's request for a visa. Lee had been confined to the military airfield where he landed, forcing him to spend a night on his plane. A U.S. State Department official called the situation "embarrassing" and Lee complained that he was being treated as a second-class leader.

After Lee had decided to visit Cornell, U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher assured PRC Foreign Minister Qian Qichen that a visa for Lee would be "inconsistent with unofficial relationship ." However, the humiliation from Lee's last visit caught the attention of many pro-Taiwan figures in the U.S. and this time, the United States Congress acted on Lee's behalf. In May 1995, resolutions asking the State Department to allow Lee to visit the U.S. passed the House 396 to 0 and the Senate 91 to 1. The State Department relented on May 22, 1995 and the PRC condemned the U.S. for "ruining" Sino-American relations.

Lee spent June 9–10, 1995 in the U.S. at a Cornell Alumni reunion as the PRC state press branded him a "traitor" attempting to "split China".

Read more about this topic:  Third Taiwan Strait Crisis

Famous quotes containing the words lee and/or visit:

    One’s gone, one’s born. It’s an amazing process, isn’t it? As many as I’ve delivered, it never fails to awe me.
    —John Lee Mahin (1902–1984)

    Madam, or sir, would you visit on the butterfly the sins of the caterpillar?
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)