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ASIAMS.NET |
ASIAN AMERICAN ISSUES
TAIWAN INDEPENDENCE
OR UNIFICATION?
(Updated
Tuesday, Apr 1, 2008, 05:55:02 PM)
he most pressing Asian foreign policy issue currently faced by the U.S. is the Taiwan question. The email we receive in reaction to our articles relating to this issue suggests that it's an emotional one for many of our readers. Perhaps one reason for the emotion is the fact that the issue isn't amenable to an easy or simple solution.
The first historical mention of Taiwan appears to have been when Portugese traders found it to be a resting place on their journey to Japan and named it Isla Formosa. Beijing's claim to Taiwan dates back to the 16th century when a Chinese general fought off the Portugese to claim the island for the emperor. In 1895 the expansion-minded Japanese annexed it after defeating China in a war on the Corean peninsula. China briefly reestablished sovereignty over Taiwan following Japan's defeat in August of 1945.
At the time the official government of China, as recognized by most nations of the world, was under the control of the Kuomingtang headed by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. He was engaged in a desperate war against Mao Tse-tung's peasant army. Despite billions of dollars of aid by the U.S. based mainly on intensely partisan reporting by Henry Luce's Time/Life empire, the spectacularly corrupt Chiang lost that war and fled to Taiwan with 2.5 million followers.
He established the present government of Taiwan on December 7, 1949 and proclaimed it the sole legitimate government of all China. Mao made the same claim. The claims competed until 1971 when it became clear to most of the world that Mao's was more persuasive. Taiwan was kicked out of the UN. The Beijing government took its place as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, a seat given in recognition of China's role in fighting Japan in World War II.
Mired in its own misguided war in Vietnam, and intensely fearful of anything red, the U.S. was one of the last nations to recognize the legitimacy of Mao's government. In 1972 Richard Nixon made his historic journey to Beijing. In 1976 the U.S. took the next step by recognizing the People's Republic as China's sole legitimate government. It began pursuing the "One China, One Taiwan" policy under which official diplomatic contacts were exclusively with Beijing but continued to sell billions of dollars a year of fighter jets, helicopters, tanks and missiles to Taiwan to help defend against a possible Chinese effort to refunify by force.
In 1997 President Clinton declared a "strategic partnership" with Beijing over intense Republican objections. It was an astute recognition of the fact that China's 1.2 billion people must be accorded a central place in U.S. foreign policy. But the historic, moral and economic ties that bind the U.S. to Taiwan's 23 million people stand squarely in the way of cutting off arms sales and renouncing the pact under which the U.S. obliged itself to come to Taiwan's defense in the event of attack by China. That U.S. pledge and continuing arms sales continue to inflame Beijing to periodic bursts of violent anti-U.S. rhetoric.
Taiwan has been a domocracy since 1989 when it legalized opposition parties. It held its first democratic presidential elections in 1990. Lee Teng-hui handily won to keep the presidency which he had originally gained in 1988. Lee won again in 1996. Since 1997 he began efforts to warm up relations with Beijing by agreeing to enter into negotiations under a "One-China" framework with an eye toward eventual reunification. Beijing's leaders continued their highly successful campaign of pressuring diplomatic partners into severing ties with Taiwan. China even raised hell when Lee made a semi-surreptitious trip to New York in 1997. Since then China has scared neighborning nations like the Philippines into not allowing Lee to enter. As of 1999 Taiwan's diplomatic allies number about 18 out of about 220 nations on earth. All are tiny, impoverished Central American, African and Pacific Island nations that appreciate Taiwan's generous aid packages. Pago Pago is considered a major ally.
Feisty Lee Teng-hui launched his own guerilla offensive in July, 1999 by declaring over German radio that Taiwan was in fact a separate state and would negotiate with Beijing on an equal footing. That sent Beijing into a tizzy. It fired off bombastic threats to take Taiwan by force and to annhilate the U.S. Navy if it intervenes. On October 18 during his British visit Chinese President Jiang Zemin assumed a softer, more relaxed tone in telling a London newspaper that China would be peacefully reunited with Taiwan under a one-nation two-systems formula by the middle of the next century. One might have expected Lee to have been relieved by that statement. Instead, he brushed it aside as "a hoax". China should try instead to set a timetable for its democratization as that was the only way to ensure reunification, sneered Lee's Mainland Affairs Council chairman Su Chi. Most polls show that a clear majority of Taiwanese prefer to maintain the status quo indefinitely rather than moving toward unification.
Beijing's reunification mandate appears based on the idea that in winning the mainland, the Chinese people had rejected the "criminal" Kuomingtang and its right to rule any part of China. It also sees Taiwan as a galling symbol of the division wrought and preserved by western imperialists -- namely, the U.S. -- seeking to enjoy global hegemony at the expense of Chinese dignity.
Meanwhile the U.S. remains on the hook to defend Taiwan and sell it arms though doing so keeps its relations with a quarter of humanity rocky and on edge. Under its current policy the U.S. is the asbestos firewall that keeps friction between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait from igniting into war.
Should the U.S. continue alienating Beijing to help Taiwan protect its independence or improve relations with China by pressuring Taiwan to reunite?
This interactive article is closed to new input.
Discussions posted during the past year remain available for browsing.
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WHAT YOU SAY
[This page is closed to new input. --Ed.]
I am very confused. Is it true that China is aka PRC while Taiwan is aka ROC?
Thanks for helping me out. ^^
Confused   
Thursday, November 07, 2002 at 21:34:41 (PST)
   [61.64.140.83]
Huu76, Great Britain? Ha, what a joke!!! More like, Weak Britain or Little Britain. Project military power? More like, follow the U.S. and take credit for U.S. military victories. Man, you got no clue!!!! Britain has been in decline for the entire 20th Century, and it is still in decline. No more empire; just a couple islands, one of which (Falklands) will probably go to Argentina soon.
China is on the rise. And there is nothing you can do about it. You suck!!!!
Realist   
Thursday, November 07, 2002 at 18:29:19 (PST)
   [210.0.188.194]
AC Dropout,
i haven't been talking nonsense. you are a cynic yes, so you think since american and taiwan is bs china has the same right? at least the bs in the other two isn't as legal. the current level of social control in taiwan is much less and negative treatment of foreign domestic help there doesn't qualify on the list for human rights abuse by the government - it is more like a domestic violence/abuse problem. as for your statement i've lived in taiwan though not china and enough of the truth has come out from china by people who lived there. you are one nationalistic chinese who is somewhat averse to china-criticism. "There is no forced abortion in China", you said. So all those reports are false and those dissident people who fled trisking personal safety and leaving everything they knew behind to come to the States have lied? yeah right. What about the documented abuses by chinese medical practictioners pressured to commit forced abortions? maybe in the metropolitan areas you frequented and the law for two single child parents it may be true. but yes population is a problem there and measures are needed i agree. also i never said the US was some beautiful land of the free and other bs. we all know that our liberal freedoms here are protected theoretically by law but history such as the japanese internment -racially movtivated (german/italian american were off the hook then) and today the systematic arrest and interrogation of arab americans as you mentioned violate our supposed guaranteed rights. Not to mention the patriot Act we have now and the resultant fallout after 911 america may begin to become a police state due to the factors of this war on terror, using the media to enhance fear ie. the sniper incident, the republicans control of congress, and a foolish bush at the helm (not really him, but his dad's advisors). Soon this ultra conservatives will have the necessary justification to create a Big Brother political climate. America is a land of great hypocrisy sure. The point is that China practically offically has little regard for human rights. At least in Taiwan after the transition from being a police state after the KMT renewed the rule of law people have much more freedom in their personal lives and beliefs. the persecution of the Falun Gong is a good example. I understand how the Falun Gong represented a possible threat to the established social/political order but their repressive measures destroy human lives and dignity. pragmatic chinese in power has always traditionally seen human life as dirt cheap especially because of the huge population. chinese christians from my church were also murdered in the mainland by police 'authorities'. and we are no cult either, just refuse to be legally registered because then they force political propaganda into the spiritual life. basic freedoms such as to worship should become a right in China.
abc college guy   
Thursday, November 07, 2002 at 16:23:01 (PST)
   [65.184.91.9]
huu
"China may someday be able to compete economically, but when East bangs heads with West, America and its allies will still win."
oh boy oh boy. So now we are moving into the economics territory arent we?
Let me give you some advice, stop humiliating yourself ok? You dont know anything about economics except maybe America is powerful.. he he he. GUess what? thats my country not yours. for that matter, not any of us allies is your country. Not even Canada. ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Keep bashing your country huu. that's real class for you right there. A chinese bashing china.
SOG   
Thursday, November 07, 2002 at 11:59:44 (PST)
   [128.193.5.191]
Huu
I definately dont have a inferiority complex. All asian stud over here. lol.
You want to debate? bring it on.
SOG   
Thursday, November 07, 2002 at 11:49:24 (PST)
   [128.193.5.191]
Huu 76
"if Great Britain chose to defend Taiwan instead. Unlike China, the British can still project their military influence around the globe."
wow you are a smart monkey. The Russian and chinese ASCM are FAR SUPERIOR than US ASCM. The Russians and the chinese are the only countries that have successfully developed a ramjet ASCM.
Britians little navy is a joke, china would wipe them clean off the face of the earth. New chinese DDGS are comparable to areigh burke the most advanced US dystroyers, and the new sovermany DDG EM (super DDG) will be either the best or second best DDG in the world.
You are making a good fool out of yourself by talking about the military. Or the economy for that matter. Your statments are so ignorant and idiotic.
Give me a break, even the US will have to send in 4 CVG groups to protect taiwan if they get there in time.
You are a cocky ignorant chinese white wannabe. oh oh I got a name for you.
Taiwanese!
ha ha ha ha ha
SOG   
Thursday, November 07, 2002 at 11:46:46 (PST)
   [128.193.5.191]
huu76,
"What do Nazi Germany, U.S.S.R. and China have in common? All have/had no respect for basic human rights, and were not democracies. 2 were the catalysts for the world's major conflicts this century. All of which were expansionistic I might add."
This has got to be the most propoganda trash I've read in a while. Now you just falling back on ideological rhetoric.
USA is not expansionistic? It was only 13 states in the beginning.
USA respect human rights? Black Slavery, Chinese Exclusion act, Native American Indians, Jim Crow laws, 3/4 resolution, Japanese internment camps, No due process for Americans of Middle Eastern descent....Study USA history before you make stupid comments again.
USA and her allies...let's see about that with Bush II and his new foriegn policy. Even Saudi Arabia pulled their support recently on our Attack Iraq plan.
AC Dropout   
Thursday, November 07, 2002 at 09:12:23 (PST)
   [24.90.98.143]
SOG,
Believe what you want. Truth hurts when you don't like it.
May be easier on your ego if I was white, but I'm not. You fail to realize that the smart Chinese over here will be running things, either upfront or behind the scenes. Unlike you, we know which system works. Japan, South Corea, Taiwan, Hong Kong (although I wonder how long that will go on), Malaysia and Singapore see it, why can't you?
Which system created the Internet so you could spout your gibberish? Which system protects your rights so you don't get beat down for spouting it?
Anyway, China would have a difficult time if Great Britain chose to defend Taiwan instead. Unlike China, the British can still project their military influence around the globe.
Since you know so much about me, let me tell you about yourself.
SOG, you are a very frustrated individual with an inferiority complex.
You must always hear that you are correct, regardless if your statements hold any merit.
AC,
China may someday be able to compete economically, but when East bangs heads with West, America and its allies will still win. China can't get ahead by always waiting and copying everything.
What do Nazi Germany, U.S.S.R. and China have in common? All have/had no respect for basic human rights, and were not democracies. 2 were the catalysts for the world's major conflicts this century. All of which were expansionistic I might add.
huu76   
Wednesday, November 06, 2002 at 20:23:55 (PST)
   [64.231.103.88]
ABC college guy
yep I agree, just dont TRY to force me that TI garbage.
Democracy is neat. But history hows a oliogopic governmetn is most stable. Which by the way is what china is presently.
China should slowly ease into democracy which like I said before she is doing.
SOG   
Wednesday, November 06, 2002 at 13:33:49 (PST)
   [128.193.5.190]
abc college guy,
As if Taiwan doesn't have human right abuses either.
1) Treatment of vietnamese, philipine, and Thailand domestic help
2) Treatment of PRC national wives
Also what make you think the USA does not practice serious control of political dissendents. Notice all the Middle Eastern Immigrants rounded up without due process in the USA. Ever see any anti Isreali news broadcast on our networks or cable stations. Notice we've been castrating sexual offenders in CA. Notice that 10% of our USA population reside in the penitentary system and a vast majority of them are black.
Notice FLG people were burning themselves in the street of China.
There is no forced abortion in China. It is more like they make it economically unfeasible for the average urban family to have more than 1 kid with heavy taxes. The rich, the farmers, the unique cases of a couple consisting of both being single children are able to multiple children. But that is only because China is overpopulated. If they had a shrinking population, like most industrialized nations, the government wouldn't care about this this point.
The USA calling the PRC a human right abuser is like a pot calling the kettle black.
I recommend you live in ROC and PRC and finish your degree before you spout nonsense.
AC Dropout   
Wednesday, November 06, 2002 at 09:41:28 (PST)
   [24.90.98.143]
Hey "Chinese" Canadian,
You don't know what ya talking about. China's sovereignty shall never be violated by TI mofos. Please spare us with your 'democracy' rhetoric. Speaking of democracy, vast majority of Chinese on both sides of the straight condemn TI.
Hoklo Taiwanese   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 23:34:18 (PST)
   [66.185.85.81]
SOG: man i completely understand your pride in China and desire to see her dominant once again on the world stage as this is the true wish of a proud chinese. i am taiwanese and would like unification except for china's serious human rights abuses. you've just never been touched by them brother. the regime is very very cruel and if you really are a soldier of God you would not admire the current political system in place on the mainland. we need US style or preferably a more advanced system of democratic government to take place in China. the crackdown on falun gong is not just media bullshit. the government kills and tortures people man. in my christian church man were killed and tortured recently because they refused to register with the government and begin spouting government rhetoric in their spiritual meetings. the government does very terrible stuff reminicent of the Nazi Gestapo or Soviet brutality. those in power in China have no concept of individual human dignity or very little of it. with overpopulation and forced abortions the value of human life is very cheap there. not exactly american values now is it? aren't you a defender of the American flag? or christian or if not espouse universal morality? don't close your eyes like the rich in america do just because of personal reasons. i love the idea of a unified powerful and glorious China that can once and for all achieve Chinese hegemony in the world. but first, the system must change and become as socially liberal as it is here.
abc college guy   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 23:29:50 (PST)
   [65.184.91.9]
China should become a democratic state, but to do this effectivly she must ease into through the transition which she is doing presently.
There is some chinese who pretend they are better than other people around the world. woo wee, we got some ignorant people on this board. Instead of trying to better everyone's status and help people they bash this and bash that. I smell taiwanese around here...
ha ha ha ha ha
SOG   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 13:58:59 (PST)
   [128.193.169.87]
Huu
what are you so cocky about? arent you just a 15 yr old punk kid?
You are NOT American.
You are NOT Canadain.
You are CHINESE. Forgot so fast? Wait till you get the canadian citizenship first before bashing your motherland.
FYI you dong know anything about the economy, nor about the military of any country.
Why dont you read up before you start putting out this BS all over the web and pretend you are somehow superior to other people.
You are a shoeshine times a carrot nickel smarter than GWB.
LOL
SOG   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 13:51:32 (PST)
   [128.193.169.87]
"Counter point to Japan being so great; no A-bomb would have happend if no Pearl Harbour happened. And what's wrong with using the excuse of saving the lives of your own service men in a war that someone else started?"
The problem with that argument is that any nation with the bomb can now use the same argument, even the US can still use the argument of saving lives and material to justify dropping more nuclear bombs. If the argument was good then, it's good now. We can use the same reason to drop nuclear bombs in Iraq, Indonesia, China, wherever we can save lives.
The Truth   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 13:18:41 (PST)
   [152.163.188.196]
huu 76
wow you are kinda smart arent ya.
Real smart
How do you rig a AAM? trying to hit a target going mach 2+ with a range of 100 km?
Uh huh, okie. Some one is real smart around here, smart as MR GWB.
SOG   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 11:58:59 (PST)
   [128.193.168.150]
Chinese Canadian:
"Taiwan is a fully-fledged democracy, and historically its links to China are about as strong as China's links to Vietnam, Korea and Mongolia. Both of these are independent."
For a Chinese, you are ignorant of China's history.
"If Tawian wants independence, it should get it."
How many US military bases are there in East Asian countries - South Korea, Japan, Vietnam, the Phillippes, Taiwan. How many Asian countries have military bases in the US or any European countries? Taiwan is part of China. Any further disunity in the region allows greater subjugation of Asian countries by western powers.
tazadar   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 11:13:51 (PST)
   [67.116.4.243]
huu76,
Jeez that's stuff for paperback novels. Why don't they just lay claim to Hongcouver while their at it.
How can the USA protect ROC economic interest? Half of ROC economic interest are in China. Hence by your logic USA needs to protect China's interest as well. Like supporting the "One China Policy"....Oops Bush II already has.
AC Dropout   
Tuesday, November 05, 2002 at 09:51:40 (PST)
   [24.90.98.143]
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