Photo: Presidential Office Building in Taipei. CC BY-SA 3.0 - Photo: 2020

The Significance of Taiwan’s Forthcoming Election

Viewpoint by Jonathan Power

LUND, Sweden (IDN) – In the Chinese government’s eyes it has three rebellious parts of China on its plate – Tibet, Hong Kong and Taiwan. In Tibet, protestors from time to time have clashed with police and soldiers. In Hong Kong, the reform and freedom demonstrations are now in their eighth month. In Taiwan, society has constructed a form of democracy anathema to Beijing.

On January 11 Taiwan goes to the polls. China does not welcome this and indeed President Xi Jinping over the last two years has been increasingly strident in his criticism of Taiwan’s continuing policy of remaining apart.

The present president, Ms Tsai Ing-Wen, is the hot favourite to win. Her party has long been the party of democracy, human rights and leans towards declaring independence from China. The opposition, the Kuomitang, is descended from the Nationalists led by Chiang Kai-Shek, who fled China when they were defeated by the communists in 1947 and made Taiwan their home. They lean towards reunification. Thus far neither side has pushed their cause passed the tipping point.

The Tibetans, by and large, no longer try and argue for independence, but even the notion of autonomy is not acceptable to Beijing. In Hong Kong at the time of reunification in 1997 an overwhelming majority accepted autonomy on condition that Hong Kong could keep its system of government and move on an agreed timetable towards democracy. Only because the Chinese have made it clear that they are slowing down any transition towards democracy, despite what they promised, have the demonstrations continued for so long.

During the last 20 years Taiwan’s China debate has matured at a fast rate. Ms Tsai’s predecessor, President Chen Shui-bian, may not have won many converts to his independence line (which is supported by about 30% of the voters) but he undoubtedly shifted the terms of the debate. He persuaded the electorate that they must never kow-tow to China.

At the same time they have been convinced by the Kuomitang Party that Taiwan should not provoke China and that Taiwan must increase its economic links, its direct air flights and encourage an influx of significant numbers of Chinese tourists, all of which under an Kuomatang administration it started to do. There are now 120 flights each day between Taiwan and the mainland. (Before it was zero.) And 4 million tourists visiting every year.

In broad terms it might seem that this is exactly the policy of the status quo in Taiwan – neither independence nor union. In many aspects it is. But it is not the same status quo as 20 years ago – it is both more independent (not independence) minded and more conciliatory.

In reality both sides need each other. Taiwan wouldn’t be so comfortably off if it didn’t have the Chinese market for its huge investments, a home for factories churning out the latest products designed by highly skilled Taiwanese inventors and engineers.

China would not have done so well over the last three decades if it hadn’t had this Taiwanese input. Indeed, one could argue that it was the most important single ingredient in China’s technological success.

For years U.S. strategists have been saying this is the world’s most dangerous flashpoint, one that could even lead to a nuclear war with China. The U.S. supplies arms aplenty to Taiwan – some of which, provocatively, need American cooperation and participation to be fired. Despite that, China is capable of overwhelming the island’s defences; it has 2000 missiles aimed at the island.

Sometimes China seems to be in a hurry to get its way in Taiwan and Hong Kong. This seems to the case with Xi. In earlier times, under his two predecessors, it seemed relaxed with the status quo.

For Xi, one suspects, every time an election in Taiwan comes round he regards it as a poke in the eye. He does not like it. “The Chinese military recently conducted exercises during which its forces circled Taiwan, suggesting that they are capable of drawing a noose around the island and then tightening it”, reported The Financial Times in November. Recently both publicly and privately Chinese officials have been raising the subject of Taiwan in every diplomatic conversation.

Would China decide to take the risk of invading Taiwan? Taiwan has a strong enough military to do China a lot of damage even if it went down to defeat. The U.S. would not stand idly by even though it should avoid war. Its economic sanctions, with the addition of Japan’s, Europe’s and perhaps India’s, would be crippling.

The status quo should suit everybody as it has in the past. Military conflict would make everyone blind.

Note: Jonathan Power was for 17 years a foreign affairs columnist and commentator for the International Herald Tribune. Copyright: Jonathan Power. Website www.jonathanpowerjournalist.com. [IDN-InDepthNews – 07 January 2020]

Photo: Presidential Office Building in Taipei. CC BY-SA 3.0

IDN is flagship agency of the International Press Syndicate.

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