"TAIPEI, Taiwan — Three months after
events in Ukraine started, Annette Lu, a former vice president of Taiwan, stood
before reporters to promote a wildly unpopular in the West idea.
China and Taiwan, she said, should form a commonwealth that
would be integrated economically, like the European Union, but remain separate
politically.
She called it One Zhonghua — a
word that means “Chinese” in a cultural, ethnic or literary sense but is
distinct from the word that refers to China in a political sense. It was a wink
at the Chinese Communist Party’s insistence that there is only one China and
that Taiwan is an inextricable part of it.
One Zhonghua is not a new idea. The
notion of a commonwealth or
federation of independent Chinese states has been touted as a solution to
Taiwan’s dilemma for decades by academics, editorials and minor officials on both sides of
the strait. But when events in Ukraine started, it surfaced again.
“For the first time, Taiwanese
people realized that problem is real,” Andrew Hsia, vice chair of the K.M.T.
opposition party in Taiwan, told me last month. He had just returned from a
rare and controversial visit to
mainland China — an attempt to improve the quality of life for
Taiwanese people working in China and get to know the new Chinese leaders
responsible for policy toward the island. He was dubious of the idea of a
commonwealth but said that “any idea that can maintain the existing way of life
and avoid conflict is worthy of discussion.”
One Zhonghua is a fantasy, of
course. President Xi Jinping of China, who considers Taiwan a rebellious
province, has shown no appetite for anything that would leave Taiwan’s
sovereignty intact. In fact, China is expected to announce a sped-up timeline
for reunifying with the island by force if necessary. Across the water,
President Tsai Ing-wen of Taiwan stands firm on the island’s right to determine
its own fate and rejects anything that smacks of a union with China.
Yet the quixotic One Zhonghua
campaign gets at the heart of the unsolved riddle of what Taiwan’s relationship
to China should be. The vast majority of Taiwanese people want to keep the
status quo of undeclared, de facto independence, according to polls.
Yet roughly 40 percent also said in a recent survey that they want better economic
relations with China while a smaller percentage said economic ties should be
reduced. Some one million
to two million Taiwanese
— nearly 10 percent of the island’s total population — are estimated to live
and work on the mainland.
As the rivalry between the United
States and China heats up, many Taiwanese people are asking themselves how to
preserve their incredibly innovative and prosperous open society. Should they
prepare to fight like Ukraine or try to hammer out a deal to avoid conflict?
How Taiwanese voters answer that question will determine who wins Taiwan’s
presidential election in January — and the fate of the island’s fledgling
democracy.
For the Democratic Progressive
Party, the party currently in power, the best way to avoid a conflict is to
bolster ties with the United States and buy enough weapons to make China think
twice about launching an invasion. These days, Joseph Wu, the foreign minister,
keeps a Ukrainian flag signed by Ukrainian soldiers in a prominent place in his
office, next to two pairs of boxing gloves that
were given to him by the mayor of Kyiv. In December, the administration
announced that it was extending the length of
compulsory military service from four months to one year.
Yet Taiwan is not Ukraine. In
political terms, it is not recognized by the United Nations as an
independent country. In practical terms, it’s an island that would run out of
natural gas in roughly eight days if it were ever blockaded. The Chinese
economy, despite significant challenges, is vastly larger, more diverse and
more attractive than the Russian economy. On the eve of the events in Ukraine,
the Russian military was roughly four times larger than that of Ukraine. Today,
the Chinese military is nearly 12 times larger than that of Taiwan.
Regardless of whether Taiwanese
people admit it, part of the country’s prosperity comes from the fact that it
has been a gateway to the biggest market in the world. At a nightclub in
Taipei, I hung out with a concert promoter who couldn’t wait to put on another
event in Shanghai, where he earns more money, and a Nigerian British female
rapper named Brazy who came to Taiwan to learn to rap in Mandarin, hoping that
her songs would go viral in China.
These days, a feeling of uncertainty
hangs over Taipei. Almost nobody I spoke with had confidence that Taiwan could
withstand an attack without the direct involvement of American soldiers. Bill
Stanton, a retired American diplomat who once headed the equivalent of the U.S.
embassy in Taipei and also served in Beijing during the Tiananmen Square
massacre, told me he’d faced bullies as a kid and that he sticks up for Taiwan
for that reason: “They are small, they are easy to pick on,” he said. “I think
we all need to stand up for the little guy.”
President Biden has vowed four times
over the past year or so
to do just that, partly because defending Taiwan is seen as integral to
defending Japan, South Korea and international shipping. But American policy
has been deliberately ambiguous about exactly what support the United States
would provide Taiwan in the event of a crisis. Social media accounts
have flooded the island with warnings that Americans will ultimately abandon
them to their fate.
There’s also been a flurry of arrests of alleged
spies, including a Taiwanese military official who
was reportedly paid to surrender on command.
Recently, Matt Pottinger, who was a
National Security Council staff member in the Trump administration, gave a pep
talk in Taipei. “A fiery resolve to defend one’s homeland, family and way of
life can compensate for inferior equipment, inferior numbers and inferior
odds,” he advised in a speech he gave in Mandarin, which cited the lessons from
Ukraine. “But will must be cultivated.”
For the D.P.P., part of that fiery
resolve involves reorienting trade away from China and toward Japan, Australia,
New Zealand and the United States, a project known as the “Southbound” policy.
That might work when it comes to
computer chips, Taiwan’s most lucrative industry. But fish farmers and orchard
owners are skeptical that the Chinese market, which buys about 42 percent of the island’s
exports, can be replaced. Last summer, China banned Taiwanese grouper and
wax apples, leading some farmers to change their stance. “Of course we want to
have an independent Taiwan,” one orchard owner told Lung Ying-tai, a former
minister of culture. “But at what cost?” Taiwanese officials vowed to find new
markets for the fish or consume them domestically. During a fancy lunch in Taipei,
the deputy foreign minister removed the lid on a succulent dish and declared,
“This is our freedom fish!”
Mr. Hsia, the vice chair of the
K.M.T., told me that he asked for the ban on grouper to be lifted during his
recent trip to China. He described the response of Chinese officials as
cooperative and said they welcomed a delegation from Taiwan’s fish farming
association days later. If China ends up lifting the ban, it would bolster the
K.M.T.’s claim that it is the party that knows how to handle China.
The K.M.T. has a long history of
arguing for economic integration with China. The party’s roots date back to the
nationalist army that lost a civil war against Chinese Communists in 1949 and
escaped to Taiwan to regroup. K.M.T. officials, who initially ruled as a
military dictatorship, were so committed to the dream of returning to the
mainland for a rematch that, a Ming Chuan University professor told me, they
routinely barred active-duty soldiers from getting married, out of fear
soldiers would be diverted from their cause. The closest that Taiwan has ever
come to One Zhonghua occurred between 2008 and 2016, under the administration
of President Ma Ying-jeou of the K.M.T. He signed a raft of agreements with
China, including a sweetheart trade deal
that allowed many Taiwanese goods to be sold in China with reduced tariffs,
without giving China the same access in return. That deal remains in place, and
it’s seen as vital to Taiwan’s economy today.
But a second trade deal, which
focused on services, was a bridge too far. Spooked that Taiwan was growing too
close to China, protesters took over the legislature building
in 2014 and helped push the K.M.T. out of power two years later in what was
called the Sunflower Movement.
Since the D.P.P. won the 2016
election, it has announced changes that underscored the separateness of the
Taiwanese identity, shrinking the size of the
words “Republic of China” on passports while making the word
“Taiwan” much more prominent. The number of people who consider themselves
Taiwanese has grown from 17.6 percent in 1992 to 60.8 percent in 2022,
according to Ching-hsin Yu, director of the Election Study Center at National
Chengchi University in Taipei.
Young activists are dismayed that
Ms. Lu, who once served five years in prison under the dictatorship for trying
to bring democracy to Taiwan, is peddling One Zhonghua.
“Lu’s proposal is actually very
outdated,” said Fei-fan Lin, a former protest leader who became deputy
secretary general of the D.P.P. and is now a board member of the New Frontier
Foundation, a D.P.P. think tank. China’s crackdown on Hong Kong starting in
2019 removed any doubt that China would dismantle Taiwan’s political system if
it got the chance.
“Can Chinese Nationalists (or Their
Apologists) Please Shut Up About Zhonghua?” ran the headline of an article by Brian
Hioe, a chronicler of progressive activism in Taipei, in New Bloom magazine
last August. On Twitter, he has suggested that
figures like Ms. Lu, who is now 78 years old, need to be “put out to pasture.”
Yet for the older generation in
Taiwan, the idea of being Chinese still holds deep cultural power. Lung
Ying-tai, the former culture minister, told me that since China was unified in
the year 221 B.C.E., many in China have harbored the notion that Chinese people
should all live in unity under the same ruler.
Those who tried to break away from
the emperor never lasted long. “In thousands of years of recorded history,
Taiwan is the first open society of Chinese people,” she told me. “It is a
miracle. How we survive will be another miracle.”"
That Taiwanese people are considering such options is not surprising. No one wants to die in wet trenches in the winter because of Landsbergis' (Broiler) questionable ideas. And Broiler can shove his gigantomania's ideas into his ass - it will definitely fit, after all, Broiler has a big cloaca. One Zhonghua, stinking Broiler...
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