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Taiwan’s Last Election?

Posted on Monday, February 27, 2023
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by Daniel Berman
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31 Comments
Taiwan

AMAC Exclusive – By Daniel Berman

In January of 2024, Taiwanese voters will go to the polls to choose between the ruling anti-Beijing Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and the pro-Mainland KMT. Although still nearly a year away, the lead up to the election and debate surrounding it is already sparking discussions about the democratic future of Taiwan.

Whether or not the People’s Republic of China is about to attack Taiwan is the question on everyone’s lips in Washington. A top Air Force General sent a memo to his officers last month warning “I hope I am wrong. My gut tells me will fight in 2025.”

“I hope he’s wrong as well. I think he’s right, though, unfortunately,” Rep. Michael McCaul, the chair of the House Foreign Relations Committee, added in response to the memo by General Mike Minihan, the head of the air mobility command. With a Chinese balloon being downed over North America, and Chinese aircraft entering Taiwanese airspace in ever greater numbers, it can seem that we may not even make it to 2025.

This backdrop sets the stage for Taiwan’s high-stakes election, which seems likely to turn into a referendum on whether Taiwan will pursue independence outright, even at the cost of conflict with China, or whether it will avoid conflict, even if it means subordination to the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing. The CCP would be likely to welcome a KMT victory as an embrace of Taiwan’s Chinese identity. If, however, the DPP wins again, Xi Jinping and the CCP are likely to perceive it in much the same way Putin perceived the victory of pro-Western Ukrainian nationalists in the Ukraine: as an effort by Western-backed elements to reject their historic identity. But Xi, like Putin in Ukraine, is taking actions that will not ensure he wins the political contest in Taiwan, but are rather more likely to ensure he loses. Like in Ukraine, that political loss may then become a “justification” for military conflict.

The leading candidate for the DPP is Vice President Lai Ching-te, who describes himself as a “pragmatic worker for Taiwan independence.” The Financial Times reported in January that U.S. officials were concerned by his pro-independence views, which may be why he has taken steps to walk them back in recent weeks, remarking last month, “I would like to reiterate that Taiwan is already an independent and sovereign nation and thus we do not have a need to further declare Taiwan independence.”

It is unlikely those remarks will satisfy Xi Jinping, for whom there is only one sovereign and independent Chinese nation, and it is the one he runs. For Xi, who comes from a system where politics represent not the preference of individual voters but the proxy battle between powerful forces, electing a pro-independence president would not be a freely exercised choice of the Taiwanese people, but rather an act of rebellion by his own wayward subjects. Chinese history has never been kind to emperors who allow rebellion to proceed unpunished.

The perception of the Taiwan issue in the context of a rebellion gives some protection against Xi Jinping moving suddenly without pretext against Taiwan, even as it almost assures he will move against Taiwan if he perceives Taiwan as defying him. In practice, that means Xi will likely invest heavily in trying to help the KMT win the 2024 elections, both as an alternative to the use of force if it succeeds, and to demonstrate at home and abroad he tried everything before being “forced” to resort to military means. China’s current military moves seem more in-line with a pattern of intimidation than a prelude to an invasion.

Nonetheless, military aggression also places the United States in a difficult position. Contrary to what Beijing alleges, Taiwan’s desire to break with Beijing is not the result of American subversion, any more than Ukrainians’ desire not to be ruled from Moscow is the product of a CIA plot. U.S. military planning is handicapped by the need to allow the Taiwanese to make a momentous decision about their own future, with potentially enormous costs, while also preparing for the contingency where the country will need to be defended. Multiple planners have expressed frustration with the slowness with which the Taiwanese are making military preparations, and this is justified from an American perspective. But it ignores the deep fissures that do exist on the island, and how they will be playing out in an election.

For one thing, whatever doubts Washington has about Lai and the DPP, the KMT has responded to defeats by turning themselves into apologists for Beijing. The former KMT Chairwoman toured Xinjiang at the request of the CCP and praised Beijing’s security policies in 2022 even as China was threatening military action over Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan.

Just this past week, a 12-member delegation of KMT officials led by the party’s Vice Chairman Andrew Hsia visited Beijing, meeting with senior officials to pledge to end tensions if they took power. Hsia had previously led a KMT delegation to meet with CCP leaders in August 2022 as a counter to Pelosi’s visit. This has been echoed by Chinese state media, with the People’s Daily running an op-ed two-weeks ago stating that the KMT “must make the right choice, now or never,” alleging that the DPP holds power with the support of the United States, and that the only way to return to power is for the KMT to embrace the full backing of the CCP.

It may at first seem odd that the Kuomintang, the party which under Chiang Kai-Shek fought a decades-long civil war against Mao Zedong and the CCP, would suddenly be perceived as pro-Communist. But in a historical context it makes perfect sense. The Kuomintang were a Chinese nationalist party, tracing their roots to Sun Yat-Sen, whom the CCP also considers a forefather. The Kuomintang did not seek to rule Taiwan or even China, but to be a party for all Chinese, and local organs of the party were set up overseas in places such as the Philippines, Singapore, and Malaysia. The Malay Chinese Association, until recently the major Chinese political party in Malaysia, began as the local wing of the KMT.

The KMT and its leaders arrived in Taiwan in 1949 as exiles. They had no connections to the island which had been under Japanese rule since 1945, and rapidly created a river of blood with the locals through a violent series of repressions. Popular policies such as land reform only partially mitigated this impression, and Taiwan’s economic miracle under the KMT added a division between the KMT elites, many of whom were linked by family ties to Chinese communities abroad and on the mainland, and Taiwanese natives whose lives were on the island.

Domestically, this manifests in economics. The KMT is the party of the top and the bottom. At the top are the descendants of mainland exile families, many of whom turned their connections abroad into enormous wealth as the mainland opened itself up to investment in the 1980s. At the bottom are aboriginal communities and others who fear isolated from a cosmopolitan DPP.

By contrast, the DPP has come to represent those in the middle and working classes who have built lives in Taiwan. They are educated, successful, and enjoy freedom. Most importantly, they stand to lose everything if the CCP were to take over. This is a marked contrast from the KMT elites. As much of their wealth is intertwined with investments abroad, especially in the mainland, a war, even a successful one which resulted in an independent Taiwan, would see them lose almost everything. Either because the CCP would seize their assets, the mainland economy would collapse, or trade would become impossible.

The KMT does not favor political integration with the mainland per se. But because a break with the mainland would be so devastating to their elite, they are willing to concede what they can to the CCP, with the last KMT President, Ma Ying-jeou, becoming the first Taiwanese leader to meet with the leader of the PRC when he shook hands with Xi Jinping in Singapore in November 2015.

In a dynamic reminiscent of what took place in Ukraine during the Euromaiden protests, Ma’s meeting with Xi set off a mass protest movement. The Sunflower Movement did not force him from office, but it did storm the Taiwanese parliament and ultimately drove the KMT from power. Just as Putin’s increasing authoritarianism made pro-Russian politicians in neighboring states increasingly appear to be traitors, so too did Xi Jinping’s belligerence and actions in Hong Kong. The KMT was crushed in the 2016 elections.

Xi Jinping’s reaction was not to give the KMT latitude but to hug it ever tighter. The CCP engaged in a clumsy game of carrot and stick which would have embarrassed Putin, alternately threatening the DPP government in Taiwan with war and meeting with leading representatives of the opposition. Xi met with the Chairwoman of the KMT in 2016, along with a former vice president. This helped none of those involved, nor did fears generated by the crackdown in Hong Kong, which overshadowed the 2020 Taiwanese elections that the KMT again lost.

Xi Jinping may honestly believe that the fourth or fifth time is the charm. More likely, he knows exactly what he is doing. When the People’s Daily calls for the KMT to fully embrace its role as a pro-Beijing party, the gift is laced with arsenic. Beijing knows such a path would ensure defeat, not victory for the KMT. But perhaps that is the point. Xi Jinping may not be interested in the KMT returning to power, especially if the price is for the KMT to adopt a much more hostile attitude to Beijing. Rather he appears to want them to fully embrace the PRC so that when they lose, he will, like Putin, have a cause for war. He will have proven to the Chinese public that he tried persuasion, that the Taiwanese rejected it, and he will have no choice but to move in. In this interpretation of events, the KMT are functioning as useful idiots.

The United States too must stop vacillating about Lai, the DPP, or their views on Taiwan independence. Xi Jinping looks like he is already busy writing the script he intends to follow, and that script involves Lai winning and Xi citing that as justification for conflict. U.S. leaders should also realize that Beijing has lost interest in its own “friends” on the island, much as Putin did with Ukraine, and their purpose is to be victims who need to be rescued, not allies. If Beijing needs a pretext, it will ensure pro-independence figures win by sabotaging its own friends.

Washington should start planning for what will follow January 2024.

Daniel Berman is a frequent commentator and lecturer on foreign policy and political affairs, both nationally and internationally. He holds a Ph.D. in International Relations from the London School of Economics. He also writes as Daniel Roman. 

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Lieutenant Beale
Lieutenant Beale
1 year ago

Judging from what happend in Afghanistan under this administration, it’s not looking good Taiwan.

InsanitySquared
InsanitySquared
1 year ago

The way I see it, we need to help Taiwan as much as possible, but not allow ourselves to be directly involved. A big war with China even if nukes don’t go flying can still cost us lives of many thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of lives of American boys and girls. I do not have kids but I certainly do not wish more of our youth dying in faraway places. We can help Taiwan as much as we are helping Ukraine but not more than that. I think we still need to help our allies like Japan and South Korea though. Countries that we have treaties with must be protected to show the World that we honor our word and we are not a pushover. But over-extending ourselves unnecessarily is not a smart strategy either. If Russia and China are changing the global game, we may wanna consider arming our allies with nuclear weapons so that they can protect themselves. Since North Korea crossed that threshold, we can allow South Korea, Japan, and even Australia to develop nuclear weapons and become fully capable nuclear states.

Wayne
Wayne
1 year ago

If the Air Force General has a gut feeling that war is likely in 2025 why isn’t he putting US Planes on Taiwan now?

Patriot Will
Patriot Will
1 year ago

The leaders of Communist China have Biden’s number. Unlike the USA which is sadly full of brainwashed, ignorant Americans, PRC knows very well that Biden is weak, inconsistent, and illogical. They know from his incoherent words and feckless policies and actions that Biden is a disaster on all fronts. The Communist Chinese respect competence and strength, which Biden is sorely lacking. In Biden they see a man full of ignorance and hate for his own country. They see an empty shirt who is destroying his own country with words and policies that are punishing true patriots, while propping up dysfunctional miscreants, all in the name of critical race theory and alternative sexual identities.

Nick
Nick
1 year ago

If you live in taiwan, don’t buy any green bananas

PaulE
PaulE
1 year ago

Just a few points:

1) The people of Taiwan have to finally decide which way they want to go. They can try and dance on the head of a pin and try to be both an independent, prosperous nation and yet at the same time almost completely conciliatory to China’s CCP, but I think most people realize that President Xi has no interest in participating in this dance much longer. He wants the technological capabilities that Taiwan builds for the world in the hands of mainland China, so he can control yet another aspect of the global economy. President Xi has documented and carrying out out exactly how he intends for China to become the world’s lone superpower and everyone in Washington, D.C. is well aware of that plan.

So, the people of Taiwan really have to decide for themselves which way they want to go and act accordingly. That means seriously preparing themselves for a long, hard, sustained fight with China, if they decide to go that route. In essence, make the potential pain mainland China would face high enough to discourage any military action from China. So far much of the Taiwanese people expect the United States to carry almost the full burden of protecting Taiwan. Given how dependent the rest of the world is on the technology that Taiwan supplies the world with one would expect dozens of other nations would be actively signaling their willingness to align with the United States on projecting a united front to President Xi. Yet to date, outside of Japan and perhaps South Korea, most of the rest of the world remains silent. Just look at Taiwan’s current military manpower readiness and defensive capabilities. That is NOT a viable strategy given the proximity of Taiwan from mainland China.

2) The United States Navy defending Taiwan, which is only about 100 miles away from mainland China, via military force would be a bloodbath for us on a conventional warfare basis, if it comes to that. This is the outdated and small-scale naval force China had 30 or 40 years ago, that was limited to basically coastal patrols. Today China has a very capable and modern deep-water navy. Anything we send into the Taiwan Straits would be facing not only the bulk of the Chinese Navy, which would seriously out-number us and be nearly on par or on par with us in terms of capability, but also missile batteries and Chinese Air Force planes coming from the mainland as well. It wouldn’t be unrealistic to expect we would lose 2 or 3 aircraft carriers, and most of their crews, in the first 24 hours of any military engagement via hypersonic weapons we can’t defend against currently. Remember, based on the effective round-trip range of our naval planes, our aircraft carriers would have to be very close to mainland China. So, while Joe Biden in his delusional mental fog of dementia might talk a tough game for the TV cameras and think he is the next FDR, the reality for a lot of American service personnel would play quite differently. The same President and his administration that wants to slash the military to the bone at every turn, while also trading mission readiness for political wokeness, isn’t the one who would be on the front lines.

Just a few points to ponder.

Kyle Buy you some guns,and learn how to shoot
Kyle Buy you some guns,and learn how to shoot
1 year ago

Stay out of wal=mart.

Ann S
Ann S
1 year ago

Why do we need to defend Taiwan if many elite KMT want to be United with China? Why do we have to be involved in a civil war in Taiwan like we are in the Ukraine? All it accomplishes is many dead civilians and destruction of the country and the Xi and Putin keep on keeping on. Nothing will change.
Ukraine and Taiwan have bad politicians just like everywhere else. This saber rattling is idiotic and will not change anything.
After Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan and now Ukraine one would think the free world has learned that war never solved anything. And the people are the real victims, not only in the countries involved but here in America as well.

J.Mize
J.Mize
1 year ago

Death By NUKE is not a great way to go out, TODAY , TOMORROW or YESTERDAY… But to properly and judiciously ARM our best allies, is a quantitative move. But this administration does not have the Guts to proceed with that for fear of upsetting the enemy. So what’s the big deal with a few dozen spy balloon’s floating over our sensitive military facilities? My thought on that point is
( WHY ) why did China feel it was necessary. What was there to gain, have they succeeded in the task that they set out to accomplish for the incursion into our sovereign air space. I would love to know the inside scoop on what was found ( the technical gear) of the balloon shot down over the Atlantic coast line. That in itself would tell the public a lot about what and why China took the effort to plan and fully risk the chance that the US and Others would show, and maybe display some level of contention about the incursion. You don’t bake a cake to simply toss it out once it is fully on the plater for the tasting. Nothing China does is without reason and a full scale well defined plan, as the article above truly shows and is stating. XI has a plan ” HEADS I WIN ,,,, TAILS YOU LOSE” .?

If this Biden bunch has their way China will be sitting on the plaza watching in the Spring of 2025 after the so called US fair and free election of the next KING, Premier, or PUPPET, of the Americas, which they will have had a huge hand in getting their man elected, I apologize for going this far in this medium at this moment, but like you I am not able to accept ever dose of the KOOL AID that this BIDEN BUNCH has to offer as a means to fall in line and passively watch as MY COUNTRY is Sold down the river to the highest bidder and it certainly seems it sure ain’t gonna be someone or some entity in Europe who takes home the Golden Ring. China is now the only BIG DOG on the block and time is coming where someone is going to have to cut off its tail and muzzle it once and for all if we are to remain a free and open society as we have for 240 yeas now. Take a hard look at Afghanistan now today, it is a Chinese puppet and will be going forward, Thankyou Father Biden!! for setting that up. Mexico will probably be next and there won’t be a thing we can do about it. XI is setting the stage for numerous moves all at once. But losing the Tiawan election is the 1st step. Allowing the KMT to be defeated is the key to the gates, once that happens XI will be compelled to move on Taiwan to achieve what he could not do in a simple free election. Hummmm?
sounds vaguely familiar, Venezuela, North Korea, Afghanistan, see the process. A creeping cancer that cannot be reversed once it has taken the host. Has anyone ever read ” SUM OF ALL FEARS ” .?

Viet Vet 6769
Viet Vet 6769
1 year ago

Sure hate to see this happen for we don’t need another war, Good change nuclear warfare!

Elton Yancey
Elton Yancey
1 year ago

If anyone thinks the U.S. military is ready for a war,they had better think again.With all of the woke leaders in brandons admin, and the military,we will get our butts kicked and loose many young people.The rest of the world is laughing at us. I really hope no one joins up.I was in the Nave years ago and these times make me sick.

Philip Hammersley
Philip Hammersley
1 year ago

I personally know a senior Navy officer who privately said that we couldn’t beat the Chinese if it comes to that. Bill Clinton allowed his financiers to GIVE our technology to the ChiComs. Obama and Biden both kiss the you know what of Xi. Only Trump made ANY effort to counteract the Chinese. Why is most of our medicine STILL made in China? Now, Slow Joe wants electric cars which are made from Chinese components with minerals mined by CHILDREN.
Either the DIMMs are totally retarded (excuse the word) or they are bought off! (Or both)

gina
gina
1 year ago

Obama stripped our military force of weapons, ships..etc. Biden is doing the same and giving what’s left to Ukraine. Then you add the wokeness currently going on in the military and we are left with the equivalent of rubber band guns and two year olds to shoot them, so I pray our men and women aren’t sent to fight a war because they won’t be prepared.

Alan Daniel
Alan Daniel
1 year ago

The Chinese will not wait five years. Why should they? They must attack while Biden is in office and control of the Senate is still with the Democrats. When the Chinese attack it will be with overwhelming force. While Taiwan probably will not win, the US must support the defense and act to cause Red China to lose as much combat power as possible while not wasting our own. If we can cripple Red China’s military force in a conventional war it should [not definitely] stop any near term moves to expand further. This will be especially true if our forces remain in good shape with a lot fewer losses. We could stop the invasion if we went nuclear [tactical], but Biden would never do that. Hell, Biden might walk away and let the Chinese have Taiwan. Look what he did in Afghanistan. AD2

A Voter
A Voter
1 year ago

Why not? We had our last election in 2020. What is taking Taiwan so long to get onboard?

Michael J
Michael J
1 year ago

Biden can scarcely handle enemy balloons and we’re expecting him to help Taiwan? The lunatics in China are on record that if they can’t survive an all out war, then no one else will. This world is dealing with pure evil with no rational solutions. If deterance is no longer on the table then we will be awaiting the final curtain. Biden will cower and Taiwan will fall.

gerald serlin
gerald serlin
1 year ago

This is scary. Taiwan is a nominally democratic country so long as it can stay free from Chinese control. Once the Chinese government takes control, there will be no turning back. If the US is wishy-washy in its long-standing defense commitment to Taiwan, no country in the world can stand up to Chinese domination.

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