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Better Get Used to it, China: Taiwan and Japan Will Get Closer

Aepsilons

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Despite applying considerable pressure on Tokyo in recent weeks, Beijing was unable to prevent the Japanese government from rolling out the red carpet for former Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui last week. During a visit to Japan, Lee addressed a packed Diet and had a meeting with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Besides showcasing the longstanding warm relationship between Japan and Taiwan, the Abe government’s decision to stand up to Chinese pressure presages a likely deepening of ties between Tokyo and Taipei, the result of both growing fears of China’s assertiveness as well as political change in Taiwan.

In a strong protest on July 24 after Lee, 92, was allowed in Japan, a spokesman at China’s Foreign Ministry expressed Beijing’s “grave concern” over the visit by the former leader, whom he described as “a stubborn Taiwan splittist.”


On the same day, Ma Xiaoguang, a spokesman for the State Council’s Taiwan Affairs Office, said Beijing “strongly opposes any country providing a stage for ‘Taiwan independence’ activities, and take strong umbrage at Japan allowing Lee to visit.”

Ma continued: “Lee’s contemptible acts have made compatriots from both sides see more clearly the extreme harms ‘Taiwan independence’ forces do to the peaceful development of cross-Strait relations and the integral benefit of the Chinese nation, and will surely be scorned by compatriots from both sides.”

Undeterred, Tokyo invited Lee, who presided over Taiwan’s democratization in the late 1980s and was the country’s first freely elected president in 1996, to give his first address ever at the Diet, Japan’s parliament, which was attended by about 400 members.

Tokyo further exhibited its independence from China’s pressure when Abe held a 90-minute meeting with Lee over breakfast. Although Lee declined to comment on the meeting, independent sources have confirmed that the two leaders did meet.

Known for his firm stance on China, Abe has made no secret of his affinity for Taiwan, which he visited in 2010. During that trip, he held meetings with Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou as well as paying an unscheduled courtesy call to members of the opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). Despite referring to Japan as the Republic of China’s (Taiwan) “best friend,” Ma has been known for his at best lukewarm regard for Japan, which governed Taiwan from 1895 until 1945.

Tensions between Japan and China have risen markedly since Abe’s visit, in large part due to the territorial dispute over the Diaoyutai islets in the East China Sea, known as the Senkakus in Japan. China’s unilateral declaration of an Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) in the East China Sea as well as militarization of the South China Sea, which has threatened to destabilize the region, forced Tokyo to join other governments in reassessing its stance on China. Hedging, rather than accommodation, became the main policy, with renewed interest in welcoming the U.S. back to the region as a “security guarantor.”

Taiwan is also a claimant to the Senkaku/Diaoyutais. Remarks by Lee in Tokyo last week, to the effect that the islets belong to Japan, prompted an angry response from Beijing and accusations of “treason” by Ma’s Kuomintang (KMT), which has threatened to take the former president to court and to suspend his pension entitlements as a former head of state.

Meanwhile, the rapprochement that has occurred between Taiwan and China since Ma assumed office in 2008 has also stirred some apprehensions in Tokyo. Although Japan, like much of the rest of the world, has welcomed the reduced tensions in the Taiwan Strait, fears have risen in recent years that the détente risked going too far, especially after a more ideological Xi Jinping assumed the No. 1 position in 2012. Though amenable to closer ties between Taiwan and China, Tokyo does not like the idea of an overly pro-Beijing government in Taipei, let alone one that would promote unification with China. Despite Tokyo’s “one China” policy and its stated neutrality on the Taiwan “issue,” there is no doubt that a Taiwan that exists independently of Beijing’s rule is very much in its strategic interest.

As a result, Japanese officials have quietly expressed Tokyo’s hopes that the DPP will return to power in 2016, especially as the KMT’s presidential candidate, Hung Hsiu-chu, has come across as a threat to Taiwan’s “status quo”—at least according to her critics, which includes a number of members of her party.

Although Tokyo is unlikely to take actions that will cause serious harm to its important relationship with China, there is nevertheless a high likelihood that Japan will increase its cooperation with Taiwan and provide the necessary moral support to the DPP. Although military-to-military relations between Taiwan and Japan have been good, albeit quietly so, in recent years, they would conceivably expand under a DPP administration that, much like a large segment of the Taiwanese public, has never hidden its deep affinity toward Japan.

The geopolitical context, which has turned against China as a result of its assertiveness abroad and deepening authoritarianism domestically, as well as the alignment of domestic politics in Taipei and Tokyo, could therefore create an environment that is more favorable for Taiwan than it has been in several years. Taipei might find it has more room to maneuver internationally. Consequently, more visits to Japan by Lee or senior DPP officials, or perhaps by Japanese officials to Taiwan, are likely, with pressure and complaints by Beijing having little, if any, effect. Although this is a prospect that would very much anger Beijing, it is one that undoubtedly would be warmly welcomed by the people of Taiwan.

The author is an employee of the Thinking Taiwan Foundation, a think tank launched by Tsai Ing-wen in 2012. The views expressed in this article are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect the official positions of the institutions with which he is affiliated.
 
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Better get used to it, random Western commentator/propaganda artist, Japan and China and PRC and ROC will also get closer
 
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Random Pinky to give the organization some more credibility. He's an ornament, I suppose.


My friend, this author reiterates the same points I have made, in parallel tandem, actually. I quote him,

"Although Tokyo is unlikely to take actions that will cause serious harm to its important relationship with China, there is nevertheless a high likelihood that Japan will increase its cooperation with Taiwan and provide the necessary moral support to the DPP. Although military-to-military relations between Taiwan and Japan have been good, albeit quietly so, in recent years, they would conceivably expand under a DPP administration that, much like a large segment of the Taiwanese public, has never hidden its deep affinity toward Japan."

Seriously, sometimes I think 'The Diplomat' reads PDF , lol.


:lol:


@LeveragedBuyout , Sir. :)
 
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Expanding ROC-Japan relations is effectively immaterial to the PRC unless Japan tries to change the status quo
 
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The status quo will change (is changing now?) when Dr. Tsai Ing Wen wins in 2016. Don't you know that the 'Thinking Taiwan Foundation' is also a credible NGO operating in Japan? lol.

One of the leaders of Ilha Formosa (i think you know this foundation, well, i hope so since you're a Taiwanese), is also in close coordination with the Thinking Taiwan Foundation in Japan.

An indirect relationship, yes, but a relationship and correlational nonetheless.
 
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My friend, this author reiterates the same points I have made, in parallel tandem, actually. I quote him,

"Although Tokyo is unlikely to take actions that will cause serious harm to its important relationship with China, there is nevertheless a high likelihood that Japan will increase its cooperation with Taiwan and provide the necessary moral support to the DPP. Although military-to-military relations between Taiwan and Japan have been good, albeit quietly so, in recent years, they would conceivably expand under a DPP administration that, much like a large segment of the Taiwanese public, has never hidden its deep affinity toward Japan."

Seriously, sometimes I think 'The Diplomat' reads PDF , lol.


:lol:


@LeveragedBuyout , Sir. :)

Is there any movement towards change in status-quo like Taiwan declaring independence?

It would be interesting to get some views from aged people here on PDF who observed the dynamics of China-Taiwan relations over the course of 20 - 25 years and hence could comment if the geo-political changes like closer Taiwan - Japan ties we are observing are routine and happen as a matter of course whenever China shows assertiveness or is it something unique and unprecedented.

Regards
 
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Seriously, sometimes I think 'The Diplomat' reads PDF , lol.
:lol:
@LeveragedBuyout , Sir. :)

It's uncanny, isn't it? I once emailed The Diplomat to ask them to create a forum (why re-post their articles elsewhere if we can discuss on their site?), but I never received a reply. It appears they are content with their Disqus comments system.

Regarding the article itself, it makes sense. So long as China relies on threats to bring Taiwan back into the fold, it will force a reaction. If China were more clever (and I believe previous CCP leaders were, Xi not so much), it would use attractive soft power to entice Taiwan to rejoin, perhaps through preferential trade agreements modeled on the EU. Until recently, the EU was a soft-power superpower--everyone wanted to join. Surely China can study the lessons of the EU and do an even better job with its own Asian Union or equivalent. The AIIB is an interesting experiment, but China needs to take it to the next level.
 
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Is there any movement towards change in status-quo like Taiwan declaring independence?

It would be interesting to get some views from aged people here on PDF who observed the dynamics of China-Taiwan relations over the course of 20 - 25 years and hence could comment if the geo-political changes like closer Taiwan - Japan ties we are observing are routine and happen as a matter of course whenever China shows assertiveness or is it something unique and unprecedented.

Regards


I would encourage you, my friend, to read into the history of the DPP. In fact on September 30, 2007, Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive Party approved a resolution asserting a separate identity from China and called for the enactment of a new constitution for a "normal nation".

DPP passes `normal country' resolution - Taipei Times

Btw, the current front runner for the DPP is Dr. Tsai Ing-Wen, and she is expected to win in the 2016 Taiwan Presidential Election.

Regarding the article itself, it makes sense. So long as China relies on threats to bring Taiwan back into the fold, it will force a reaction. If China were more clever (and I believe previous CCP leaders were, Xi not so much), it would use attractive soft power to entice Taiwan to rejoin, perhaps through preferential trade agreements modeled on the EU. Until recently, the EU was a soft-power superpower--everyone wanted to join. Surely China can study the lessons of the EU and do an even better job with its own Asian Union or equivalent. The AIIB is an interesting experiment, but China needs to take it to the next level.

I guess that's one of the things that the European Union has going for itself, the limitless soft power potential, being that it is a union of some 28 nations, and governed with a system that encourages transparency, and democracy that endorses citizen participative representation. In fact, perhaps Taiwan and other Liberal Democracies in Asia can look into the EU's soft power styles. However, with the CPC? I don't think so. How can we expect them to implement a soft power political dynamic when they are arresting lawyers who are encouraging for transparency in regards to citizenry civil rights? An issue that has led to international condemnation form Japan, the United States, the European Union, et al.

In fact, Sir, from my recent readings of what's going in with China, Xi has even reneged on his promise for greater transparency and less state-intervention in regards to economic improvements for the nation (China, PRC). Their recent state intervention in their market rout would be an example of antithesis of Xi's promise. Xi promised earlier this year in the 2015 Plenum that China would consider greater liberal corporate law changes as well as greater transparency for regulation -- seems like all of these are on hold.
 
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I would encourage you, my friend, to read into the history of the DPP. In fact on September 30, 2007, Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive Party approved a resolution asserting a separate identity from China and called for the enactment of a new constitution for a "normal nation".

DPP passes `normal country' resolution - Taipei Times

Btw, the current front runner for the DPP is Dr. Tsai Ing-Wen, and she is expected to win in the 2016 Taiwan Presidential Election.

Thanks, as I have earlier stated my understanding is limited on these issues but I keep on trying to learn more.

This reminds me of "which came before chicken or the egg" situation.

Based on your comment some can argue that increased Chinese aggression is in response to Taiwan's quest for separate identity as a Normal Country while others can argue that increased Chinese aggression is driving Taiwan towards the separate identity and increased co-operation with Japan.

Any way China has clearly defined the Red Line as per my understanding and I believe Chinese pride may lead them to a rash decision if this line is crossed. I had assumed Japan, US and Global community would not want this to happen and thus pressurize Taiwan to stop short of declaring complete independence but recent threads by you show something quite different happening.

Now this can be a pressure tactic to warn China to back off which is understandable.

your opinion?
 
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I'm glad to read these developments. China is knows the end is coming near for their country and they are getting more and more aggressive with the day. Japan and China should keep relations like how Turkey is keeping relations with China but it should know its limits. Abe understands the principe "keep your friends close, keep your enemies even closer."
 
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Regarding the article itself, it makes sense. So long as China relies on threats to bring Taiwan back into the fold, it will force a reaction. If China were more clever (and I believe previous CCP leaders were, Xi not so much), it would use attractive soft power to entice Taiwan to rejoin, perhaps through preferential trade agreements modeled on the EU. Until recently, the EU was a soft-power superpower--everyone wanted to join. Surely China can study the lessons of the EU and do an even better job with its own Asian Union or equivalent. The AIIB is an interesting experiment, but China needs to take it to the next level.

The AIIB isn't just an experiment. It overlaps with the much larger One Belt, One Road Initiative to bind Eurasia together into a cohesive economic area with China. Trade and transportation can't happen without infrastructure. Hence the AIIB.

One Belt, One Road - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

P1-BR865_CAPEC_16U_20141107194517.jpg


Moreover, the One Belt, One Road Initiative also overlaps with SCO.

Shanghai Cooperation Organisation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

541px-SCO_(orthographic_projection).svg.png


So I believe China has already taken it to the next level.

China's primary concern going forward into the 21st century is to acquire natural resources to supply and power the world's largest manufacturing base. China can only do this by going westward into Asia, Middle East, and Africa. What happens in some islands in the Western Pacific is of no concern at all in the big picture.
 
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I guess that's one of the things that the European Union has going for itself, the limitless soft power potential, being that it is a union of some 28 nations, and governed with a system that encourages transparency, and democracy that endorses citizen participative representation. In fact, perhaps Taiwan and other Liberal Democracies in Asia can look into the EU's soft power styles. However, with the CPC? I don't think so. How can we expect them to implement a soft power political dynamic when they are arresting lawyers who are encouraging for transparency in regards to citizenry civil rights? An issue that has led to international condemnation form Japan, the United States, the European Union, et al.

I think China had the potential to accomplish this with Hu Jintao's "peaceful rise" rhetoric, but Xi has turned out to be not so clever, and destroyed all of the good will that was built up. The Shanghai faction appears to more clever vis-a-vis international opinion, but they appear to be out of favor at the moment. Xi's "Chinese Dream" is essentially the polar opposite, promising greater glory to China at the expense of China's neighbors.

In fact, Sir, from my recent readings of what's going in with China, Xi has even reneged on his promise for greater transparency and less state-intervention in regards to economic improvements for the nation (China, PRC). Their recent state intervention in their market rout would be an example of antithesis of Xi's promise. Xi promised earlier this year in the 2015 Plenum that China would consider greater liberal corporate law changes as well as greater transparency for regulation -- seems like all of these are on hold.

Agreed, the failure on the reform front is quite disappointing. Let's look at it from a different angle. The only major reform that Xi carried out, the anti-corruption drive, just so happens to have simultaneously served the purpose of purging his political rivals. Imagine that. Meanwhile, the real reforms that are needed to ensure China's prosperity (transparency, corporate governance reform, financial liberalization, etc.) are delayed or reversed. What is left is China's debt-fueled growth model, which is neither original nor sustainable enough to cultivate admiration by others.

What China needs is a vision and a model that inspire other countries to be like China. China's rapid economic growth formed a solid foundation for that, but there are not many in the global demos who say to themselves, "I would love to live in a middle-income society that prohibits free speech, jails dissidents, is rife with corruption, and constantly threatens its neighbors." Not to mention the thinly-veiled racial supremacist tones behind Xi's nationalist appeal. Xi will be in power for several more years, so it looks like soft-power will not be a tool available to China.

The AIIB isn't just an experiment. It overlaps with the much larger One Belt, One Road Initiative to bind Eurasia together into a cohesive economic area with China. Trade and transportation can't happen without infrastructure. Hence the AIIB.

One Belt, One Road - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

View attachment 242592

Moreover, the One Belt, One Road Initiative also overlaps with SCO.

Shanghai Cooperation Organisation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

541px-SCO_(orthographic_projection).svg.png


So I believe China has already taken it to the next level.

China's primary concern going forward into the 21st century is to acquire natural resources to supply and power the world's largest manufacturing base. China can only do this by going westward into Asia, Middle East, and Africa. What happens in some islands in the Western Pacific is of no concern at all in the big picture.

This all relates to trade, which is all well and good, but does little to improve China's ability to attract countries/territories into its political bloc. Do you envision the one belt/one road initiative turning into a political-economic bloc similar to the EU? If so, can you give me your take on how you see that developing? I don't see it. And can you tell me what the SCO has achieved in concrete terms? It's not a defense organization like NATO, and not an economic union like the EU, so what is important about it?
 
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