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China, Taiwan and America

At the time of writing   China is holding its biggest-ever show of military force in the air and seas around Taiwan, including the firing of ballistic missiles.

The military exercises followed a visit to the island by the Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi.

China sees Taiwan as a breakaway province that will eventually be under Beijing's control again.

However, Taiwan sees itself as an independent country, with its own constitution and democratically-elected leaders.

China's President Xi Jinping has said "reunification" with Taiwan "must be fulfilled"—and has not ruled out the possible use of force to achieve this.

Taiwan is an island, roughly 100 miles from the coast of south east China.

It sits in the so-called "first island chain", which includes a list of US-friendly territories that are crucial to US foreign policy.

If China was to take over Taiwan it could be freer to project power in the western Pacific region and could possibly even threaten US military bases as far away as Guam and Hawaii.

But China insists that its intentions are purely peaceful.

The island first came under full Chinese control in the 17th Century when the Qing dynasty began administering it. Then, in 1895, they gave up the island to Japan after losing the first Sino Japanese war.

China took the island again in 1945 after Japan lost World War Two.

But a civil war erupted in mainland China between nationalist government forces led by Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong's Communist Party.

The communists won in 1949 and took control in Beijing.

Chiang Kai-shek and what was left of the nationalist party—known as the Kuomintang—fled to Taiwan, where they ruled for the next several decades.

China points to this history to say that Taiwan was originally a Chinese province. But the Taiwanese point to the same history to argue that they were never part of the modern Chinese state that was first formed after the revolution in 1911—or the People's Republic of China that was established under Mao in 1949.

The Kuomintang has been one of Taiwan's most prominent political parties ever since—ruling the island for a significant part of its history.

Currently, only 13 countries (plus the Vatican) recognise Taiwan as a sovereign country.

China exerts considerable diplomatic pressure on other countries not to recognise Taiwan or to do anything which implies recognition.

China could attempt to bring about "reunification" by non-military means such as strengthening economic ties. For one thing Taiwanese companies have invested hugely in China. And in Taiwanese investments the presence of American multinationals can hardly be ruled out.

But in any military confrontation, China's armed forces would dwarf those of Taiwan.

China spends more than any country except the US on defence and could draw on a huge range of capabilities, from naval power to missile technology, aircraft and cyber attacks.

Much of China's military power is focused elsewhere, particularly along the LAC in the Himalayas, but in overall terms of active duty personnel for example, there is a huge imbalance between the two sides.

In an open conflict Taiwan could at best aim to slow a Chinese attack, try to prevent a shore landing by Chinese amphibious forces, and mount guerrilla strikes whilst waiting for outside help.

That help could come from the US which sells arms to Taiwan.

Until now, Washington's policy of "strategic ambiguity" has meant the US has been deliberately unclear about whether or how it would defend Taiwan in the event of an attack.

Diplomatically, the US currently sticks to the "One-China" policy, which recognises only one Chinese government—in Beijing—and has formal ties with China rather than Taiwan. The Mao- Nixon parley that opened the Chinese economy to American corporates is now history

But in May, US president Joe Biden appeared to harden Washington's position.

Asked whether the US would defend Taiwan militarily, Mr Biden replied: "Yes."

The White House insisted that Washington had not changed its position.

Relations between Taiwan and China appear to have deteriorated sharply following Ms Pelosi's visit, which Beijing condemned as "extremely dangerous".

China says its military exercises are focused on six danger zones around Taiwan, three of which overlap the island's territorial waters.

Taiwan says the move, which will force ships and planes to find routes around those areas, violates its sovereignty and amounts to a blockade.

Tensions between China and Taiwan have been increasing and America is just aggravating them by making undesired provocation.

[Contributed]

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Frontier
Vol 55, No. 8, Aug 15 - 21, 2022