US-CHINA: QUEST FOR
PEACE
By
Henry C K Liu
Part 1: Two nations, worlds apart
Part 2: Cold War links Korea, Taiwan
Part 3: Korea: Wrong war, wrong place, wrong enemy
Part 4: 38th Parallel leads straight to Taiwan
Part 5: History of the Taiwan time
bomb
Part 6: Forget reunification, nothing to
reunite
This article appeared in AToL on
January 30, 2004
While United Nations declarations and
international principles support the rights of some aboriginal and
colonial peoples to self-determination and independence, they do not
apply to Taiwan, a de facto, de jure and inalienable part of China. It
always was and always will be, despite current talk of a referendum.
Neither the UN's Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
nor the Inter-American Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples recognizes a right of complete territorial and political
independence. For example, the UN Draft Declaration states, "As a
specific form of exercising their right of self-determination,
[indigenous peoples] have the right to autonomy or self-government in
matters related to their internal and local affairs."
Although the exercise of self-determination can include secession from
an existing state and the creation of a new one, it also includes other
less disruptive choices. The UN General Assembly's 1970 Declaration on
Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and
Cooperation among States explains that implementation of the right to
self-determination need not conflict with the territorial sovereignty
or political unity of a state. The declaration provides that a people
exercising its right of self-determination may choose to form a
federation with an existing state, integration into an existing state
as an autonomous region, or "any other political status freely
determined by a people" - short of secession.
The declaration goes on to explain the conditions under which peoples
are not justified in seeking secession and independence from a
sovereign state. It states that independent countries possessing
governments that effectively represent the whole of their populations
(ethnic minorities included) are considered to be conducting themselves
in conformity with the principle of equal rights and self-determination
of peoples. For example, if an indigenous people or ethnic minority
resides in a state that enables it to participate effectively in the
political process and economy and to practice its religion and culture,
then it is exercising its right of self-determination and has no cause
to secede. The self-determination argument does not fit at all the
Taiwan situation.
In 1919, the victorious World War I Allies, including China, chose in
the Versailles Conference to grant German concessions in Shandong,
China, to Japan rather than returning them to China. This outrageous
decision was supported by a secret British treaty with Japan in
exchange for Japanese recognition of British interests in Tibet, and
also by a secret Russo-Japanese treaty in exchange for Japanese
recognition of Russian interests in Outer Mongolia. This concession to
Japan, together with the affirmation of Japan's 1915 Twenty-One Demands
of China, sparked violent protests all over China, led by students in
Beijing. This came to be known in history as the May Fourth Movement, a
watershed event that triggered the release of revolutionary energy.
Riding the momentum of national consciousness of the May Fourth
Movement, Sun Yat-sen reorganized the Guomindang (GMD, known on Taiwan
as the Kuomintang or KMT) into a socialist and a nationalist party. Mao
Zedong was working as a librarian in Peking University at the time of
the student protests. Two years after the May Fourth student protest,
the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was founded in Shanghai. The
political dynamism behind the preservation of China's territorial
integrity was the fountainhead of all revolutionary movements in China.
No Chinese government can compromise on the secession of Taiwan and
survive.
In the 2000 election on Taiwan, exploiting his authority as president
of the Republic of China (ROC) and chairman of the GMD, Lee Teng-hui
clandestinely supported the independence-leaning Democratic Progressive
Party (DPP) and engineered the split of the GMD into contentious
factions that ensured the election of Chen Shui-bian as president of
the ROC with only 39.2 percent of the vote cast. He won without a
runoff in the "winner take all" election by a narrow margin of 300,000
votes over James Soong, former secretary of the late Jiang Jing-guo and
secretary general of the GMD. Soong had run as an independent candidate
after being forced off the GMD ticket by Lee Teng-hui. Soong and Lien
Chan, the GMD candidate, together received 59.9 percent of the votes
but both lost the election separately to Chen, the minority winner.
GMD lost in 2000 because of a traitor
The GMD would have easily won the election if it were not for the fact
that it had a traitor at the head of the party. After the election, the
gravely wounded GMD expelled Lee Teng-hui from the party. But the most
problematic aspect of the 2000 election was that it was
unconstitutional, since local elections on Taiwan could not
legitimately elect holders of national offices of China, be it Republic
or People's Republic (PRC).
Jiang Jing-guo was credited with the democratization of Taiwan. As a
young man of 16, Jiang went to Moscow in 1925 to study communism
first-hand, which he embraced devotedly, quite typical of patriotic
youths of the time. He was a classmate of Deng Xiaoping in Moscow. The
inter-party struggle between the GMD and the CCP was very much a family
affair at the leadership level.
Sun Yat-sen, founder of the GMD and the ROC, welcomed CCP members to
join the GMD as individuals. After Sun's death in 1925, Jiang Jie-shi
(Chiang Kai-shek) at first sided with the left wing of the GMD. By
1927, with the support of GMD extreme rightists, Jiang undertook
anti-communist purges within the GMD. The young Jiang Jing-guo, then in
Moscow, publicly denounced his father as a reactionary and went to work
in Siberia, where he met and, in March 1935, married Fenna Epatcheva
Vahaleva, a native Russian. Jiang Jing-guo returned to China in April
1937 after having lived in the Soviet Union for 12 years.
In 1949, Jiang Jing-guo followed his father to Taiwan to become head of
the secret police (Blue Shirts) in 1950, and he served until 1965. One
of the high-profile operations of Jiang Jing-guo's Blue Shirts was
against General Sun Li-jen, a Virginia Military Institute-trained
general who led victorious US-equipped Chinese forces against the
Japanese alongside US commanding General Joseph Stilwell in Burma. Sun
was the first Chinese nationalist general who showed that given modern
weapons and training, the Chinese soldier could be an excellent
fighter. Sun was much appreciated by Stilwell, whose opinion of Jiang
Jie-shi was intensely and openly unfavorable. General Douglas MacArthur
had plans to use Sun as commander of a new invasion force on the
Chinese mainland during the Korean War. Sun's popularity with and
loyalty from his troops made him an unwitting political rival to Jiang
Jie-shi and caused him to be placed under house arrest until the end of
martial law in 1986.
From 1955-60, Jiang Jing-kuo led the building of a cross-island
highway, a key infrastructure project that integrated the economy of
the island and facilitated administrative control over the south from
Taipei in the north. He was defense minister from 1965 until 1969, when
he became vice premier. In 1972, he was appointed premier and served
until 1978. Jiang Jie-shi died in office in April 1975, and Jiang
Jing-guo succeeded his father to power - first as premier, becoming
president in 1978 after vice president Yen Chai-kan served out Jiang
Jie-shi's remaining term. Jiang Jing-guo was re-elected to a second
term in 1984 by the National Assembly, which consisted mostly of
"thousand-year" legislators of indefinite tenure who had been elected
before the ROC fled from the mainland. He was the last legal,
constitutionally legitimate elected president of the ROC.
In 1987, Jiang Jing-guo lifted martial law and allowed family visits to
the mainland and a gradual loosening of political controls, allowing
opposition political parties such as the DPP to function legally. Jiang
launched the "Fourteen Major Construction Projects", the "Ten Major
Construction Projects" and the "Twelve New Development Projects",
contributing to the "Taiwan miracle". Not surprisingly, because of his
communist training, Jiang's development programs were similar to the
national construction programs on the mainland led by Mao Zedong, the
difference being that Taiwan did not have to face hostile US
containment and total economic embargo, and Taiwan's problems were of a
much smaller scale and complexity than those on the mainland.
Jiang Jing-guo. the people's leader
Among Jiang's economic accomplishments were the acceleration of the
process of modernization to give Taiwan a 13 percent growth rate, a
US$4,600 per capita annual income, and one of the world's largest
foreign-exchange reserves, at the time of his death. Jiang Jing-guo
died in office of heart failure in Taipei at the age of 78 in 1988. In
contrast to his father's political persona, the legacy of Jiang
Jing-guo is that of a people's leader, very much in the mode of the
ideal communist cadre of his youth. He remains generally a populist,
and popular, figure popular among the electorate on Taiwan today,
particularly among those who support eventual cooperation between the
GMD and the CCP for a peaceful end to the civil war. His memory and
image are frequently invoked by GMD officials who have rejected the
anti-party, pro-independence political platform of Lee Teng-hui,
Jiang's successor as president and GMD party chairman.
The ROC had been governed until 1991 under a constitution drafted in
1947 when the ROC government ruled the mainland and Taiwan. The
constitution outlined a government for all of China. The document was
in part drafted as a way of creating a coalition government between the
GMD the CCP, in hope of avoiding a renewal of the civil war. It was
adopted by the National Assembly on December 25, 1946, was promulgated
by the ROC National Government on January 1, 1947, and went into effect
on December 25, 1947. The constitution was seen as the third and final
stage of political reconstruction of China.
Inter-party cooperation between the GMD and the CCP took place twice in
history, the first time from 1920-27 when the GMD looked to the Soviet
Union as a model and the second time from 1936-47 after the Xi'an
Incident, when Jiang Jie-shi was captured by two dissident Nationalist
generals and forced to join a united front with the CCP in the war of
resistance against Japanese aggression.
Significant amendments were made to the ROC constitution in 1991, and a
number of judicial interpretations of the constitution reflect the
drastic shrinkage of GMD-controlled areas. Until 1991, the ROC
government in Taipei claimed to be the sole legitimate government of
all China, including the mainland and Outer Mongolia, which had become
a Soviet satellite as a result of Moscow entering the war against
Japan. In keeping with that claim to represent all China, when the GMD
fled to Taipei in 1949, it re-established the full array of central
political bodies that had existed on the mainland in its wartime
capital Nanjing.
While much of this governmental structure remained in place, in 1991
president Lee Teng-hui unofficially abandoned the ROC government's
claim of sovereignty over the mainland, stating that the Taiwan
authorities do not "dispute the fact that the communists control
mainland China". The National Assembly, however, never has officially
changed the national borders, since doing so would spell the de jure
end of the ROC and be seen as a prelude to Taiwan independence.
National Assembly members were anti-communists but they were not
traitors. They had no interest in allowing the dismemberment of any
part of China.
Taipei: Either the government of all China or
nothing
A fundamental issue is at stake. A government cannot selectively claim
only a minor, offshore part of the larger nation. It is either the
government of all China, inter-party disputes of legitimacy
notwithstanding, or it is not a government of China at all.
If the Taiwan authorities do not claim to be the legitimate government
of China, they also forfeit their own legitimacy even as a provincial
government of Taiwan, since Taiwan is an inalienable part of China, a
fact acknowledged by both the GMD and the CCP, the certified
participants in the political dispute.
The whole notion of reunification of Taiwan is flawed and misleading.
The Taiwan issue is the product of a civil war between two political
parties, not two governments. What is needed is not a reunification of
Taiwan with China, but a new political accommodation between the GMD
and the CCP to end the protracted civil war. There were two previous
periods of cooperation between the two parties and there is no reason a
third period of cooperation cannot be arranged. Under GMD control,
Taiwan is a de facto and de jure part of China. There is nothing to
reunite. Throughout the modern history of China, there have been many
examples of more than one government existing simultaneously on Chinese
soil - but there has been always only one China.
The National Assembly of the ROC, elected on the mainland in 1947 to
carry out the duties of choosing the president and amending the
constitution, was transferred to Taiwan when the ROC government fled
the mainland. Because after 1949 it was impossible to hold subsequent
elections to represent constituencies on the mainland, representatives
elected in 1947 held these seats "indefinitely" as a temporary measure
until the anticipated return to the mainland.
In June 1990, the Council of Grand Justices, the equivalent of a
supreme court, faced reality - there was no prospect for a return to
the mainland. And therefore the council mandated the retirement,
effective December 1991, of all surviving "indefinitely tenured"
members of the National Assembly, Legislative Yuan, and other national
governmental bodies.
The second National Assembly, elected in 1991, was a provincial
legislative body, not a national one. It has no legitimate mandate to
decide on national issues, including the election of a national
president. This second National Assembly amended the constitution in
1994 illegally and unconstitutionally, paving the way for the
unconstitutional direct election of the national offices of president
and vice president of the ROC. Local elections were then held on Taiwan
in March 1996. This unconstitutional second National Assembly retained
the authority to further amend the constitution, to recall or impeach
the president and the vice president, and to ratify certain
senior-level presidential appointments.
In April 2000, the members of the National Assembly voted to permit
their terms of office to expire without holding new elections, in
effect dissolving the body as a standing institution. The members also
determined that such an election would be called in the event the
National Assembly would be needed to decide a presidential recall or a
constitutional amendment. In recent years, the National Assembly has
handed most of its powers to the Legislative Yuan, including the power
of impeachment. The National Assembly in essence became defunct,
revoking with it the legitimacy of the new government of the ROC.
Taiwan, like Hawaii, can't amend the constitution
This is equivalent to the US Congress being replaced because the state
legislature of Hawaii votes to amend the US constitution without the
required approval of the requisite number of states. Taiwan's political
and legislative machinations are analogous to Hawaii's state
legislature disbanding a duly elected Congress and to declaring that
the territories of the United States would thereafter be limited to the
islands of Hawaii - and eventually be known as the Republic of Hawaii.
The US on the mainland, according to this Taiwanesque scenario, would
be viewed by the new Republic of Hawaii as a foreign country. In other
words: illegal secession.
As the National Assembly passed legislation in 1994 to allow for local
popular elections on Taiwan of national offices, the Legislative Yuan
in 1994 passed legislation to allow the direct election of the governor
of Taiwan province and the mayors of Taipei and Kaohsiung
municipalities. These elections were held in December 1994, with the
GMD winning the governor's office and Kaohsiung's mayoral post. The DPP
won the Taipei mayoral position. In 1998, GMD candidate Ma Ying-jeou
regained the mayoralty of Taipei by defeating the opposition DPP's most
prominent figure - Chen Shui-bian, who is now the illegal president of
the ROC.
The position of elected governor and many other elements of the Taiwan
provincial government were eliminated by presidential fiat at the end
of 1998. The stated official purpose of this move was to streamline
administrative efficiency, but in reality it was intended to weaken the
political base of governor James Soong. In the November 1997 local
elections, the DPP won 12 of the 23 county magistrate and city mayoral
contests to the GMD's eight, outpolling the GMD for the first time in a
major election.
Soong was GMD secretary general from 1989-93. Despite his mainland
provenance, Soong was widely seen as a loyal supporter of Lee Teng-hui
and an opponent of the mainlander strongholds, the New Kuomintang
Alliance and the New Party. In support of Soong, Lee coined the term
"New Taiwanese" to describe a person born on the mainland, raised on
Taiwan, and calling Taiwan home. Obviously, in keeping with the
favorite-son doctrine, the demographics of local elections naturally
favor local candidates in all elections. If Texas voters alone could
elect a US president through local elections in Texas, a Texan would
win the presidential race, although a president so elected would not be
constitutionally legitimate.
In 1993 Soong was the first and only directly elected governor of
Taiwan province. He was an effective campaigner and his good showing in
the governor's race ended hopes by the DPP of a so-called Boris]
Yeltsin effect, by which a locally elected governor antagonistic to a
national political structure would command more influence than a
national government unpopular with the local population. Soong's
position was eliminated in 1998 after a National Development Council
meeting in 1996, when the NDC suggested that the governmental structure
of the Republic of China be streamlined and the Taiwan provincial
government be abolished to remove administrative redundancy.
This was a political move by then-president Lee Teng-hui to cut off
Soong's power base and at the same time to elevate the status of Taiwan
from that of a Chinese province to that of "one China, one Taiwan". Yet
there is no democratic principle that supports any right of local
voters on Taiwan to determine this or any other national issue, which
only can be decided by all voters in all of China. One common belief on
Taiwan is that Lee Teng-hui favored the less popular vice president,
Lien Chan, over the highly popular Soong, in a deliberate effort to
sabotage GMD election chances.
Taiwan polls for national office are illegitimate
Lien Chan is less popular with local voters on Taiwan mainly because he
is a mainlander and as such always faces a disadvantage in local
provincial elections. But Lien Chan, or any other candidate running for
national office, would not have to face any local election at all if
the original National Assembly had not been illegally disbanded. Others
familiar with Taiwan politics believe Lee feared that Soong if elected
would expose the corruption during Lee's tenure, and undermine Lee's
carefully nurtured legacy as a promoter of democracy.
More important, by illegally disbanding the National Assembly, Lee
rendered all Taiwan elections for national office illegitimate. By
denying GMD political control of Taiwan, Lee unwittingly ended the
Chinese civil war between the GMD and the CCP - by making the GMD
politically irrelevant. Deprived of political control of any Chinese
territory, the GMD ceased to exist as a political force of consequence
and the Chinese civil war between two contending political parties was
at an end - for lack of a certifiable contender.
Taiwan is now occupied by an illegitimate authority that both the GMD
and the CCP have a common interest in eliminating. It also makes a
mockery of the official US position on Taiwan, which aims to preserve
the so-called status quo of Taiwan and to oppose any unilateral
changes. The status quo was GMD control of Taiwan, through the
government of the ROC. This status quo has been unconstitutional,
fundamentally and unilaterally changed by the use of local elections
for national offices.
Unless and until the US de-recognizes the usurpation of national
offices of the ROC by unconstitutional local elections, the "one China"
policy professed by the US is mere hypocrisy. The issue is not local
democracy; the issue is illegitimate usurpation.
A recent controversy involving the illegal 1994 ROC constitution is the
right to referendum, which is enshrined in that new constitution.
Although the right is constitutionally permitted, implementing
legislation had been blocked by the pan-blue coalition - largely from
suspicions that proponents of a referendum law would use it to overturn
even the illegal new ROC constitution and provide a legalistic means
for declaring Taiwan independence.
In 2003, Chen Shui-bian, the illegally elected president, proposed
holding a referendum in 2006 for implementation of an entirely new
constitution on May 20, 2008, to coincide with the inauguration of the
12th president of the ROC, and the 54th anniversary of the first
inauguration of Jiang Jie-shi as president. Proponents of such a move,
namely the DPP-led pan-green coalition, play to the US anti-communist
fixation and argue that the constitution endorses a socialist ideology
- the Three People's Principles proclaimed by Sun Yat-sen, the GMD
founder, as the founding principles of the GMD and the ROC.
Such socialist principles, they argue, are only "precedented" in
communist countries. Furthermore, the current constitution explicitly
states: "To meet the requisites of the nation prior to national
unification ..." in direct opposition to the pan-green agenda of
keeping Taiwan separated from the mainland under all circumstances.
The pan-blue coalition has also come up with its own constitutional
reform proposals, but for implementation in 2005. This position changes
the nature of the unfinished Chinese civil war between the GMD and the
CCP, and compels the PRC into actions to protect the territorial
integrity of China. On this issue, the CCP and the GMD, as well as the
PRC and the ROC, are of one mind. Notwithstanding the illegality of the
new constitution, a referendum on the status of Taiwan, aside from its
controversial constitutionality, can only be valid if it is held on all
of China, including the mainland, and not just held on Chinese Taiwan.
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