The approach to Taiwan is strangely at odds with its policy elsewhere in
the region.
The ballots were barely stored for the 2014 local election in Taiwan
when a raft of articles appeared in the
U.S. media arguing that the shattering victory of the opposition
pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) over the pro-China
Kuomintang (KMT) presaged another round of “tensions” across the Taiwan Strait.
Rising zombie-like from its grave, this line revived an old criticism of the
administration of DPP President Chen Shui-bian. From 2000 to 2008, when he was
in power, Chen was accused of “provoking” China and causing “tension” in the
Taiwan Strait. Indeed, in many media presentations, China was often depicted as
the helpless victim of DPP provocations, without any agency of its own.
Poor China!
Since the
military, bureaucracy, police, and legislature remained under KMT control,
there was never any possibility that Chen could roll out of bed one morning and
declare independence, as all knew. Instead, these unreal but constant
accusations of “tension” served Beijing’s desire to suppress and discredit Chen
and the DPP, both on its own behalf and to help its ally, the KMT. For a
variety of reasons, commentators began repeating the KMT and Beijing line that
Chen Shui-bian was “provocative,” especially after Chen won a second term. The
U.S. government also eventually followed suit. Since one of Beijing’s major
strategic goals is to transfer tension from the Washington-Beijing relationship
to the Washington-Taipei relationship, every official U.S. hack on Chen
Shui-bian and subsequent DPP leaders since has been a strategic victory for
Beijing.
The
simple reality is that the DPP does not increase tensions nor does the KMT
soothe them. Instead, Beijing chooses the level of tensions it feels it needs
to manage its relations with Washington, Taipei, and the two major Taiwan
parties, while blaming others for its actions. For Beijing, “tension” is a
foreign policy choice used to manipulate its interlocutors.
The claim
that Taiwan “causes tension” has a striking uniqueness: In all other instances
of tension along the Chinese frontier, U.S. officials and commentators
routinely and assumptively treat China as the source of tension. It is only
Taiwan that is different. For example, in the late 1960s Beijing suddenly
manufactured a historically absurd and legally indefensible claim to the Senkaku
Islands of Japan. The U.S. has asserted that it will defend the islands under
the U.S.-Japan mutual defense treaty and criticized China’s illegal air-defense
identification zone and other aggressive acts. Nor has the U.S. been shy in
criticizing China’s claim to most of the South China Sea, recently offering a
highly publicized legal document refuting the Chinese claims. The U.S. also
conducts diplomacy with regional powers obviously aimed at countering China.
Washington and the U.S. media seldom publicly criticize Japanese, Vietnamese,
Malaysian, or Indonesian leaders for resisting Chinese expansion (“causing
tension”). Only Taiwan receives that treatment.
Washington’s
strange Taiwan policy, criticizing the pro-Taiwan side for resisting Chinese
expansion (“causing tension”) while supporting the pro-China party in Taiwan
(and indirectly, China itself), is deeply at odds with U.S. policy elsewhere in
Asia. Because it is a policy predicated on the dominance of the KMT, given the
changes sweeping Taiwan, it is rapidly becoming a policy in search of a future.
The recent local election loss, which left the KMT in disarray, is merely the
distant glow of the forest fire on the horizon
that incoming KMT Chairman Eric Chu may find it difficult to hold at bay, even
with the KMT’s huge resource advantages.
First,
the KMT is run by a ruling caste of insiders who hand down the KMT from
generation to generation. The next generation is thin indeed. The children of
many powerful KMT leaders have foreign citizenship – the president’s own
children are Americans – and little interest in Taiwanese politics. The losses
of two of the three “princelings” (children of powerful leaders) in the 2014
elections shows that KMT’s privileged scions, even where they might exist, will
find it difficult to win.
KMT
elites have ruled Taiwan by showering local factions with patronage cash to
gain their support. In return, local factions do not operate at the national
level or form cross-regional networks. This center-local disconnect means that
unlike political parties in modern democracies, the KMT lacks reliable
mechanisms for bringing promising local politicians to the national level.
Moreover, since local politics in Taiwan are notoriously dirty, successful
local politicians are often seen as deeply corrupt and poor candidates for national
office. Thus, at the moment, the KMT is a party with no obvious next generation
of leaders and no clear program for cultivating them. Since long-term DPP
success in the south has confined the KMT to a few northern districts and
sparsely populated mountain areas, it also has no obvious place to foster
future politicians with solid regional bases.
Ironically,
the KMT’s close engagement with China engenders internal conflict. Chinese
investments in local areas impact the local KMT faction networks on which KMT
rule depends, fracturing links to the party center and souring its local
support. Take the recent failure of the much ballyhooed services trade pact
with China. In the international media, the student occupation of the
legislature is often presented as a simpleminded ideological narrative of brave
but short-sighted students opposing “free trade.” The reality is more
complicated. The agreement permitted Chinese to operate service businesses in
Taiwan, businesses that directly competed with those of local KMT legislative
factions and their supporters and constituents. Hence, the KMT’s own local
legislators wouldn’t vote for the deeply unpopular pact. The students moved on the legislature
only when the KMT undemocratically attempted to circumvent the legislature by
declaring the bill a law without a legislative vote.
The most
serious problem facing the KMT, and thus, U.S. Taiwan policy, is the rapid
demographic and economic change in Taiwan. Poll after poll shows that locals do
not want to be part of China and think of themselves as Taiwanese, especially
among the under-30 generation. The KMT has lost the young. The party’s claim to
a superior economic record has been devastated by the performance of the Ma
Administration. The KMT is widely seen as the party of big business, with wages
returning to 1999 levels amid stagnant incomes. The Taipei housing bubble has
forced young couples into neighboring counties to find housing, changing the
solidly pro-KMT demographics of those regions. Though the rising generation is
sick of the incompetence and venality of both major parties, the DPP does not
share the KMT’s pro-China baggage. Further, emergent non-party political
activism is also pro-Taiwan and hostile to KMT economic and political policies.
Finally,
there is the ever-rising risk of conflict in Asia. Beijing’s zero-sum
territorial demands are paired with provocative policies for maritime and other
resources. The U.S. could be supporting a party and a people in Taiwan who have
a deep, urgent interest in resistance to Chinese expansion, a natural asset for
both Washington and Tokyo. Instead, U.S. support of the KMT means that
Washington may find itself opposing Beijing across Asia with a government in
Taipei that is more or less informally allied to Beijing and identifies with
its expansionist goals.
Is that
really where Washington wants to be?
Michael
Turton blogs at The View from Taiwan.
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