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Taipei mayor won't publicly back 'One China', Shanghai forum at risk


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Ko Wen-je speaks after winning the local elections at the campaign headquarters in Taipei November 29, …


TAIPEI (Reuters) - An annual forum between the mayors of Shanghai and Taipei might not take place as scheduled this year because the mayor of the Taiwan capital will not publicly endorse Beijing's "One China" principle.

The dispute highlights the deep mistrust between the two sides despite the establishment of the best ever trade ties since Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou took office in 2008.

Taiwan has been holding the annual "Two Cities" forum with China's economic capital since 2010 but this year's visit to Shanghai is under a shadow because Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je has repeatedly refused to recognize "One China".

Ko met the deputy mayor of Shanghai, Weng Tiehui, on Thursday to discuss a possible visit to Shanghai next month but no decision was reached.

"The first thing we'd need to do is to increase mutual trust, or we can't take it any further," Ko told a news briefing after the meeting with Weng.

Ko, an independent, beat a rival from the China-friendly Nationalists in late in 2014 to take office.

Beijing has claimed sovereignty over Taiwan since 1949, when Mao Zedong's forces won the Chinese civil war and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists fled to the island, claiming to be the true Chinese government.

Beijing insists that all countries and international organizations recognize it as the "One China".

(Reporting by Faith Hung; Editing by Paul Tait)
 
Sigh, a thread with too many manipulations. What you guys want? :D

As I look over this thread, I read the following things except armed forces.

1. Taiwan's political situation, US' attitudes and Japanese follow-up tactics, Japanese ambitions to sell weapons to Taiwan. :D
2. Japan is strong enough but need Taiwan as a ally and others.
3. Japan is preparing a war and their enemy seems to be China and they do have the willingness to counter China.

You could just directly speak louder and don't let it turn to be ridiculous here. Hmm, it seems off topic.

And many other experts that know much more about Taiwan and mainland China than Chinese.:D

WTF!

Ok, caution! all brothers, please be well prepared for the Japan thread. And get ready for save our brothers in danger at any time. I am serious If you read those guys posts.

:D:D:D

PS. To my fellow neitizens, please don't mention our nuclear weapon and that actually is not ready to human beings. When we use nuclear weapons that means the end of world or the end of a certain country. This is totally immoral and stupid.:crazy:
 
Sigh, a thread with too many manipulations. What you guys want? :D

As I look over this thread, I read the following things except armed forces.

1. Taiwan's political situation, US' attitudes and Japanese follow-up tactics, Japanese ambitions to sell weapons to Taiwan. :D
2. Japan is strong enough but need Taiwan as a ally and others.
3. Japan is preparing a war and their enemy seems to be China and they do have the willingness to counter China.

You could just directly speak louder and don't let it turn to be ridiculous here. Hmm, it seems off topic.

And many other experts that know much more about Taiwan and mainland China than Chinese.:D

WTF!

Ok, caution! all brothers, please be well prepared for the Japan thread. And get ready for save our brothers in danger at any time. I am serious If you read those guys posts.

:D:D:D

PS. To my fellow neitizens, please don't mention our nuclear weapon and that actually is not ready to human beings. When we use nuclear weapons that means the end of world or the end of a certain country. This is totally immoral and stupid.:crazy:
Take ease, for the the foreigners' perception level like this thread about Taiwan issue, the solution of Taiwan issue will be quietly easy for lack of external interference.
 
Last edited:
Taiwan stands up to China with military parade to underline its role against Japanese in WWII



TAIPEI, Taiwan – Taiwan has marched out thousands of troops in a parade to spotlight an old but often forgotten claim that its forces and not the Communists who took over China routed the Japanese in World War II.

China and Taiwan split during civil war in 1949 and today's China — more militarily and economically powerful than Taiwan — says the Communists had directed the resistance against the Japanese.

The two-hour parade held Saturday included missiles, Apache attack helicopters and a mountain bike team for stealth missions.

Taiwan's Nationalist Party, which ruled all of China when Japan invaded parts of the country starting in 1931, says Communist forces had only a minor role in fighting the Japanese alongside the Republic of China troops.


Taiwan stands up to China with military parade to underline its role against Japanese in WWII | Fox News

------





Taiwan Pursues MH-60R ASW Helos



TAIPEI — Taiwan's Navy seeks to procure eight to 10 MH-60R Seahawk anti-submarine warfare (ASW) helicopters via the US Foreign Military Sales program to replace aging MD500 "Defender" helicopters, a local defense industry source said.

An announcement is expected by the end of this year and a possible letter of acceptance in 2016, the source said. A US-based defense industry analyst said the deal was estimated at $700 million to $800 million.

Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense confirmed that the MD500s are scheduled for retirement and that it was seeking a replacement.

The revelation comes on the heels of news that Lockheed Martin will acquire Sikorsky Aircraft, maker of the Seahawk, from United Technologies for $9 billion. The new Seahawks will also augment the Navy's existing inventory of 18 S-70C(M) ASW helicopters now in operation.

"Some of the older S-70s' mission equipment and avionics is outdated," the defense industry source said. The MH-60Rs will be able to take up some of the heavy lifting.

"This is good news. The MH-60R program is essential to Taiwan's maritime security and represents an important new capability for the ROCN," said Rupert Hammond-Chambers, president, US-Taiwan Business Council, Arlington, Virginia. "The main issue is ensuring the budget is suitable for a program of this cost as Taiwan's ruling party continues to underinvest in the defense budget.

"It is also noteworthy that if the MH-60R LoR is accepted this fall it will be the first new program for new equipment that would result in a new capability since the autumn of 2006. This in the face of ongoing reporting by the Bush and Obama administrations that the cross-strait military threat expands annually."

Taiwan's Navy has two S-70C(M) ASW squadrons, the 701 and 702, formed in 1991 and 2000, respectively. The Navy also has an active ASW squadron (501) of 10 MD500 Defender helicopters procured in 1980.

The MD500s are now "worn out" and "couldn't find a submarine unless it was washed up on the beach," the defense industry source said. They could still use some of the MD500s for pilot training, but they are finished as an operational platform, he said.

Taiwan has been beefing up its ASW missions with the replacement of two squadrons of Northrop Grumman S-2T Turbo Trackers with 12 refurbished P-3C Orion ASW aircraft.

In 2010, the US announced a $3.1 billion deal for 60 UH-60M helicopters to be delivered 10 a year until the final transfer in 2018. "It's not a production problem, it's a rate of delivery the military wants for training reasons," the local defense industry source said.

However, after 700 people were killed by Typhoon Morakot in 2009, Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou announced that 15 of the aircraft would be given to the National Airborne Service Corps (NASC), under the Ministry of Interior, for humanitarian missions. The NASC has a mix of helicopters for rescue and transport missions: AS365N1/N2, S-76B, UH-1H and B234/CH-47.

Taiwan still needs additional Sikorsky UH-60M Black Hawk utility helicopters to replace the 15 Black Hawks transferred to the NASC and to replace the 45 remaining Bell UH-1H utility helicopters. These additional Black Hawks would properly equip its third battalion, the 603 Army Aviation Battalion, now outfitted with nine Boeing CH-47D Chinook cargo helicopters and other training helicopters.

The 601 and 602 are outfitted at present with a combination of older AH-1W Super Cobra attack helicopters and UH-1Hs, and new AH-64 Apache Longbow attack helicopters.

However, the US-based defense industry analyst said there have been no specifics about "a follow-on UH buy, although replacement for the remaining UH-1Hs is both logical and justified, made all the more necessary by Ma's decision to give 15 Black Hawks to the disaster relief authorities. The better question is: when will the money become sufficiently available to fund such a costly program?"

Taiwan's defense industry/community criticized Ma's decision because the MH-60M was a combat configuration, not for search and rescue. The sudden announcement put pressure on the US government's FMS program to make late adjustments, which resulted in no significant changes in the first nine aircraft.

"The first nine will be the same as the Army variant, except it will include a different radio, the TFM-500 Federated Radio, and a Bambi bucket [for firefighting]," the defense industry source said. The final six for NASC will include the same TFM-500 radio and Bambi bucket, but will also be configured for search-and-rescue operations.

Additional announcements and news are expected next month as Taiwan and US defense industry officials, along with government officials from both Taipei and Washington, gather at the upcoming biennial Taipei Aerospace and Defense Technology Exhibition, Aug. 13-16. So far, 102 exhibitors will display their wares with 265 booths.

US exhibitors will include General Dynamics Mission Systems, Lockheed Martin and Rockwell Collins. Taiwan exhibitors will include Aerospace Industrial Development Corp., Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology, Ministry of National Defense, National Space Organization, Trivet Industrial Corporation, and U&U Engineering. This year the show will include its first UAV exhibition area.



Taiwan Pursues MH-60R ASW Helos
 
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@Nihonjin1051
 
@Nihonjin1051

The Odd Couple: Japan & Taiwan’s Unlikely Friendship
| The Diplomat

The Odd Couple: Japan & Taiwan’s Unlikely Friendship | The Diplomat

Japan does not have it easy among its neighbors. Koreans (from both Koreas) and Chinese won’t miss a chance to slam Japan for lack of repentance for Japan’s war-time crimes (needless to say, public figures in Japan give them a good reason every now and then), and relations with Russia, while not being as bad, still face the unresolved dispute over Kuril Islands. However, one relationships stands out in the otherwise awkward position of Japan in the region. Its relationship with Taiwan, while unofficial due to the peculiar status of Taiwan, is unlike any other Japanese bilateral relationship in Northeast Asia. Indeed, it would not be far-fetched to call Taiwan the most Japan-friendly state in Asia.

Naturally, there is no single explanation for why Taiwan does not join its neighbors in their collective dislike of Tokyo. There is certainly a mutual understanding that Taiwan needs Japan’s support should relations between Taiwan and China deteriorate. Likewise – and in the face of Beijing’s pressure on Tokyo regarding Diaoyutai/Senkaku despite – Japanese policymakers understand that Japan’s security would be seriously challenged should Taiwan fall under Beijing’s control. With the return of Shinzo Abe to premiership, there has been remarkable acknowledgment of the importance of Taiwan for Japan’s security. In a January 2013 White

Paper, Japan’s defense ministry included a PRC attack on Taiwan as one of the scenarios that could prompt a Japanese conflict with China. Yet, the same could be said about South Korea. That is, it would be hard to imagine another Korean War that would see Japan cooperating with Seoul in one way or another. But relations between South Korea and Japan are a far cry from Tokyo’s relationship with Taiwan.

Another argument can be made that ties to Washington help to facilitate relations between Tokyo and Taipei. The U.S. would certainly not be pleased if Taiwan’s President ran on an anti- Japanese agenda. Taiwan needs the U.S. for its defense, hence, it is sound to assume that whoever is in charge in Taipei will moderate their policy toward Japan. Yet again, however, the same could be said about South Korea, which maintains a formal defense alliance with Washington and hosts a sizable contingency of U.S. troops. Yet, these factors have not resulted in cordial relations between Korea and Japan. Washington is certainly trying to decrease the level of antipathy between its two treaty allies, but it can’t claim much success on that front.

Democracy may also play a role in smoothing relations between Taiwan and Japan. But this too fails to account for why Japan and South Korea don’t have as positive of a relationship as Tokyo and Taipei. Indeed, as the case of Korea and Japan shows, democracy might actually help sow discord between two states as politicians feel the need to cater to public opinion.

Economics also cannot fully account for Japan and Taiwan’s strong bilateral relationship. Japan is Taiwan’s second largest trading partner, while Taiwan is the fifth largest for Japan. But Taiwan and China as well as Japan and China maintain even more extensive economic ties. This can’t overcome the fact that China is Taiwan’s principal security threat and, as the recent Sunflower Movement reminds us, Taiwanese are having serious second thoughts about the direction of cross-strait relations. And China may be Japan’s largest trading partner but this has done little to prevent prolonged tensions over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Another reason that Taiwan and Japan’s bilateral relationship has been so positive is that successive Taiwanese heads of state have held a positive view of Japan. Lee Teng-hui (Taiwan’s President 1988- 2000) represents a generation of Taiwanese who received their education from Japan during the colonial period (1895-1945) and who speak Japanese fluently. Lee’s successor, Chen Shui-bian, from Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) also held a favorable view of Japan and sought closer security ties with Tokyo.

Yet, when the Kuomintang (KMT) party came to power under Ma Ying-jeou in 2008, many expected the new Taiwanese government to reduce ties with Japan at least at the very senior levels of government. This was not an unreasonable position given that the KMT of 2008 was a fundamentally different party from Lee Teng hui’s KMT in the 1990s. Frustrated with its loss of the presidency for two terms, KMT embraced China (and the CCP) with Lien Chan’s visit in 2005. Moreover, the rapid improvement of cross-strait ties during the first years of Ma’s presidency puzzled Tokyo about where Taipei stood. Thus, the scene was set for a deterioration in bilateral relations.

Yet, nothing of the sort has happened. On the contrary, last April Taipei and Tokyo signed a fisheries agreement that laid down the rules under which Taiwanese fishermen can operate around the Diaoyutai/Senkaku islands. This is a remarkable agreement especially when seen within the broader context of maritime disputes in East and Southeast Asia. Japan signing a similar agreement with South Korea or China would be virtually unthinkable at the present time.

In short, then, their relationship with the U.S., economic ties, similar political systems and an affinity between national leaders all play a role in facilitating Taiwan and Japan’s strong bilateral relationship. But, as noted above, those factors are present with other nations, including some like South Korea which have strained relations with Japan. Perhaps the largest reason for the positive bilateral relationship, then, is that—unlike in other countries, ties with Japan are cherished by Taiwanese of all different groups.

Consider that a survey conducted by the Interchange Association Japan, Japan’s de facto embassy in Taiwan, found that 65 percent of Taiwanese feel either “close” or “really close” to Japan, which stands in stark contrast to China where over 90 percent of Chinese have either an “unfavorable” or “relatively unfavorable” opinions of Japan.

Indeed, Japan is overwhelmingly the most popular country among Taiwanese. When asked what their favorite country was in the same survey, 43 percent said Japan, while only single digits said Singapore, the U.S. or China. The support for Japan is even stronger among Taiwanese aged 20-29, with 54 percent of respondents in that age group listing Japan as their favorite foreign country. By contrast, only 2 percent of respondents between ages of 20 and 29 said China was their favorite foreign country.

A Japanese Foreign Ministry report on Taiwan-Japan relations reveals some of the reasons why Japan is viewed so favorable among Taiwanese. For example, 67 percent of Japanese say they feel either “very close” or “really close” to Taiwan, while tourism reached 1.5 million people in 2012.

This cordiality between the Japanese and Taiwanese people has virtually eliminated any anti-Japanese sentiment in Taiwan, as exemplified by the amount of (mostly private) donations Taiwanese made to Japan in the aftermath of the 3/11 earthquake and tsunami. There is also an aspect of positive interpretation of common history.

It is former President Lee’s generation that maintains a generally positive interpretation of the colonial period, which compares favorable for many Taiwanese with the period of White Terror brought about by the Kuomintang after its retreat to Taiwan in 1949. But, as noted above, there is an immense support for Japan among younger population too. And that translates into great popularity of Japanese products. Young Taiwanese prefer to use Line over WhatsApp and WeChat for their instant messaging, Japan-born Hello Kitty is omnipresent on the streets in Taiwan, and Japanese anime has a large fan base in Taiwan. The positive ideas about history meet widespread admiration for Japanese cultural artifacts and fashion designs.

The friendship is not a top-down driven process; it goes well both ways and it makes Taiwan an outlier among Japan’s neighbors. Japanese, for their part, feel Taiwan’s positivity and reciprocate accordingly. From the perspective of Taiwan’s relations with China, partnership with Japan provides additional security while extensive people-to-people contacts make Japan perhaps the friendliest nation regarding Taiwan’s de facto independence. From the vantage point of Taiwan-U.S. relations, Japan’s genuine interest in preserving Taiwan’s status quo is complementary to the U.S. interests in protecting Japan. Moreover, regional efforts to strengthen the bilateral relationship are in line with declared U.S. policy of rebalancing to Asia and its “alliance network.” But all that stands on a solid and extensive networks of people-to-people contacts between the two island nations.

Michal Thim is a Ph.D. candidate in the Taiwan Studies Program at the China Policy Institute (CPI), University of Nottingham, CPI blog’s Emerging Scholar and a Research Fellow at the Prague- based think-tank Association for International Affairs. Michal tweets @michalthim.

Misato Matsuoka is a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick and CPI blog’s Emerging Scholar. Research interests cover the U.S.-Japan alliance, neo-Gramscianism and regionalism in Asia-Pacific.
 
@Nihonjin1051

The Odd Couple: Japan & Taiwan’s Unlikely Friendship
| The Diplomat

The Odd Couple: Japan & Taiwan’s Unlikely Friendship | The Diplomat

Japan does not have it easy among its neighbors. Koreans (from both Koreas) and Chinese won’t miss a chance to slam Japan for lack of repentance for Japan’s war-time crimes (needless to say, public figures in Japan give them a good reason every now and then), and relations with Russia, while not being as bad, still face the unresolved dispute over Kuril Islands. However, one relationships stands out in the otherwise awkward position of Japan in the region. Its relationship with Taiwan, while unofficial due to the peculiar status of Taiwan, is unlike any other Japanese bilateral relationship in Northeast Asia. Indeed, it would not be far-fetched to call Taiwan the most Japan-friendly state in Asia.

Naturally, there is no single explanation for why Taiwan does not join its neighbors in their collective dislike of Tokyo. There is certainly a mutual understanding that Taiwan needs Japan’s support should relations between Taiwan and China deteriorate. Likewise – and in the face of Beijing’s pressure on Tokyo regarding Diaoyutai/Senkaku despite – Japanese policymakers understand that Japan’s security would be seriously challenged should Taiwan fall under Beijing’s control. With the return of Shinzo Abe to premiership, there has been remarkable acknowledgment of the importance of Taiwan for Japan’s security. In a January 2013 White

Paper, Japan’s defense ministry included a PRC attack on Taiwan as one of the scenarios that could prompt a Japanese conflict with China. Yet, the same could be said about South Korea. That is, it would be hard to imagine another Korean War that would see Japan cooperating with Seoul in one way or another. But relations between South Korea and Japan are a far cry from Tokyo’s relationship with Taiwan.

Another argument can be made that ties to Washington help to facilitate relations between Tokyo and Taipei. The U.S. would certainly not be pleased if Taiwan’s President ran on an anti- Japanese agenda. Taiwan needs the U.S. for its defense, hence, it is sound to assume that whoever is in charge in Taipei will moderate their policy toward Japan. Yet again, however, the same could be said about South Korea, which maintains a formal defense alliance with Washington and hosts a sizable contingency of U.S. troops. Yet, these factors have not resulted in cordial relations between Korea and Japan. Washington is certainly trying to decrease the level of antipathy between its two treaty allies, but it can’t claim much success on that front.

Democracy may also play a role in smoothing relations between Taiwan and Japan. But this too fails to account for why Japan and South Korea don’t have as positive of a relationship as Tokyo and Taipei. Indeed, as the case of Korea and Japan shows, democracy might actually help sow discord between two states as politicians feel the need to cater to public opinion.

Economics also cannot fully account for Japan and Taiwan’s strong bilateral relationship. Japan is Taiwan’s second largest trading partner, while Taiwan is the fifth largest for Japan. But Taiwan and China as well as Japan and China maintain even more extensive economic ties. This can’t overcome the fact that China is Taiwan’s principal security threat and, as the recent Sunflower Movement reminds us, Taiwanese are having serious second thoughts about the direction of cross-strait relations. And China may be Japan’s largest trading partner but this has done little to prevent prolonged tensions over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Another reason that Taiwan and Japan’s bilateral relationship has been so positive is that successive Taiwanese heads of state have held a positive view of Japan. Lee Teng-hui (Taiwan’s President 1988- 2000) represents a generation of Taiwanese who received their education from Japan during the colonial period (1895-1945) and who speak Japanese fluently. Lee’s successor, Chen Shui-bian, from Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) also held a favorable view of Japan and sought closer security ties with Tokyo.

Yet, when the Kuomintang (KMT) party came to power under Ma Ying-jeou in 2008, many expected the new Taiwanese government to reduce ties with Japan at least at the very senior levels of government. This was not an unreasonable position given that the KMT of 2008 was a fundamentally different party from Lee Teng hui’s KMT in the 1990s. Frustrated with its loss of the presidency for two terms, KMT embraced China (and the CCP) with Lien Chan’s visit in 2005. Moreover, the rapid improvement of cross-strait ties during the first years of Ma’s presidency puzzled Tokyo about where Taipei stood. Thus, the scene was set for a deterioration in bilateral relations.

Yet, nothing of the sort has happened. On the contrary, last April Taipei and Tokyo signed a fisheries agreement that laid down the rules under which Taiwanese fishermen can operate around the Diaoyutai/Senkaku islands. This is a remarkable agreement especially when seen within the broader context of maritime disputes in East and Southeast Asia. Japan signing a similar agreement with South Korea or China would be virtually unthinkable at the present time.

In short, then, their relationship with the U.S., economic ties, similar political systems and an affinity between national leaders all play a role in facilitating Taiwan and Japan’s strong bilateral relationship. But, as noted above, those factors are present with other nations, including some like South Korea which have strained relations with Japan. Perhaps the largest reason for the positive bilateral relationship, then, is that—unlike in other countries, ties with Japan are cherished by Taiwanese of all different groups.

Consider that a survey conducted by the Interchange Association Japan, Japan’s de facto embassy in Taiwan, found that 65 percent of Taiwanese feel either “close” or “really close” to Japan, which stands in stark contrast to China where over 90 percent of Chinese have either an “unfavorable” or “relatively unfavorable” opinions of Japan.

Indeed, Japan is overwhelmingly the most popular country among Taiwanese. When asked what their favorite country was in the same survey, 43 percent said Japan, while only single digits said Singapore, the U.S. or China. The support for Japan is even stronger among Taiwanese aged 20-29, with 54 percent of respondents in that age group listing Japan as their favorite foreign country. By contrast, only 2 percent of respondents between ages of 20 and 29 said China was their favorite foreign country.

A Japanese Foreign Ministry report on Taiwan-Japan relations reveals some of the reasons why Japan is viewed so favorable among Taiwanese. For example, 67 percent of Japanese say they feel either “very close” or “really close” to Taiwan, while tourism reached 1.5 million people in 2012.

This cordiality between the Japanese and Taiwanese people has virtually eliminated any anti-Japanese sentiment in Taiwan, as exemplified by the amount of (mostly private) donations Taiwanese made to Japan in the aftermath of the 3/11 earthquake and tsunami. There is also an aspect of positive interpretation of common history.

It is former President Lee’s generation that maintains a generally positive interpretation of the colonial period, which compares favorable for many Taiwanese with the period of White Terror brought about by the Kuomintang after its retreat to Taiwan in 1949. But, as noted above, there is an immense support for Japan among younger population too. And that translates into great popularity of Japanese products. Young Taiwanese prefer to use Line over WhatsApp and WeChat for their instant messaging, Japan-born Hello Kitty is omnipresent on the streets in Taiwan, and Japanese anime has a large fan base in Taiwan. The positive ideas about history meet widespread admiration for Japanese cultural artifacts and fashion designs.

The friendship is not a top-down driven process; it goes well both ways and it makes Taiwan an outlier among Japan’s neighbors. Japanese, for their part, feel Taiwan’s positivity and reciprocate accordingly. From the perspective of Taiwan’s relations with China, partnership with Japan provides additional security while extensive people-to-people contacts make Japan perhaps the friendliest nation regarding Taiwan’s de facto independence. From the vantage point of Taiwan-U.S. relations, Japan’s genuine interest in preserving Taiwan’s status quo is complementary to the U.S. interests in protecting Japan. Moreover, regional efforts to strengthen the bilateral relationship are in line with declared U.S. policy of rebalancing to Asia and its “alliance network.” But all that stands on a solid and extensive networks of people-to-people contacts between the two island nations.

Michal Thim is a Ph.D. candidate in the Taiwan Studies Program at the China Policy Institute (CPI), University of Nottingham, CPI blog’s Emerging Scholar and a Research Fellow at the Prague- based think-tank Association for International Affairs. Michal tweets @michalthim.

Misato Matsuoka is a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick and CPI blog’s Emerging Scholar. Research interests cover the U.S.-Japan alliance, neo-Gramscianism and regionalism in Asia-Pacific.



An excellent piece , amigo !
 
@Nihonjin1051

Chiang statues become targets as Taiwan confronts history
Chiang statues become targets as Taiwan confronts history - Yahoo News

Taipei (AFP) - One has been beheaded, others defaced. Some are dressed in costumes by pranksters. Statues of Taiwan's former ruler Chiang Kai-shek have been increasingly targeted as the island confronts its authoritarian past.

Though still seen as a hero by some in Taiwan for waging war against communist China under the banner of the nationalist Kuomintang (KMT), Chiang has long been a divisive figure.

His role in Taiwan's "White Terror" -- a purge of political opponents -- and his imposition of martial law have led many to brand him a dictator synonymous with the authoritarianism that wary Taiwanese now equate with mainland rule.

Despite splitting after a civil war, China considers the island as a part of its territory awaiting reunification, by force if necessary. Fears over increased Chinese influence have grown since 2008 under President Ma Ying-jeou's KMT government, which has forged a rapprochement with Beijing.

Chiang's authoritarianism has outweighed his Nationalist credentials and his image is wrapped up in that concern, with young people in particular feeling strongly that his memory should not be celebrated.

"Chiang was a dictator. For a long time, freedom of speech in Taiwan was suppressed," said Peter Chu, 23, a graduate student at National Taiwan University of Science and Technology.

"Why should his statues be allowed to remain on any campus?"

"There have been calls for removing the statue (at my school), but the school authorities have done nothing about it," says student activist Chu Chen, 18, who attends the prestigious Taipei Municipal Jianguo High School.

"Every year, graduates decorate the statue mocking it."

Students most recently decked it out the figure in an E.T. costume, with a helmet and wings.

The animosity is not all about avenging the past.

Chu is part of a campaign against what protesters call "China-centric" changes to the school curriculum by the ruling Beijing-friendly KMT government.

He says youngsters' anti-Chiang sentiment stems from the same drive: to take control of their own destinies.

Students last week stormed the education ministry compound after a young activist committed suicide.

Some remain camped out there, demanding the retraction of the curriculum changes and the resignation of the education minister.

- Authoritarian icon -

As leader of the KMT, Chiang fought a civil war on the mainland with the Chinese communists before being defeated and fleeing to Taiwan in 1949, where he imposed martial law.

The island had previously been under Japanese rule until 1945, when it was given to China. Chiang remained its leader until his death in 1975.

Political opposition was banned and newspapers barred until martial law was eventually lifted in 1987.

But it was an incident 50 years previously that first sparked Taiwanese resentment.

The massacre on February 28, 1947 -- known as the 2/28 Incident -- saw troops brutally quell an anti-government uprising triggered when an inspector beat a woman selling untaxed cigarettes in Taipei.

Thousands of people were tortured and killed during the subsequent "White Terror" crackdown.

Though Chiang was not on the island for the 2/28 incident he has been held responsible for ordering the army to step in, and it has become an easy symbol for the animosity against him, which becomes particularly pronounced on the anniversary.

There were a record 30 attacks on statues of Chiang on February 28 this year, with one beheaded and others smeared with red paint.

"Many of the attacks (on statues) were done by students, who believe Chiang is the icon not only of the Kuomintang's authoritarian rule of Taiwan but also of a regime from China," said Shih Cheng-feng of National Dong Hwa University in the eastern Hualien county.

"As Chiang's statues are on every corner, they have easily become the targets of growing anti-China sentiment," he said.

Chiang's public profile was steadily eroded under the rule of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) from 2000-2008, with statues removed and street names changed.

Traditionally Beijing-sceptic and pro-independence, the DPP changed the name of the island's main airport from Chiang Kai-shek to Taoyuan, dropped his memorial day as an official holiday, and scrapped his image from bank notes.

Schools were asked to stop singing songs portraying him as a "national saviour" and "great world leader".

But some iconography survived.

In March this year, the DPP mayor of the southern city of Tainan, William Lai, ordered the removal of Chiang statues from 16 schools.

"Chiang's statues have political implications and are very controversial. They should be removed," Lai said.

They were sent to a museum in the northern city of Taoyuan which also houses Chiang's mausoleum.

In recent years it has become a graveyard of unwanted Chiang icons, with 218 statues currently on display. Officials there expect numbers to rise as more are discarded.

Three presidents, including current leader Ma, have apologised to the families of the 1947 massacre victims. They were given compensation after a government investigation said that Chiang "should bear the biggest responsibility" for the incident.

Yet bitterness remains.

"The transition of justice has not been completed," Taipei-based rights lawyer Lai Chung-chiang told AFP.

"Despite a democracy, the remnants of the authoritarian ruling, like Chiang's statues, still stand."
 
US Army allows Taiwan students to mark uniforms


Three of Republic of China's military exchange students who took on paratrooper training in the U.S. were allowed to mark their uniforms with the word "Taiwan" by U.S. military schools, Ministry of National Defense (MND) Spokesman David Lo said yesterday. This could be a subtle but advancing change in the R.O.C. and U.S. military relationship, even though the two countries have no official diplomatic ties, Lo said.
The U.S. and Taiwan have maintained military cooperation for decades. During the early stages of the exchange of military personnel, there were many restrictions binding Taiwanese personnel. Initially, they were prohibited from wearing R.O.C. uniforms in the U.S. Currently, they are allowed to wear U.S. military uniforms with a badge featuring the R.O.C. national flag, as well as marking their uniforms with the word "Taiwan," according to Lo.

In regard to this development, Lo affirmed the good will of the U.S., adding that it'd be even better if the exchanged personnel were allowed to stitch "Republic of China" on the uniforms. On the other hand, an anonymous diplomat stated that the U.S. Army's leniency may not necessarily be U.S. State Department policy as the Joint Chiefs of Staff still go by the "one-China policy." Consequently, allowing the "Taiwan" to be on the uniforms does not necessarily mean that America has recognized Taiwan, the diplomat said.

Nonetheless, willing to allow the word "Taiwan" on U.S. uniforms is a great gesture which should not be abused, he said.

The MND stated that three R.O.C. Military Academy exchange students — attending the Virginia Military Institute, The Citadel and Norwich University – were headed to Fort Benning, Georgia. Wearing their unique "Taiwanese" military uniforms, the three military students received the United States Army Parachutist Badge.

The three students — Hsu Hao-chen (許皓宸), Hsu Li-chuan (許禮泉) and Chen You-cheng (陳又誠) — received the same training as 500 other U.S. soldiers and military students. Of 520 trainees, 431 finished the training. Thirty students from the U.S Military Academy attended the training, of which seven were eliminated. The three Taiwanese military students completed and passed five principal parachute jumps, including a night jump, with flying colors, said Lo

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I can understand if Taiwan was only independent for say 5 years, or 10 year. But come on, amigo, the mainlanders are just a wee bit unpractical in saying that Taiwan will be forced to be united with Mainland? Taiwan hasn't been part of Mainland since 1894, and even then they didn't really have full control of Taiwan in the first place only in the coastal areas. In fact, it was when Taiwan was under Japanese rule that the whole of the island was conquered and the Imperial Japanese Army crushed the defeated the Aborigines in Taiwan, and encouraged complete development of the island --- from a provincial backwater to a world-class Imperial crown colony, and an industrial state, doubled the population, had a literacy rate of 96% all within just 40 years of being a Japanese colony. Impressive yes?

Taiwan , in my eyes, is independent, has been independent, and will remain independent. And China will not have the means to seize it by force without drawing in international intervention.

First of all if PRC China is as strong as other members here claim, and if it was that "easy" to do so, they would have invaded ROC decades ago. otherwise "IT AINT GONNA HAPPEN!!!". So hold on your horses gentlemen!!! Reunification between the two CHINAS will be and will always be a dream and will remain a dream (in our lifetimes anyway). Besides we can just park an Aircraft Carrier or two in the Taiwanese strait and the PRC will back down their usual warlike rhetoric's like we did in 96.

China does not have the means to blockade Japan. We would eradicate any enemy navy foolish enough to attempt that.

I agree brother they don't have the means and as I understand the Japanese Imperial Navy errrrr JSDF Navy or whatever you call those gray things that float has more destroyers than the Chinese Navy (the PRC i mean). You are 2nd to the US Navy with the numbers of those tubs i think. I read it somewhere.

I am quite fascinated with the behavior of some members here I mean gentlemen seriously!??! Invade them, bomb that, wipe you out, unbelievable!!! I am so glad these people aren't the leaders of their respective countries or we are all in deep sh*t!!!!

@Technogaianist you flyboy and @Nihonjin1051 you squid!!! again, I see you two posting more pictures of the navy and airforce!!! need i remind you two that jets and ships make good pictures but in the end it is the grunts on the ground that ultimately win the war!!! but i have to give it to you two GOOD JOB BROTHERS!!! KEEP 'EM COMIN!!!
 
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