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WSWS : News
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Chinese military exercise raises tensions with Taiwan
By John Chan
25 June 2004
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China is about to stage a major military exercise near the
Taiwan Strait that is certain to heighten already sharp tensions
with Taiwan following the islands recent presidential election.
While an exact date is yet to be announced, the Chinese foreign
ministry confirmed on June 1 that the exercise would take place
in late June or early July at Dongshan Island in Fujian provincejust
277 kilometres from Taiwans Penghu Islands.
Previous Chinese exercises have focused on crossing the Taiwan
Strait and making landings. The stated purpose of the latest military
manoeuvres is to practice taking control of the Taiwan Straitthat
is, to test the ability of Chinese forces to seize control of
air space and sea lanes in battles that would, in all probability,
involve not only Taiwanese, but US military forces.
Some 18,000 Chinese troops including a tank brigade, will be
deployed along with submarines, warships, a cruise missile brigade
and Russian-made Su-27 and Su-30 fighter jets. In recent years,
the Chinese military has sought to build up its navy and airforce.
In a show of force in late April, Beijing sent eight new warships,
including a stealth boat carrying long-range supersonic anti-ship
missiles, to Hong Kong and into the South China Sea.
While China is currently in no position to challenge the US
navy, Beijings latest sabre rattling is aimed at sending
a sharp warning to the Chen administration in Taiwan not to take
any steps toward proclaiming independence. Beijing, which regards
Taiwan as a renegade Chinese province, has repeatedly declared
in the past that it would intervene militarily against Taiwan
in the event of any such proclamation.
Taiwans President Chen Shui-ban narrowly defeated the
Kuomintang (KMT) challenger in presidential elections in March
by making a deliberate appeal to Taiwanese nationalism and threatening
to call a future referendum on the independence of the island.
In his inauguration speech, however, Chen attempted to pacify
Beijing by indicating that he did not intend to make any change
to the status quo in the near future.
Chens conciliatory comment has not assuaged concerns
in Beijing, where sections of the Stalinist bureaucracy are pushing
for a more hard-line stance and, if need be, military action against
Taiwan.
Sun Shengliang, a scholar from the Taiwan Institute of the
official Chinese Academic of Social Sciences, told the Strait
Times earlier this month: Before the end of 2006, we
should make solid preparation, even preparation at all costs,
so that Taiwanese people will understand that it is not empty
words when we say Taiwan independence means war.
Last month, the Chinese government declared that it was drafting
a national unification law. Although its contents
and purpose have yet to be made public, the Hong Kong media reported
that the law may include measures to conscript civilian resources
and manpower to engage in a war with Taiwan.
Some preparations for a more aggressive military stance towards
Taiwan are already underway. Ming Pao Daily News, a pro-Beijing
newspaper in Hong Kong, reported last month that local militia
units had been ordered to be operationally prepared for
war at any time.
According to the Straits Times, when Chinese Vice President
Zeng Qinghong visited Fujian province earlier this month to check
on preparations for the upcoming military exercise, he broached
the idea of appointing military officers to top provincial posts.
His aim was said to be to coordinate provincial resources in the
event of war.
On June 20, CNN reported that several Chinese generals had
petitioned President Hu Jintao for more funds and faster
war preparation against Taiwan. A source in the Peoples
Liberation Army (PLA) told the Straits Times on June 23
that China was ready for war. If fighting breaks out tomorrow,
we will have enough food for the whole population to last for
one year and oil reserves to survive a long drawn-out war,
he said.
Chinas tough stance against Taiwanese independence is
in part aimed at preventing the growth of separatist sentiment
in other regions. If Taiwan were to formally break from China,
it would only encourage like-minded movements in Tibet, oil-rich
Xinjiang and possibly other provinces.
Chinas threats against Taiwan are also a measure of the
political crisis in the Stalinist bureaucracy. The huge social
gulf between rich and poor that has opened up as a result of so-called
market reforms has left Beijings claims to represent socialism
or even to provide for the social needs of the masses in tatters.
Its initial encouragement of Western democracy among
the middle class elite in early 1980s ended with the Tiananmen
Square massacre in 1989.
The demand for the unification of Taiwan with the mainland
is one of the methods of whipping up Chinese nationalism, which
is Beijings only remaining ideological means of shoring
up its base of support.
Washingtons destabilising role
Beijing is also concerned at the US military threat to China.
US relations with Taiwan are part of a string of alliances that
Washington has with countries bordering China. Since the Bush
administration came to power, the encirclement of China has become
more pronounced. Under the guise of the war on terrorism,
the US now has troops in Afghanistan and military bases in a number
of Central Asian republics. It has also strengthened its military
ties with India, Nepal and in South East Asia.
During the 2000 presidential election campaign, Bush declared
China to be a strategic competitor and, in the immediate aftermath
of his insertion as president, adopted a belligerent stance towards
Beijing. Following the September 11 terrorist attacks, Washington
toned down its rhetoric as Beijing backed the war on terrorism
and the US invasion of Afghanistan in particular. But Beijing
is legitimately concerned that relations with Washington could
easily turn sour.
Indeed some sections of the US political establishment are
already pushing for a more aggressive stance toward China. At
a Congressional hearing last week, the US-China Economic and Security
Commission called on the White House to conduct a fresh
assessment of the one China policy and to step
up its military assistance to Taiwan in order to counter Chinas
military modernisation.
The commission is a bipartisan congressional committee set
up in 2000 to conduct a far-reaching review of US-China relations.
Any move by Washington to abandon the present one China
policy, under which Beijing is recognised as the sole international
representative of Chinaincluding Taiwanwould have
a profoundly destabilising effect in North East Asia.
To justify its recommendations, the commission published a
report last week portraying China as a serious security threat
to Taiwan and the US, a major exporter of weapons of mass
destruction to terrorist sponsors in Middle
East, a supporter of North Koreas nuclear programs and a
threat to democracy in Hong Kong.
Urging the provision of more US arms to Taiwan, commission
chairman Roger Robinson commented: Are they [Taiwan] maintaining
a proper level of balance with this new offensive force structured
by Beijing? The answer to that, in our view, is: No... We simply
cant stand on the sidelines and see any sort of downward
spiral in the cross-strait relations.
Beijing has urged Washington to reject the report, saying it
was full of Cold War mentalities. But according to
John Tkacik from the right-wing Heritage Foundation, a high-level
reexamination of the one China policy has been underway
for months. He told the Taipei Times that a State Department
review began prior to Vice President Dick Cheneys visit
to Beijing in April.
The commissions report dovetails with the thrust of the
Pentagons recently published Annual Report of the Military
Power of Peoples Republic of China. It claimed that
Chinas military spending is between $50 and $70 billion
a year, making its defence budget the third largest in the world.
The Pentagon concluded that Chinas development of space
technology as well as naval and air power, supported by a rapidly
expanding economy, would make the country a world military power
in the next 10 to 15 years.
Beijing has accused the US of exaggerating data about the Chinese
military in order to justify its own arms build-up against China.
Chinese military spending has increased and its forces have access
to more sophisticated weapons, but China is in no position to
challenge the US militarily now or in the near future. As for
the Chinese economy, it remains a huge cheap labour platform heavily
dependent on foreign investment and associated technologies.
Calls in Washington for a tougher stance against China can
only encourage Taiwan to take a less conciliatory approach to
Beijing. Chen recently rejected an offer from Beijing to withdraw
its 500 missiles targetting Taiwan if Taipei halted its latest
purchases of US arms. He authorised a special budget of $18 billion
to buy submarines, sophisticated aircraft and missile systems.
The Taiwanese military retains close ties with its US counterparts.
In an already volatile situation, it announced on Monday that
it had just finished a six-day computer-simulated war game using
a US-designed system, and with the assistance of 60 US military
personnel. The defence minister justified the war game aimed against
China by saying that Chinas rapid military expansion increased
the possibility of China using military force against Taiwan.
A major live-fire drill involving Taiwans army and air force
is planned for August.
See Also:
Behind the political crisis in Taiwan
[7 June 2004]
Political standoff continues
in Taiwan
[8 May 2004]
Political tensions escalate
after Taiwans disputed presidential election
[25 March 2004]
Political volatility surrounds
Taiwanese election
[16 March 2004]
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