To be Americas enemy is dangerous but to be Americas friend is fatal - KissingerThe US has a way of inducing countries to commit suicide, there's several examples even on going today.
To be Americas enemy is dangerous but to be Americas friend is fatal - KissingerThe US has a way of inducing countries to commit suicide, there's several examples even on going today.
I am not surprised. I used to visit many mainland forums. At that time those Chinese forums are much less restricted, I still remember many middle class mainland Chinese would talk about how they would surrender to the Americans if the US landed in Shanghai or Beijing. How they would even be a guide for these American troops to liberate China. Their justification is that they don't want war. And the Americans can't be worst than CPC. And that what they do is to shorten the war and save lives. That's the same logic Wang Jingwei used to defect to the Japanese. Wang Jingwei claimed that since China can't win a war against Japan so it is better off China should surrender and cooperate with the Japanese. Wang Jingwei claimed that he doesn't want a war and is saving lives.I posted something similar before and got some hate for it, but I will do it again. I prefer a negotiated independence over a war of reunification. Last few days I was talking to family and friends about Ukraine and Taiwan, and none of them wanted a war.
If your logic applied, then China should definitely invade Taiwan. When imperial Japan waged war against China, Taiwanese who joined the Japanese invasion are much more brutal than Japanese. There are countless atrocities committed by Taiwanese in mainland China.And for the emotional closure to China's Hundred Years of Humiliation? Take it out on Japan. Outcompete the Japanese on every industry they have (other than pornography) and deindustrialize their country. Take it out on Europe. Have a permanent naval presence in the Atlantic and demand a seat on every discussion on European security. Take it out on the U.S. Tell them that if they ever dare to bomb another country of the Global South again China is prepared to sanction them. Dropping bombs on Taiwan gives me zero satisfaction.
OK. So here is the question: what if DPP becomes breaks all the laws anyways? Or just rejects the offer?
Here is an electoral map of Taiwan.
Here is a language map of Taiwan.
Notice how blue = Mandarin = KMT and green = Hokkien = DPP on both maps?
DPP vs. KMT is split on ethnic lines (Hokkien vs Mainlander). DPP can easily become Taiwanese nationalist/fascist. You can trust this? And what makes you think that a fascist party would even agree to these terms? Following the discourse in Taiwan they'd rather fight to the death than accept this sort of 辱台 policy.
In that case why make the offer? It only makes you look weak and indecisive, and gives them information that you are not committed and that since their independence is negotiable so is their neutrality, so is everything, and in fact they'll be even more emboldened.
So in other words, you are willing to trade the national securities of a nation away in exchange to make yourself feel better over morals.
What do you suggest China should do if the West recreates EuroMaiden 2014 in 2xxx? Should China invade an independent nation?
Also answer the question of the potential of civil war. Do you think the hardliners in the CCP, military, general population are going to back down. Don’t avoid it.
It's an offer with very serious concession from China without compromising much on Taiwanese 'democracy'. Rejecting such an offer out of hand will weaken Taiwan's international support. The biggest opposition will probably come from Penghu residents, but they all know Penghu is not going to hold in the event of a PLA attack.
Make the offer with a simultaneous massive mobilization if needed. The problem with Putin's demand on Ukraine was that what Putin was offering was strictly worse for Ukraine compared to status quo, where my hypothetical offer to Taiwan includes both positive (independence) and negatives (loss of offshore islands).
Reunification by force poses risks. Economic risks, military risks and political risks. Those are very real risks, not potential risks in the future like a Taiwanese EuroMaiden. Avoiding them is not about making me feel better morally.
EuroMaiden had a specific historical context. It's not re-creatable in Taiwan. Chinese economic pull over Taiwan is incomparably greater than Russian economic pull over Ukraine. Taiwanese Guoyu and Putonghua are the same language, Russian and Ukrainian are not the same language. In any case, what can the West offer to Taiwanese to entice them to start a EuroMaiden? Free working visas to the US? Remember even now TSMC reportedly has a harder time recruiting Taiwanese engineers to work in the U.S. than on Mainland. Remember it has to be something that the West offer, that violates the independence agreement and the Taiwanese want it bad enough to consider violate the independence agreement.
As for your last question, as I said, I talked to my family and friends, all of them pro-government Chinese citizens, and none of them wanted a war over Taiwan now they're watching a real war unfolding in Ukraine. Of course, there's a big gap between rejection of war and acceptance of a negotiated independence, but as long as China's power continues to grow, I think it's quite possible that sometime down the road people will be ready to let go. As I said, why not mark the end of century of humiliation by outcompeting and deindustrialize Japan? By being a major player in European security? By making Americans behave? Furthermore, identities change. Young Chinese are moving left. If Chinese nationalism shift from pure ethno-nationalism toward a hybrid of ethno nationalism and civic nationalism based on socialist principles (which is what the government is currently pushing), it could reach a point where Taiwanese are seen as fundamentally un-Chinese.
My terms for a Taiwan solution.
1. Beijing takes all Taiwan's offshore islands, including Penghu, Lanyu and Green Island.
2. Beijing acknowledge Taiwanese independence and Taiwan joins the UN.
3. Taiwanese recognition of Diaoyu Islands as Chinese territory.
4. Taiwan becomes permanently neutral.
5. Taiwan are required to share any intelligence received from any third country with China and not allowed to share any intelligence to any third country without Chinese approval.
6. Taiwan is not allowed to receive or host any third country military equipment without Chinese approval.
7. All terms above passed as a constitutional amendment.
Reunification by force poses risks. Economic risks, military risks and political risks. Those are very real risks, not potential risks in the future like a Taiwanese EuroMaiden. Avoiding them is not about making me feel better morally.
EuroMaiden had a specific historical context. It's not re-creatable in Taiwan. Chinese economic pull over Taiwan is incomparably greater than Russian economic pull over Ukraine. Taiwanese Guoyu and Putonghua are the same language, Russian and Ukrainian are not the same language. In any case, what can the West offer to Taiwanese to entice them to start a EuroMaiden? Free working visas to the US? Remember even now TSMC reportedly has a harder time recruiting Taiwanese engineers to work in the U.S. than on Mainland. Remember it has to be something that the West offer, that violates the independence agreement and the Taiwanese want it bad enough to consider violate the independence agreement.
As for your last question, as I said, I talked to my family and friends, all of them pro-government Chinese citizens, and none of them wanted a war over Taiwan now they're watching a real war unfolding in Ukraine. Of course, there's a big gap between rejection of war and acceptance of a negotiated independence, but as long as China's power continues to grow, I think it's quite possible that sometime down the road people will be ready to let go. As I said, why not mark the end of century of humiliation by outcompeting and deindustrialize Japan? By being a major player in European security? By making Americans behave? Furthermore, identities change. Young Chinese are moving left. If Chinese nationalism shift from pure ethno-nationalism toward a hybrid of ethno nationalism and civic nationalism based on socialist principles (which is what the government is currently pushing), it could reach a point where Taiwanese are seen as fundamentally un-Chinese.
Avoiding them is not about making me feel better morally.
Taiwan is not about material gain or interest; or at least it's very very little about it. Taiwan is China's dearest value; the entire country will lose morale if Taiwan were allowed to become independent. The world would laugh at China for failing in its most important issue since China opened to the world. The traitors on Taiwan would endlessly dump salt on the wound for Chinese patriots. No warm-blooded Chinese patriot can live in this kind of world of being an eternal loser and failure. I know I'd rather die than see the day the ROC became independent because nothing in life would give me an ounce of satisfaction if Taiwan were lost. No matter the cost, no matter the risks, no matter the suffering, China must fight to the last man, woman, child to hold Taiwan. Even in MAD with all of Western civilization with Taiwan included, China must never let it go.I posted something similar before and got some hate for it, but I will do it again. I prefer a negotiated independence over a war of reunification. Last few days I was talking to family and friends about Ukraine and Taiwan, and none of them wanted a war.
Right now China needs to build up its military (especially its nuclear arsenal) to deter the West from waging total economic war on China (i.e. total chips ban). Try something crazy and China will take Taiwan and nobody will have semiconductor for the next decade (especially if South Korea is also drawn to the war). Taiwan is China's human shield. But after China has its own independent semiconductor supply chain I think a peaceful settlement with Taiwan would be good. Taiwan's core industry, semiconductor, is by all indication about to hit a wall called the law of physics (and the law of diminishing economic returns), and its closed allies all want a slice of the pie too.
Taiwan is also not sprouting any industry of the future. It has the second lowest TFR after South Korea. It has a rapidly decreasing population without any potential for increased level of education to compensate. This, along with RCEP, is going to collapse Taiwan's non-semiconductor industries. War is just too inherently risky for an island with such a blank future.
I don't care if Taiwanese think they are Chinese or not. China will overtake Taiwan in GDP per capita, in cultural influence, and in basically everything. The future of Taiwan will be Poland to China's Germany. Taiwanese with ambition will have to work on the mainland.
And for the emotional closure to China's Hundred Years of Humiliation? Take it out on Japan. Outcompete the Japanese on every industry they have (other than pornography) and deindustrialize their country. Take it out on Europe. Have a permanent naval presence in the Atlantic and demand a seat on every discussion on European security. Take it out on the U.S. Tell them that if they ever dare to bomb another country of the Global South again China is prepared to sanction them. Dropping bombs on Taiwan gives me zero satisfaction.
My terms for a Taiwan solution.
1. Beijing takes all Taiwan's offshore islands, including Penghu, Lanyu and Green Island.
2. Beijing acknowledge Taiwanese independence and Taiwan joins the UN.
3. Taiwanese recognition of Diaoyu Islands as Chinese territory.
4. Taiwan becomes permanently neutral.
5. Taiwan are required to share any intelligence received from any third country with China and not allowed to share any intelligence to any third country without Chinese approval.
6. Taiwan is not allowed to receive or host any third country military equipment without Chinese approval.
7. All terms above passed as a constitutional amendment.
I posted something similar before and got some hate for it, but I will do it again. I prefer a negotiated independence over a war of reunification. Last few days I was talking to family and friends about Ukraine and Taiwan, and none of them wanted a war.
It's an offer with very serious concession from China without compromising much on Taiwanese 'democracy'. Rejecting such an offer out of hand will weaken Taiwan's international support. The biggest opposition will probably come from Penghu residents, but they all know Penghu is not going to hold in the event of a PLA attack.
Make the offer with a simultaneous massive mobilization if needed. The problem with Putin's demand on Ukraine was that what Putin was offering was strictly worse for Ukraine compared to status quo, where my hypothetical offer to Taiwan includes both positive (independence) and negatives (loss of offshore islands).
Reunification by force poses risks. Economic risks, military risks and political risks. Those are very real risks, not potential risks in the future like a Taiwanese EuroMaiden. Avoiding them is not about making me feel better morally.
EuroMaiden had a specific historical context. It's not re-creatable in Taiwan. Chinese economic pull over Taiwan is incomparably greater than Russian economic pull over Ukraine. Taiwanese Guoyu and Putonghua are the same language, Russian and Ukrainian are not the same language. In any case, what can the West offer to Taiwanese to entice them to start a EuroMaiden? Free working visas to the US? Remember even now TSMC reportedly has a harder time recruiting Taiwanese engineers to work in the U.S. than on Mainland. Remember it has to be something that the West offer, that violates the independence agreement and the Taiwanese want it bad enough to consider violate the independence agreement.
As for your last question, as I said, I talked to my family and friends, all of them pro-government Chinese citizens, and none of them wanted a war over Taiwan now they're watching a real war unfolding in Ukraine. Of course, there's a big gap between rejection of war and acceptance of a negotiated independence, but as long as China's power continues to grow, I think it's quite possible that sometime down the road people will be ready to let go. As I said, why not mark the end of century of humiliation by outcompeting and deindustrialize Japan? By being a major player in European security? By making Americans behave? Furthermore, identities change. Young Chinese are moving left. If Chinese nationalism shift from pure ethno-nationalism toward a hybrid of ethno nationalism and civic nationalism based on socialist principles (which is what the government is currently pushing), it could reach a point where Taiwanese are seen as fundamentally un-Chinese.