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 EDITORIAL: Speak 
softly, but carry a big stick 
 
China seems to have taken to heart the famous foreign policy dictum of former US 
president Theodore Roosevelt ¡X ¡§Speak softly and carry a big stick¡¨ ¡X at least 
with regard to its neighbors. 
 
Roosevelt¡¦s foreign policy sought to achieve US hegemony by mixing peaceful 
negotiations with military threats. 
 
Although China¡¦s ultimate goals for the Asia-Pacific region are undoubtedly 
hegemonistic, Beijing is, for the moment, using economic and non-military 
tactics to slowly bring Asia-Pacific and ASEAN countries into its sphere of 
influence. Nowhere is that more evident than in Taiwan. 
 
Taiwan was first sucked into China¡¦s economic sphere of its own accord ¡X big 
business owners that sympathized with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) moved 
their factories to China to take advantage of cheap labor. Later, China gave 
Taiwan little choice as its economy grew far beyond the scope of what Taiwanese 
policymakers had originally foreseen. In the latest round of economic 
determinism, Taiwan has been netted like a fish by China¡¦s Economic Cooperation 
Framework Agreement. 
 
Economic hegemony has been quickly followed by a media onslaught in support of 
Chinese interests. A number of the CCP-sympathizers ¡X Want Want Group chairman 
and chief executive Tsai Eng-meng (½²l©ú) and Fubon Financial chairman Daniel Tsai 
(½²©ú©¾) are just the biggest and best known ¡X have spearheaded the drive to 
dominate the Taiwanese media, spouting their view of a ¡§one China¡¨ future that 
denies past massacres and paints a rosy picture of China¡¦s current leaders. 
 
These are all instances of China ¡§speaking softly,¡¨ but what about the ¡§big 
stick?¡¨ 
 
China has never backed down from its stance that it has the sovereign right to 
annex Taiwan. The Taiwan Strait issue is an internal matter and is not the 
business of the rest of the world. Beijing even legalized this stance with its 
¡§Anti-Secession¡¨ Law in 2004, and has been rapidly modernizing its military for 
more than a decade. 
 
As China¡¦s soft-spoken hegemony grows, so does its big stick. Beijing will 
officially spend more than US$100 billion on its military this year, yet another 
double-digit increase in its annual expenditure, and that sum only goes on 
hardware and staff payrolls. If research and development into new weapons is 
factored in, China¡¦s military spending would likely be double that figure. 
 
Concrete examples of its growing military might include its first aircraft 
carrier, an increasingly assertive submarine fleet, a newly developed stealth 
fighter, a highly sophisticated missile force and probably the biggest and best 
army of computer hackers the world has ever seen. China has even entered the 
space race, becoming the third nation to put a person into space after Russia 
and the US. Those are big sticks indeed. 
 
However, the real issue is: How long will China continue to walk and talk 
softly? With such a big stick at its disposal, China will soon reach the point 
where it can take whatever it wants. Why wait for economic and media power to do 
the trick when conquest can be achieved in a couple months with planes, 
submarines and missiles? 
 
That being said, China is, if anything, patient. And if the Chinese continue to 
tread lightly, while building the biggest, baddest military machine in the 
neighborhood, nobody will notice, until too late, that they have become the 
region¡¦s Big Brother. 
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