Editorial: Taiwan is
hostage to a blatant lie
As a famous US professor once told an up-and-coming Taiwanese academic, there is
something about Taiwan that makes even the best and the brightest of minds stop
thinking.
Time and again, otherwise intelligent academics, journalists, writers and
government officials have managed to get it all wrong when it comes to Taiwan.
The fact that a country whose 23 million people would make it the ninth-largest
country in Europe by population size, and whose economy is among the 20 largest
economies globally, is so regularly misunderstood is predominantly the result of
Chinese propaganda and the willingness of other countries to allow Beijing to
get away with its lies.
Not only is Taiwan misrepresented, but the biases that are stacked against it
prevent its 23 million people from deciding their own future. So entrenched has
this handicap become that Taiwan, not China, is often regarded as the
troublemaker, even though it is Beijing, not Taipei, that threatens war ˇX
against Taiwan, Japan and the US ˇX over the question of its sovereignty. It is
as if Czechoslovakia or Poland, not Nazi Germany, were the true instigators of
World War II in Europe.
Even though relations across the Taiwan Strait have in some ways improved since
2008, Taiwan continues to be denied the choices that a democratic nation should
be allowed to make about its destiny. As if this were not enough, academics
continue to regard it as an uncontrollable wildcard and the likeliest source of
conflict ˇX perhaps even nuclear conflict ˇX between China and the US.
Such fallacies were again present in a major report issued last week on nuclear
weapons and the future of US-China relations.
Released by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in
Washington, the report says that Taiwan ˇ§is the contingency in which nuclear
weapons would most likely become a major factor.ˇ¨
Quoting defense analyst Richard Betts, the report states: ˇ§Neither great power
can fully control developments that might ignite a crisis. This is a classic
recipe for surprise, miscalculation and uncontrolled escalation.ˇ¨
Once again, Taiwan stands accused of endangering the peace because of its desire
for self-determination, as enshrined in the UN Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. Taiwan is the uncontrollable variable that must be controlled, even if
this goes against the wishes of 23 million souls, to avoid nuclear war, when in
reality, it is the two great powers, pace Betts, that have full control of the
developments that might ignite a crisis. The decision to use force and to
escalate over Taiwan ˇX and thereby risk miscalculation leading to nuclear war
with the US ˇX lies fully in Beijingˇ¦s camp, which controls the Peopleˇ¦s
Liberation Army, its nuclear arsenal and the Second Artillery Corps.
Nobody in his right mind would blame Prague or Warsaw today for creating the
uncontrollable uncertainties that led to Berlinˇ¦s decision to invade, which was
followed by European, and eventually US, declarations of war against Germany.
The decision to escalate lay fully in the Reichstag (and also with Moscow, with
regard to Poland), not among the peaceful peoples of European countries whose
only wish was to be left alone.
Even if the conclusions were reached inadvertently by the authors of the CSIS
report, they nevertheless contribute to added pressure on Taiwanese to forsake
their right to self-determination. It tells them that they, ultimately, would be
responsible for potentially sparking a devastating nuclear war between two
superpowers should they choose to behave irresponsibly by seeking to exercise
their right as human beings.
Everybody knows that Beijing is the aggressor in the Taiwan Strait, yet experts
all over the world continue to pretend that it is otherwise, that somehow
Taiwanese are not the victims, but the cause of ongoing tensions, and perhaps of
Armageddon.
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