What Is The Problem With The China/Taiwan Thing?

I know that the Gaza thing has every little person concerned with what is happening and all the while Ukraine continues and then there is this thing that has popped up in the last couple of years…..South China Sea.

The US has mobilized in protection of the island nation of Taiwan and the war drums are slowly beating out a scenario that could be disastrous for all parties involved in this mash-up.  (There are other problems in this region but this is the one that is getting the grease in the form of taxpayer dollars)

Have you ever asked yourself….What is this all about?

China has launched major military drills around Taiwan, simulating a full-scale attack on the island – just days after the new president William Lai was sworn in.

The exercises reinforce what is at the heart of the issue: China’s claim over self-governed Taiwan.

Beijing sees the island as a breakaway province that will, eventually, be part of the country, and has not ruled out the use of force to achieve this.

But many Taiwanese consider themselves to be part of a separate nation – although most are in favour of maintaining the status quo where Taiwan neither declares independence from China nor unites with it.

Taiwan’s first known settlers were Austronesian tribal people, believed to have come from modern day southern China.

Chinese records appear to first mention the island in AD239, when an emperor dispatched an expeditionary force to it – a fact Beijing uses to back its territorial claim.

After a relatively brief spell as a Dutch colony, Taiwan was administered by China’s Qing dynasty, before it was ceded to Tokyo after Japan won the First Sino-Japanese War.

After World War Two, Japan surrendered and relinquished control of territory it had taken from China. Afterwards, Taiwan was officially considered occupied by the Republic of China (ROC), which began ruling with the consent of its allies, the US and UK.

But in the next few years a civil war broke out in China, and then-leader Chiang Kai-shek’s troops were defeated by Mao Zedong’s Communist army.

Chiang, the remnants of his Kuomintang (KMT) government and their supporters – about 1.5m people – fled to Taiwan in 1949.

Chiang established a dictatorship that ruled Taiwan until the 1980s. Following his death, Taiwan began a transition to democracy and held its first elections in 1996.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-34729538

All this was possible because the nationalists ran from the communists and the world got another domino in the theory that was ever so popular back in the day.

Now the US is once again pouring money into the island to confront China.

Taiwan’s recent election could spell a major escalation.

A Taiwan led by the newly inaugurated William Lai Ching-te will bring new challenges to the cross-strait relationship, as well as Beijing’s global articulation of its policies towards the self-governed island, according to observers on either side.
Joanna Lei Chien, a former Taiwanese lawmaker from the opposition party Kuomintang, said many assumptions on the cross-strait situation “should be thrown out of the window because things have changed at an exceedingly surprising speed” since Lai took over on Monday.
“Lai’s persona. It’s something that we really need to be very careful about,” Lei told a digital seminar hosted by the think tank Centre for Globalisation Hong Kong on Thursday.

If you must worry about something then I suggest that you keep an eye on Taiwan for it could be bursting into flames and sooner rather than later.

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

6 thoughts on “What Is The Problem With The China/Taiwan Thing?

  1. Taiwan is a complicated story that the above just barely begins to touch upon. What was said up there is true, but a hell of a lot more was going on that enabled the creation and continuation of Taiwan. That doesn’t really matter at this point, I suppose. What matters is what’s going on now.

    China has always considered Taiwan to be part of China. Period. End of discussion. Just as, I suppose, the US would consider Hawaii to be part of the US. If Hawaii set up and independent government with the support of an external power, oh, Russia, for example, we wouldn’t be too happy about it either. It’s much more complicated than that but you get the idea.

    What it boils down to now is that we’ve heavily invested in Taiwan both economically and militarily. But at the same time we’ve adopted a very odd policy politically. The US does not officially recognize Taiwan as being separate from China, even though we’ve pumped hundreds of billions of dollars in economic and military aid into the place to try to keep it independent.

    It’s all very odd.

    1. I think it is a holdover from the Cold War…..plus it gives the arms industry yet another money maker…..you are right there is so much more and to most it would bore them to tears…..chuq

  2. I’m old enough to remember when we called Taiwan ‘Formosa’. Western countries backing the Nationalist dictatorship at the time was never going to work out well, and it seems it is now coming home to roost.

    Best wishes, Pete.

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