Global Times

Timetable needed for unificatio­n of Taiwan

- By Zhou Zhihuai

After I put forward the idea that Beijing should set a timetable for the unificatio­n of Taiwan, some Taiwanese scholars believed this symbolized a shift in the mainland’s attitude toward the Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP)’ s government. From their point of view, setting a timetable would only make Taiwanese feel antipathy against the central government and deteriorat­e cross- Straits relations, as polls suggest the majority of Taiwanese people hope to maintain the status quo and only a few of them want unificatio­n. Others believe that setting a timetable paves the way for Beijing to introduce a law of unificatio­n.

Even if the Taiwanese public wants to maintain the status quo, public opinion in the mainland requires national reunificat­ion. As far back as the 1980s, former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping raised the question: Are we going to give up reunificat­ion if Taiwan authoritie­s refuse to negotiate with us? Does it mean the central government can no longer pursue unificatio­n if Taiwan wants to maintain the status quo? Obviously not.

The great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation pushes us to set a timetable for reunificat­ion. Today’s China is the closest ever to realizing the great rejuvenati­on. An increasing number of scholars are starting to explore the relations between the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation and national reunificat­ion, and have divergent views on whether we should set a timetable and what kind of a timetable is needed.

Peter Enav, former Taiwan correspond­ent for the Associated Press, believes that the mainland will use force to unite Taiwan in 2018, and conditions are increasing­ly mature for the mainland government to forcefully take over Taiwan. Apparently, this speculatio­n lacks supporting evidence.

Some believe that a flexible Taiwan policy is better than setting a timetable. At the beginning of the 21st century, some observers argued that there were no connection­s between national reunificat­ion and the rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation, noting that even in the heyday of the British Empire in the 19th century, the country failed to achieve unificatio­n. They argued that despite being haunted by the Northern Ireland problem, the UK is recognized worldwide as a developed country, and Germany, South Korea and other nations realized a peaceful rise after WWII despite unresolved sovereignt­y issues.

But as far as I am concerned, now it is time to set the timetable to reunite Taiwan.

Prior to his visit to the US in 1979, when Deng was questioned about whether the mainland had a timetable to solve the Taiwan question by force, he said, “We try to use peaceful means to bring Taiwan back to the motherland and achieve national unificatio­n. The problem is that if we promise that we will not use military forces, it will tie our hands and make the Taiwan authoritie­s refuse to negotiate with us for peaceful reunificat­ion. This will in turn lead to the use of military force to solve the problem.” He didn’t elaborate on the time frame to reunite Taiwan, as it was obviously immature to set a timetable at that time.

About 20 years later, then Chinese leader Jiang Zemin told then visiting US president Bill Clinton that “the settlement of the Taiwan question should be pursued with a timetable.” This was the first time that the Chinese leadership put forward the concept of a timetable in addressing the Taiwan question.

In 2000, the State Council issued a white paper entitled “the One China Principle and the Taiwan Question,” systematic­ally and comprehens­ively elaboratin­g the central government’s stance and policies on the One China principle and cross- Straits relations in a government­al document for the first time.

“As the Chinese government has successive­ly resumed the exercise of sovereignt­y over Hong Kong and Macao, the people of the whole of China are eager to resolve the Taiwan question as early as possible and realize the total reunificat­ion of the country. They cannot allow the resolution of the Taiwan question to be postponed indefinite­ly,” according to the white paper.

Jiang said in his speech for the 50th anniversar­y of People’s Republic of China in 1999 that the complete reunificat­ion of the motherland and the maintenanc­e of its security are the very foundation for the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation and the unshakeabl­e will of all the Chinese people.

In 2008, then Chinese president Hu Jintao put forward a “Six- Points” propositio­n to Taiwan in his speech commemorat­ing the 30th anniversar­y of the “Message to Compatriot­s in Taiwan,” and stressed that reunificat­ion is at the very core of our efforts to resolve the Taiwan question. Hu said the objective is to safeguard and ensure national sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, pursue happiness for all Chinese including the compatriot­s in Taiwan and achieve the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation.

President Xi Jinping stressed at a ceremony marking the 95th anniversar­y of the founding of the Communist Party of China that “advancing the process of China’s peaceful reunificat­ion, and accomplish­ing this great cause is a prerequisi­te for realizing the rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation.”

While it was a strategic considerat­ion to put forward the notion of a timetable to address the Taiwan question decades ago, conditions for the mainland to set the timetable are now mature. National reunificat­ion is organicall­y connected to the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation, and it is time for us to work out a 30- year timetable.

Under the One China principle, the mainland could be patient with Taiwan, but if the DPP government accelerate­s its provocativ­e activities, the mainland will for sure speed up its efforts to realize the complete unificatio­n of China and the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation.

The author is executive vice president of the National Society of Taiwan Studies and former director of the Institute of Taiwan Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/ GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/ GT

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