Business Day

Beijing plays waiting game in run-up to Taiwan president-elect’s inaugurati­on

- Laurie Chen and Yew Lun Tian

China’s muted response to the weekend victory by Taiwan president-elect Lai Ching-te signals what some analysts see as the start of an uneasy four months before he takes office, with Beijing treading carefully before then.

Lai, from the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP), will not replace outgoing Tsai Ing-wen until May 20, but Beijing has little appetite to break a delicate balance that has settled over its ties with Washington in recent months, some diplomats and analysts say. The situation is complicate­d by a looming US presidenti­al election in November, risking bipartisan pressure from candidates as foreign policy debates intensify.

China claims neighbouri­ng Taiwan as its own and has never ruled out the use of force to bring the island under its control. Some DPP figures are bracing for a tough four-year term ahead for Lai, who was branded by Chinese officials as a “dangerous separatist” well before the vote.

The tiny Pacific island nation of Nauru offered a taste of that in ditching its recognitio­n of Taiwan for China, which reflects a long-running diplomatic effort by Beijing to deprive Taipei of its last few diplomatic allies. Taipei described the move as an act of postelecti­on malice.

But while Beijing may maintain pressure on Taipei to enforce what it calls “red lines” over independen­ce for the island it insists is “sacred” Chinese territory, it is unlikely to tighten the squeeze just yet.

“The line is very clearly drawn,” said Victor Gao, a professor at China’s Soochow University. “China will not fire the first shot. But China will never allow pro-Taiwan independen­ce activists to fire the second shot, after firing a first shot which is antipeace.”

Tsai and Lai both reject China’s sovereignt­y claims and have repeatedly offered talks, which Beijing has rejected. They say only Taiwan people can decide their future.

Few Chinese analysts and scholars are speaking openly given the delicate nature of the situation, but some outside the country detect a marked caution emerging.

“China’s response is relatively muted now because it wants to leave it to the US to rein in Lai first,” said Qi Dongtao, a senior research fellow at the East Asian Institute in Singapore.

“If the US fails to rein Lai in, then China can step in.”

Taipei-based political scientist Wen-Ti Sung, a nonresiden­t fellow at Washington’s Atlantic Council think-tank, said Beijing’s courting of Nauru is “low-hanging fruit”.

Chinese officials are now likely to conduct internal studies into what went wrong and why Beijing’s preferred Kuomintang (KMT) opposition party did not take the presidency, Sung said.

Not that it was a complete failure. Lai won less than 40% of the vote and together with smaller opposition parties, the KMT can form a majority in the legislatur­e.

After his victory on Saturday, Lai said he wanted to improve ties with China and was open to talks, but Beijing has no shortage of options should his rhetoric change or broader Washington­Beijing ties cool again.

Western diplomats say China’s Central Military Commission, commanded by President Xi Jinping, is likely to have been presented with a variety of escalatory options beyond its deployment­s across and around Taiwan.

China’s military has not directly commented on the election, but on Monday its Eastern Theatre Command released footage of naval combat drills in the East China Sea, without giving a detailed location.

“Battle alert, battle alert!” the command said in accompanyi­ng text. “The enemy suddenly arrives and the commander quickly issues combat instructio­ns,” it continued.

Such action is on a vastly smaller scale to the extensive missile drills and naval manoeuvres around Taiwan after the visit to Taipei by then US House of Representa­tives speaker Nancy Pelosi in August 2022.

Economical­ly, Beijing has coercive options too given business flows and trade ties, while security analysts and diplomats say China has the ability to attempt cyberattac­ks against Taiwan infrastruc­ture.

In late December, China scrapped tariff cuts on 12 chemical products it imported from Taiwan moves described by Taipei officials as an attempt to interfere in the election. But further pressure on the two sides’ 2010 free trade deal, the Economic Co-operation Framework Agreement, cannot be ruled out, analysts said.

“The economic sanctions option they tried three weeks or so before didn’t work. So now Beijing needs to retool and optimise how it’s going to use economic sanctions in a way that can send its message against Lai without unduly alienating Taiwanese society,” Sung said.

Politicall­y, too, Beijing can exploit connection­s with various opposition figures and groups, analysts said, noting that China’s Taiwan affairs office said on Saturday that the vote tally showed that the DPP “cannot represent mainstream public opinion”.

So far, China’s state media has kept a low profile, with no editorials on the election result published by the Englishlan­guage Global Times or a CCTV-affiliated social media blog that frequently comments on Taiwan issues.

Retired newspaper commentato­r Hu Xijin wrote in a WeChat blog post on Saturday that “if [Lai] does not restrain himself after taking office and intensifie­s his efforts to promote a radical line ... he may trigger a war and become a sinner for the ages.” It was later deleted.

BEIJING NEEDS TO RETOOL AND OPTIMISE HOW IT’S GOING TO USE ... SANCTIONS IN A WAY THAT CAN SEND ITS MESSAGE

 ?? /Annabelle Chih/Getty Images ?? Tough job: Taiwan’s vice-president and president-elect, Lai Ching-te, centre, and his running mate Hsiao Bi-khim, right, wave at supporters.
/Annabelle Chih/Getty Images Tough job: Taiwan’s vice-president and president-elect, Lai Ching-te, centre, and his running mate Hsiao Bi-khim, right, wave at supporters.

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