Global Times

Tsai urged to be pragmatic

▶ Obstacles mounting for cross-Straits relations: analysts

- By Chen Qingqing

After Taiwan’s incumbent regional leader Tsai Ing-wen swept a landslide victory in the island’s regional elections on Saturday, senior officials from the UK and the US sent out congratula­tions with an intention of continuous­ly playing

“Taiwan card” in containing the Chinese mainland. However, Chinese mainland officials and analysts reiterated that any separatist attempts are doomed to fail.

Tsai of the pro-independen­ce Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) beat Han Kuoyu, candidate of Kuomintang (KMT) and Tsai’s major rival, with a record-high 8.17 million votes, surpassing the total votes she won in the 2016 regional elections.

In Tsai’s speech after she declared the victory, Tsai reminded that “peace, parity, democracy, and dialogue” are the four key elements in cross-Straits relations, claiming that the Taiwan authority would not “concede to threats and intimidati­on.”

The Chinese mainland upholds the basic principles of peaceful reunificat­ion and “one country, two systems” as well as the

one-China principle, resolutely safeguardi­ng national sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, Ma Xiaoguang, a spokespers­on for the Beijing-based Taiwan Work Office of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, said after the results of the elections came out.

And the mainland’s policy toward the island is consistent and clear. While endorsing the 1992 Consensus and opposing “Taiwan independen­ce,” the mainland will work with Taiwan compatriot­s to continue to promote the peaceful developmen­t of cross-Straits relations and the peaceful reunificat­ion of the motherland, he noted.

Some western officials showed their eagerness of continuing using “Taiwan card” as a way of containing the rise of the mainland by praising the elections “as vibrant democracy,” and even lauded Tsai for seeking socalled stability with the mainland. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo applauded Tsai’s victory in an official statement released on Saturday, claiming the island made it “a model for the Indo-Pacific region and a force for good in the world.”

UK Foreign Office also lauded that the elections “are testament to Taiwan’s vibrant democracy.” Meanwhile, in a meeting between Tsai and the director of the nonofficia­l American Institute in Taiwan on Sunday morning, the two sides reportedly sought to promote ties to a “global partnershi­p.”

External factors

The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Sunday expressed strong opposition to Western officials congratula­ting the reelected regional leader, saying such behavior violated the one-China principle.

The ministry also voiced opposition toward any form of official interactio­n between the island and countries with establishe­d diplomatic ties with the mainland, reiteratin­g that the one-China principle was a “shared understand­ing of the internatio­nal community.”

Mainland analysts said Tsai’s victory speech and her intention of upgrading the island’s global presence reflected her attempt to seek more support from the US, echoing the US government’s aim of enhancing the role of the island in its Indo-Pacific strategy.

Her victory emerged in an overall internatio­nal political climate of rising populism, said Li Xiaobing, an expert on Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan studies at Nankai University in Tianjin.

“Months of social unrest in Hong Kong also influenced the island’s mood,” he said.

The DPP successful­ly manipulate­d Hong Kong issue, creating antimainla­nd sentiment and rejection of “one country, two systems” with the younger generation, Song Luzheng, a research fellow and expert on Taiwan studies at the China Institute of Fudan University in Shanghai, told the Global Times on Sunday.

Escalating China-US trade tension prompted Washington to come up with more acts related to the island, as part of its efforts of curbing the rise of Beijing, analysts noted.

“Those actions had little concrete content but have greater significan­ce as the DPP took the opportunit­ies to advocate the support from the US government,” Song said.

Tsai’s second term is anticipate­d to lead the cross-Straits relations into a more difficult situation in 2020. Analysts

also suggested that the regional leader should uphold the bottom line, continue focusing on social and economic issues in her second term.

If she continues making use of the external forces like the US in promoting “Taiwan independen­ce,” it would only accelerate the reunificat­ion process, analysts warned.

Bottom line

Mainland’s official attitude on Taiwan question clearly indicates to the bottom line, and Taiwan regional leader and politician­s should thoroughly take into considerat­ion the potential risks before brazenly provoking the mainland, having a more pragmatic view on how long DPP’s political goals could last if it takes a more aggressive approach in dealing with cross-Straits relations.

“The ball is always in our court,” Song said, noting that mainland forecasts more obstacles in the relations after Tsai’s reelection, leading to call for a firm preparatio­n for reunificat­ion.

To further diminish the island’s global presence, the mainland would consider establishi­ng ties in 2020 with those countries which currently have “diplomatic relations” with the island or take more active policies and military gestures like island encircleme­nt exercise, analysts predicted.

“The pretext of handling Taiwan question is not to affect our rejuvenati­on process,” an analyst close to the matter who preferred not to be named told the Global Times on Sunday. The reunificat­ion is a progressiv­e process and taking the situation under control, which is the bottom line, he said.

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