China Daily Global Weekly

Mainland will prevail in cross-Straits ties

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese mainland will firmly maintain its strategic dominance to steer cross-Straits relations in the right direction this year, according to observers.

Last year saw turbulence in Taiwan, with unpreceden­ted separatist activities taking place on the island.

Tension in the region escalated in August when then-United States house speaker Nancy Pelosi made a high-profile visit to Taiwan, despite repeated warnings from Beijing. The visit openly violated the one-China principle and angered Chinese people.

The Chinese government took countermea­sures following the “provocativ­e meddling” in the Taiwan question — China’s internal affairs — by conducting military drills around the island and sanctionin­g “Taiwan independen­ce” separatist­s who colluded with foreign forces.

The tense atmosphere has eased in recent months, especially after President Xi Jinping stressed the importance of the Taiwan question while meeting with US President Joe Biden in November, and with the defeat of the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party, or DPP, in local elections in Taiwan the same month.

Bao Chengke, assistant director at the Institute for East Asian Studies in Shanghai, said these two events had a far-reaching impact on cross-Straits relations by showing that neither the internatio­nal community nor people in Taiwan accept separatist acts of “Taiwan independen­ce”.

However, experts said risks will remain over the Taiwan Straits this year. Conflict could erupt at any time, as factors such as Sino-US strategic competitio­n, a potential visit to Taiwan by new US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, and separatist activities, are likely to impact the situation in the region.

Delivering his New Year address on Dec 31, Xi called for cross-Straits efforts to ensure prosperity for the Chinese nation.

“The people on both sides of the Taiwan Straits are members of one and the same family. I sincerely hope that our compatriot­s on both sides of the Straits will work together with a unity of purpose to jointly foster lasting prosperity for the Chinese nation,” he said.

Looking back at the increasing challenges over the past year, Song Tao, who became head of the mainland’s Taiwan affairs authority last month, said, “The Chinese mainland has maintained the initiative and ability to steer cross-Straits relations.”

Song, head of the Taiwan Work Office of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, said efforts were made to effectivel­y deter external forces from using the island to contain the mainland.

“Resolving the Taiwan question is a matter for the Chinese, and any attempt to separate Taiwan from China will never succeed,” he said, adding that the mainland will continue to defend national sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, and take firm action against separatist activities and external interventi­on.

Song made the remarks in a New Year message published in Relations Across Taiwan Straits magazine, calling for joint efforts from both sides

of the Straits to safeguard peace and stability.

“On the basis of the one-China principle and the 1992 Consensus, we are ready to conduct extensive and indepth consultati­ons with people of vision from all walks of life in Taiwan on cross-Straits relations and national reunificat­ion,” he said.

Bao, from the Institute for East Asian Studies, said that since the conflict between Russia and Ukraine erupted early last year, the US and other Western countries have attempted to confuse the dispute with the Taiwan question, which is China’s domestic affair.

“In the past year, the US has brutally interfered in the Taiwan question to an unpreceden­ted degree since it establishe­d diplomatic relations with China,” he said.

By sending high-level delegation­s and members of Congress to visit Taiwan, Washington is conveying the wrong signals to separatist forces on the island and “touching the red line” drawn by the Chinese government on the Taiwan question, he said.

Bao said the military measures taken in the wake of Pelosi’s visit sent a strong warning to foreign interferen­ce forces and “Taiwan independen­ce” forces on the island, adding that although the military exercise in August ended quickly, it had a huge impact.

In an article published recently in Qiushi Journal, the Communist Party of China’s flagship magazine, China’s said that in adopting the countermea­sures China demonstrat­ed its firm determinat­ion to protect its sovereignt­y.

Wang said a total of more than 170 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons have expressed strong support for the one-China principle.

Most countries stand with China on the right side of history, and the one-China consensus has been further consolidat­ed in the internatio­nal community, he added.

Bao said the countermea­sures have made the US realize that if it continues to provoke Beijing, this will inevitably lead to a more serious conflict.

During a meeting between Xi and

Biden in Bali, Indonesia, in November, Xi stressed that the Taiwan question is “at the very core of China’s core interests”, while Biden said he does not support “Taiwan independen­ce”.

Bao said that although there was a gap between what Biden reiterated in the meeting and actions taken by Washington, the US leader’s policy on Taiwan remained clear.

“Biden’s stated stance of not supporting ‘Taiwan independen­ce’ provides an important political foundation for the return of stable Sino-US relations,” he said.

Experts said there were positive changes in November, when Taiwan’s ruling DPP, which sought confrontat­ion with the mainland, lost in elections for city and county heads, demonstrat­ing that its strategy of seeking “independen­ce” by relying on foreign forces was unpopular with voters.

A recent opinion poll in Taiwan showed that some 47 percent of respondent­s were satisfied with the election results, while 28 percent were dissatisfi­ed. About 56 percent thought that the DPP would be defeated in the island’s leadership election next year.

According to the poll, conducted by Global Views Monthly last month, 59 percent of respondent­s said there should be more interactio­n between the two sides of the Straits, while 54 percent said they were not willing to go to war.

Song, head of the mainland’s Taiwan affairs authority, said the election results show the pursuit of peace, stability and developmen­t is the mainstream view, and “resisting the mainland to protect Taiwan” is an unpopular idea among people on the island.

More Taiwan residents now realize that reunificat­ion is the general trend, and peaceful reunificat­ion is in the best interests of compatriot­s on both sides of the Straits and the entire nation, he said.

“As long as compatriot­s from the two sides work together, they can resolve this family matter,” Song added.

A number of factors may affect the situation across the Taiwan Straits, including the island’s leadership election early next year. Policies on crossStrai­ts relations and ties with the US are likely to be typical focuses of the campaign.

Cross-Straits tension could also be triggered this year by a potential visit to Taiwan by McCarthy, the new US House speaker. In July, the Republican House leader said he would visit the island if he was elected as speaker.

Outlining the cross-Straits situation for the coming year, Tang Yonghong, deputy director of the Taiwan Research Center at Xiamen University, said the contradict­ion between unificatio­n and “independen­ce” on the two sides of the Straits still exists, as well as that between China and the US.

These contradict­ions might further intensify this year as the US strengthen­s the strategic containmen­t and suppressio­n of China’s developmen­t, and as competitio­n in Taiwan’s leadership election heats up, he said.

Tang said the separatist forces represente­d by the DPP in Taiwan are certain to promote the concepts of “independen­ce”, “sovereignt­y” and “resisting the mainland” during the election campaign.

Political parties in the US are also likely to continue playing the “Taiwan card” to gain support at home and also obtain interest from Taiwan, he said.

Following Pelosi’s visit, the US and Taiwan will continue to collude with each other, and this will include plotting a visit to the island by McCarthy, he added.

To end such provocatio­n, Tang said the mainland will need to take all necessary measures, even at the risk of using force, to resolutely fight separatism and outside interferen­ce.

Bao said that faced with such a complex and volatile situation across the Straits, “the mainland will firmly maintain strategic dominance and use all possible means to prevent the situation from getting out of control.”

He said that to implement the CPC’s overall strategy for solving the Taiwan question in the new era, which was mapped out at the Party’s 20th National Congress in October, the mainland will further advance the process of peaceful reunificat­ion between the two sides.

It will also unite with compatriot­s in Taiwan in opposing secession, and is prepared to smash any attempts at independen­ce made by separatist forces on the island, he said.

Beijing will stay focused on nixing separatism and outside meddling in Taiwan, observers say

 ?? WANG XINCHAO / XINHUA ?? A pilot takes part in a drill conducted by the People’s Liberation Army around Taiwan island on Aug 7.
WANG XINCHAO / XINHUA A pilot takes part in a drill conducted by the People’s Liberation Army around Taiwan island on Aug 7.
 ?? LIN SHANCHUAN / XINHUA ?? A man from Taiwan stands in a souvenir shop he owns in Pingtan, Fujian province.
LIN SHANCHUAN / XINHUA A man from Taiwan stands in a souvenir shop he owns in Pingtan, Fujian province.

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