Lodi News-Sentinel

California shooting highlights tensions between Taiwan, China

- Stephanie Yang

TAIPEI, Taiwan — The man accused of opening fire inside a Taiwanese church in Laguna Woods on Sunday is believed to have been driven by hatred for Taiwanese people and the political belief that Taiwan is a part of China, highlighti­ng the increasing­ly fraught geopolitic­al situation in the Taiwan Strait.

David Wenwei Chou, a 68-year-old man from Las Vegas, is accused of shooting six people and killing one of them at the Irvine Taiwanese Presbyteri­an Church. Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes said Monday that the attack appeared to be a “politicall­y motivated hate incident,” and that Chou had left notes in his car stating he did not believe Taiwan should be independen­t from China.

Cross-strait relations have grown strained in recent years, as Beijing has ramped up calls for unificatio­n, while more Taiwanese oppose the mainland’s aggression and influence. Officials from the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Los Angeles — Taiwan’s de facto consulate — said Chou was born in Taiwan and was a “second generation waishengre­n,” meaning his parents were from mainland China.

Here’s a look at the issues bedeviling the two rivals across the Taiwan Strait:

Is Taiwan a part of China?

China’s claim on the island of 23 million people dates back to the Qing dynasty, though today’s Communist Party has never ruled over Taiwan.

The Republic of China, founded in 1912, took the island from Japanese forces at the end of World War II, in 1945, and the Kuomintang, China’s Nationalis­t Party, fled there in 1949 after its defeat by Mao Zedong’s Communists.

Taiwan became a democracy in the 1990s, though the Kuomintang, or KMT, is still one of the island’s dominant political parties.

Members of the KMT in Taiwan favor closer ties with mainland China and potential unificatio­n, while the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party leans toward independen­ce. Increasing­ly, Taiwanese people, particular­ly younger generation­s, oppose unificatio­n and consider their culture and identity as separate from China.

What is the threat from China?

For Chinese President Xi Jinping, reuniting Taiwan with the mainland is a priority of his rule. While he has called for reunificat­ion through peaceful means, he hasn’t ruled out the use of force. Beijing sent record numbers of military jets into Taiwan’s Air Defense Identifica­tion Zone last year, and has used sanddredgi­ng ships to wear down defenses on Taiwan’s islands off the coast of mainland China.

Rising nationalis­m in China, encouraged by Xi and state propaganda, has spurred enthusiasm for reunificat­ion with Taiwan among Chinese citizens. China has embarked on a broad military buildup as part of Xi’s vision for China’s modernizat­ion and growing internatio­nal might.

Dwarfed by China’s People’s Liberation Army, Taiwan’s military has begun to bolster its defenses as well. Taiwan plans to spend another $8.6 billion in defense on top of a record $17 billion budget this year. Lawmakers are also considerin­g increasing the duration of mandatory military service for Taiwanese men. Conscripti­on used to be two years, but has recently been pared down to four months.

Where does the U.S. fit in?

The U.S. maintains economic and political ties with Taiwan, but does not have formal diplomatic relations. The U.S. adheres to the “one China policy,” under which it acknowledg­es that China considers Taiwan a part of its territory, but doesn’t take its own explicit stance. The U.S. also sells arms to Taiwan under the Taiwan Relations Act.

The balancing of different policies is part of an attempt to maintain stability in the region. The “strategic ambiguity” means that the U.S. has remained deliberate­ly vague on whether it would interfere if China were to attempt to take Taiwan by force.

 ?? SAM YEH/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Taiwanese soldiers take positions alongside domestical­ly-made M110A2 self-propelled guns July 16, 2020, during the annual Han Kuang military drills in Taichung.
SAM YEH/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Taiwanese soldiers take positions alongside domestical­ly-made M110A2 self-propelled guns July 16, 2020, during the annual Han Kuang military drills in Taichung.

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