The recently signed
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 is a wide-ranging
document, signed by the outgoing U.S. president in the dying days of his final
year of office. While attention has been paid to how the United States
Department of Defense is to treat Russia, very little attention has been paid
to America's relationship with China which has become increasingly fractious
over the recent past, particularly over China's claims in the South China Sea.
In the Defense
Authorization Act, for the first time since 1979's dismantling of the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty, there is specific discussion
about the United States' relationship with Taiwan aka the Republic of China.
The People's Republic of China (PRC - often known as Mainland China)
views the island nation as a province of the PRC whereas, the Taiwanese people
regard themselves as an independent nation with a democratically elected
government. This difference in opinion results from the recent
post-Second World War history of the region which I will briefly outline in Part One of this two part posting.
Taiwan was annexed by
China's Qing dynasty in the late 1600s and was ceded to Japan as part of the
post-Sino-Japanese War treaty in 1895. Japan governed the island as
colony until the end of the Second World War in 1945 when Japan surrendered to
the Republic of China's (ROC) military forces led by Chiang Kai-shek. The
Republic of China came into existence in 1912 after the Qing dynasty was
overthrown during the Xinhai Revolution and included the current territories of
China, Taiwan and Mongolia and its government was headed by its president, Sun
Yat-sen who handed over the presidency to Yuan Shikai who forced the last
emperor to abdicate. After short period of control after declaring
himself the Emperor of China, he lost control of the territory and China returned
to its warlord past. Sun Yat-sen who had been in exile, returned to China
and, along with the Communist Party of China and the rejuvenated Koumintang
(KMT)and establ8isehd a rival government in the southern Chinese city of
Guangzhou. After his death in March 1925, the KMT was headed by his
protege, Chiang Kai-Shek. By 1927, the KMT and Communists split, marking
the beginning of the Chinese Civil War with each group claiming that they were
the true heirs to Sun Yat-sen. Prior to the Second World War, Japan's
desire to control China's ample natural resrouces resulted in the seizure of
Manchuria in 1931, culminating in the fall of Nanking, China's capital city, in
1937. Despite the loss of territory to Japan, the KMT and communists
continued to battle in an attempt to control larger geographic regions of the nation.
After the end of World War II, despite American interventions and
attempts to arrange truces between the two parties, the battle between the KMT
and Communist People's Liberation Army continued during the Chinese Civil War ,
with Beijing being capture by the PLA in January 1949 and Nanking being
captured in April 1949. On October 1, 1949, the Communists, headed by Mao
Zedong, founded the People's Republic of China. Chiang Kai-Shek and his
followers which included hundreds of thousands of troops loyal to him and two
million refugees fled to Taiwan, declaring Taipei as its capital. Chiang ruled Taiwan under martial law,
banning opposition parties until 1989, and not holding its first free legislative
elections until 1992 and its first presidential election in 1996. Apparently, Washington preferred a non-Communist dictatorship over one that was part of the growing Red menace. Backed
by significant financial aid from the United States who recognized Taiwan
as the legitimate Chinese government, Chiang launched Taiwan on a path to
economic growth. In addition, in 1954, the United States and Taiwan
signed the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty as part of America's move
to stiffle the growth of global communism and prevent China from taking over
Taiwan. This treaty was terminated in 1979 after the United States established
official diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China and replaced
with the Taiwan Relations Act which pledged to continue commercial, cultural
and other relations between Taiwan and the United States.
Nonetheless,
according to the Congressional Research Service, between 1990 and 2010, the
following materiel has been sold to Taiwan:
Taiwan's primary military goal
has been to prepare itself for an attack from China, however, its
spending on its military is far outweighed by China's spending as
shown on these graphics, a source of great concern in and diplomatic pressure
from the United States:
What is particularly curious and unique about America's relationship with Taiwan is that, despite its security arrangement, the United States actually does not recognize or have diplomatic relations with Taiwan's government in Taipei, rather, it recognizes the People's Republic of China through its embassy in Beijing. It's diplomatic ties with Taiwan are conducted through the American Institute in Taiwan, a nominally private organization. In large part, America's Taiwan agenda over the past sixty years has been driven by its overriding "anti-communist in any form" sentiment.
With that background information in mind, in Part Two of this posting, I will take a look at some of the most contentious diplomatic issues that have arisen from the 2017 edition of the U.S. National Defense Authorization Act.
With that background information in mind, in Part Two of this posting, I will take a look at some of the most contentious diplomatic issues that have arisen from the 2017 edition of the U.S. National Defense Authorization Act.
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