Taiwan leader says ‘peace is the only option’, as Tsai Ing-wen eyes legacy – South China Morning Post Feedzy

 

Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen has called on Beijing to develop a “mutually acceptable foundation” for interactions and “peaceful coexistence” with the island, as she sought to ease cross-strait hostilities before stepping down next year.

The overture appeared to be a move to secure cross-strait peace as part of Tsai’s political legacy after she leaves office, analysts said. Taiwan has a two-term presidential limit.

In her final Double Tenth Day address on Tuesday, Tsai, whose second term ends in May, said she had maintained the cross-strait status quo, which she stressed was critical to ensuring peace.

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“Since 2016, my administration has kept its promises and maintained the status quo,” Tsai told a rally marking an uprising that began on October 10, 1911, which eventually ended the Qing dynasty on the mainland and ushered in the Republic of China (ROC), Taiwan’s official name.

In her inauguration speech in 2016, Tsai vowed to maintain the cross-strait status quo to secure regional peace. She also pledged to conduct cross-strait affairs in line with the island’s “Republic of China constitution” – an apparent effort to ease anxieties in Beijing that her independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government would declare a formal split between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait.

Beijing views Taiwan as its territory, which must be united with the mainland, by force if necessary. It has vowed to attack the self-ruled island if it dares to change the status quo by declaring formal independence.

Most countries, including the United States, do not recognise Taiwan as an independent state, but are opposed to any unilateral change of the cross-strait status quo by force.

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Tsai said it was her duty to safeguard the island’s “sovereignty and the democratic and free way of life”, and to seek “peaceful coexistence, with free, unrestricted and unburdened interactions”, between people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait.

Beijing has suspended official talks and exchanges with Taipei since Tsai was elected president and refused to accept the one-China principle. Beijing has since ramped up pressure on the island by intensifying military operations around Taiwan and poaching nine of Taiwan’s diplomatic allies.

“Peace is the only option across the strait. Maintaining the status quo, as the largest common denominator for all sides, is the critical key to ensuring peace,” she said. “Neither side can unilaterally change the status quo. Differences between the island and the mainland must be resolved peacefully.”

In response, China’s foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said: “The biggest threat to peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait is the DPP authorities’ stubborn position to pursue independence and their collusion with external forces to seek independence and make provocations.”

Analysts said Tsai’s speech was carefully worded to avoid provocation and offer peace overtures.

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“This indicates that in the face of mounting military pressure from mainland China, Tsai opted for a safe transition as part of her legacy after she steps down,” said Wang Kung-yi, head of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society, a Taipei think tank.

He said that ongoing international conflicts elsewhere prompted Tsai to avoid saying anything that would further provoke Beijing.

“It would spell trouble for the US too if any of Tsai’s comments led to further escalation of cross-strait tensions,” Wang said, adding that Washington is already dealing with wars in both Ukraine and Israel.

Chang Wu-ueh, a professor of China Studies at Tamkang University in New Taipei, said Tsai’s speech was full of conciliatory notes.

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“She seeks to resolve the differences between the two sides, which is what she has been trying to do in the past seven years,” Chang said.

But Chang said it would be impossible for Beijing to respond with any positive gestures, referring to its insistance that the “one-China” principle must be the foundation for a resumption of cross-strait talks and exchanges.

“While her speech was unlikely to bring any obvious improvement in cross-strait ties, it was also less likely to provoke the mainland and worsen cross-strait ties further,” he said.