by Brian Hioe

語言:
English
Photo Credit: Hsiao Bi-khim/Facebook

A RECENT INTERVIEW by the Director of the Czech Military Intelligence Agency, General Petr Bartovský, with Czech Public Radio stated that China sought to intimidate Taiwanese vice president Hsiao Bi-khim during a visit by Hsiao to Prague in March 2024.

It was previously known that Hsiao’s motorcade was followed by a vehicle driven by China’s military attache in Prague.

What was not previously known, however, is that according to Bartovsky, China’s military attache was planning for a Chinese vehicle to crash into Hsiao’s vehicle as a means of intimidation. Chinese diplomats were also waiting for Hsiao at the airport when she arrived. The operation was reportedly carried out by this military attache in coordination with the Military Section of the Chinese Embassy in Prague, which had a staff of three People’s Liberation Army officers. Such new revelations suggest that this was a coordinated operation, rather than that this individual was acting on his own.

Hsiao was visiting Prague due to being invited by Czech Senate President Milos Vystrcil, visiting the European Union (EU) in the transition period before the DPP took office shortly after its election victory. This took place after a similar visit by Hsiao to the US.

Indeed, Hsiao’s trips were to shore up relations before the Lai administration took power. Indeed, Hsiao likely was aiming to reassure that the policies of the Lai administration will be largely the same as the Tsai administration, and there will be no sudden moves toward Taiwanese independence or of like nature–as some have feared of Lai and have continued to fear since he took office.

The Hsiao visits to the US and EU in 2024 were conducted with the claim that these were personal trips. While on other occasions, diplomatic representatives of Taiwan, such as Minister of Foreign Affairs Joseph Wu, have made highly public trips to the European Union in the pursuit of strengthening ties, Hsiao’s trips were done with little publicity and aimed to be low-profile. This evidently did not prevent what proved to be not only Chinese attempts at interference, but outright attempted violence against Taiwanese politicians traveling abroad.

At the time of the incident, the KMT was attempting to pass a bill in Taiwan that would have required a new set of elections to be held if the vice president-elect died. As such, the KMT has been accused of colluding with the Chinese government in seeking to assassinate Hsiao in order to hold a new set of elections.

Past years have seen warming ties between Taiwan and Czechia. In September 2020, an 89-member diplomatic delegation from the Czech Republic to Taiwan visited Taiwan. Among the delegation were Vystrcil and Prague mayor Zdenek Hrib.

Significantly, during the visit, Vystrcil declared that “I am Taiwanese” during a speech, echoing American President John F. Kennedy’s famous “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech during the Cold War. On the other hand, Hrib can probably be credited as the Czech politician who had done the most to advance Taiwan-Czech ties in prior years, breaking off a sister city agreement with Beijing to ink an agreement with Taipei instead in January 2020.

In February 2023, a phone call took place between then-President Tsai Ing-wen and Petr Pavel, the president-elect of the Czech Republic. This was touted as a diplomatic breakthrough by the DPP, signaling stronger ties between Taiwan and the central European country.

Still, as China’s actions go to show, the Chinese government may be willing to carry out violent actions against Taiwanese politicians in countries that have strong ties with Taiwan. Although Chinese “Wolf Warrior” diplomats have distinguished themselves in past years with strong rhetoric on Taiwan, it proves another matter entirely when Chinese government officials resort to planning violence against Taiwanese politicians. It is to be seen if this trend continues. And it is not entirely impossible if the KMT collaborates in such actions either.

by Brian Hioe

語言:
English
Photo Credit: Lai Ching-te/Facebook

PRESIDENT LAI CHING-TE has begun a series of ten speeches to be held nationwide, aimed at establishing political unity.

Lai’s speeches are probably directed at the recalls. Namely, Lai is attempting to drive up national participation in the recalls through his speeches, as would benefit the DPP electorally.

This has not prevented the Chinese government from attempting to frame statements by Lai as de facto declarations of independence. During his first speech, Lai referred to the nation as a “country” and emphasized that the PRC has never controlled Taiwan. The first speech, too, mostly proved a history lesson on the juridical history of international agreements regarding Taiwan’s sovereignty.

The speech was responded to by China’s Taiwan Affairs Office (TAO), which framed Lai’s comments as “a ‘Taiwan independence’ declaration that blatantly incited cross-strait confrontation, and a hodgepodge of ‘Taiwan independence’ fallacies and heresies full of errors and omissions.”

To this extent, the KMT framed Lai’s first speech, too, as a pro-independence provocation that showed that Lai was intent on pushing for a benshengren nationalist agenda. The KMT later honed in on comments by Lai in his second speech that stated, “Hammer after hammer, tempered into steel and removed of all impurities, until all that’s left is steel-willed determination to defend our sovereignty and safeguard our democracy.”

The KMT has suggested that “impurities” refer to political forces that Lai would seek to politically purge, along the lines of its current claims that Lai is engaged in “Green Communism” or a “Green Terror” directed at Taiwan. To this extent, as Lai made these comments at the Taoyuan Hakka Youth Association, KMT chair Eric Chu suggested that Lai sought to purge Hakka, waishengren, and other languages in favor of Taiwanese Hokkien nationalism.

In this framing, Chu is probably hoping to depict Lai as Chen Shui-bian 2.0, in that Chen leaned into Taiwanese Hokkien nationalism in order to boost flagging support in his presidential administration. More broadly, the KMT has sought to frame the present DPP as analogous to the Chen administration, seeing itself as successful in using such tactics to oust the DPP and return to power after the end of the Chen administration, and hoping to repeat these tactics.

It is more probable that Lai is largely seeking to drive up turnout among those who are already in the pan-Green camp. Nor was Lai saying anything new in terms of cross-strait relations. This has not prevented some international observers from interpreting Lai’s speech as the TAO has framed it, as any statement by Lai is likely to be interpreted by them. Indeed, Lai’s speech is generally understood domestically as about the recalls, and there would have been far stronger political responses domestically if they had genuinely been interpreted as a pretext for declaring independence.

Lai’s speeches have been successful insofar as sometimes the KMT’s efforts to attack him on the basis of what he says have backfired. An example proves Taichung mayor Lu Shiow-yen’s reaction to the speeches, in that she claimed that Lai’s statement that the PRC has never controlled Taiwan is merely his “personal historical view.” This statement was leveraged upon by the pan-Green camp to point to how the KMT is overly accommodating of China, in that it is a historical fact that the PRC, which was founded in 1949, has never controlled Taiwan. The effort would be to give the KMT rope to hang themselves with, then.

On the other hand, the content of Lai’s subsequent speeches may have been aimed at conveying the image that he has sought to reach across the political aisle. Actions by Lai that signal a willingness for bipartisanship, such as inviting the leaders of the TPP and KMT to a bipartisan national security meeting, are effective when the pan-Blue camp turns down these invitations.

It is to be seen to what extent Lai leans into recall campaigning. Lai has to date maintained a fairly high approval rating because he has avoided engaging in partisanship and kept out of the day-to-day fray of political squabbling between the DPP and KMT. Instead, Lai has benefited from the split between the premiership and presidency, allowing Premier Cho Jung-tai to do most of the political fighting. But Lai may shift to a more combative stance ahead of elections, even if his administration has previously denied accusations from the KMT that it would shuffle the cabinet to a “war cabinet” with a more aggressive posture for the recalls.

No more articles