Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday highlighted the US-Japan security pact as the cornerstone of stability in East Asia and the DPP’s wish to strengthen Taiwan’s relations with Japan in a speech in Tokyo.
Japan “continues to occupy a special place in the emotions of the Taiwanese people,” the DPP’s presidential candidate told the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan.
Tsai, who is in the middle of a three-day visit to Japan, emphasized four elements in Taiwan’s relationship with Japan: security, democracy, economy, and trade and travel, as well as other areas of interaction.
Photo: AFP
While Taiwan is not a formal partner in the Japan-US Security Alliance, Tsai said she believes it is important to “involve all parties, to communicate and dialogue, to manage territorial disputes in a peaceful and rational way, to ensure the freedom of navigation and to enhance transparency in military modernization” in the “cornerstone of peace and stability in East Asia.”
Closer economic ties with Japan would also help to prevent further marginalization and over-dependence on China economically, Tsai said, adding that it would be mutually beneficial if Taiwan were to join the APEC-based free-trade agreement or the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
She said that Taiwan and Japan share similar social and political challenges, such as the dominance of social and economic issues as key domestic themes and anti-nuclear awareness following the accident at the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant in March.
She went on to detail her initiative of a “Taiwan consensus” — the starting point of her policy on China — highlighting it as an inclusive, democratic process.
Future Taiwan-China engagement should be based on a “new foundation” which is inclusive, she said,
Ultimately the DPP wants to ensure that “the right to determine Taiwan’s future rests in the hands of the people of Taiwan, and any change to the status quo must be agreed by the people of Taiwan through democratic means,” she said.
Any precondition for dialogue that is not transparent and not in line with the democratic consensus of Taiwanese would not be sufficient to deal with the complexities of the cross-strait relationship, Tsai said.
The DPP is not naive about the differences across the Strait, she said, but cross-strait engagement would not be a zero-sum game “as long as both sides are sincere about building a peaceful and stable framework for interaction.”
Tsai said her victory in the January presidential election over President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) would be “a demonstration of the progressiveness and openness of Taiwan’s society.”
In a speech to overseas Taiwanese on Monday, Tsai described the affinity and solid relations between Taiwanese and Japanese over the years as being a form of “Taiwan consensus.”
The DPP’s two main policies are that a “Taiwan consensus” is needed for Taiwan to develop its external relations, in particular relations with China, while domestically, social harmony and consolidation should be in place before the implementation of economic reforms, she said.
In response to a question from a Japanese student about a “Taiwan identity,” Tsai said that it is important to have a balanced education system so that people can be proud of being Taiwanese.
Being Taiwanese or Chinese is an option; it does not depend on ethnicity, social status or one’s educational background, she said, adding: “If people are proud of being Taiwanese, then they have Taiwanese identity in mind.”
Tsai said all territorial disputes between Taiwan and Japan should be resolved peacefully, since it would be very difficult to imagine that both sides would resort to force.
As an experienced negotiator, Tsai said, she proposes that both sides first negotiate on common interests, such as fishing rights and maritime development, and set the territorial disputes aside until later.
RESPONSE: The transit sends a message that China’s alignment with other countries would not deter the West from defending freedom of navigation, an academic said Canadian frigate the Ville de Quebec and Australian guided-missile destroyer the Brisbane transited the Taiwan Strait yesterday morning, the first time the two nations have conducted a joint freedom of navigation operation. The Canadian and Australian militaries did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The Ministry of National Defense declined to confirm the passage, saying only that Taiwan’s armed forces had deployed surveillance and reconnaissance assets, along with warships and combat aircraft, to safeguard security across the Strait. The two vessels were observed transiting northward along the eastern side of the Taiwan Strait’s median line, with Japan being their most likely destination,
‘NOT ALONE’: A Taiwan Strait war would disrupt global trade routes, and could spark a worldwide crisis, so a powerful US presence is needed as a deterrence, a US senator said US Senator Deb Fischer on Thursday urged her colleagues in the US Congress to deepen Washington’s cooperation with Taiwan and other Indo-Pacific partners to contain the global security threat from China. Fischer and other lawmakers recently returned from an official trip to the Indo-Pacific region, where they toured US military bases in Hawaii and Guam, and visited leaders, including President William Lai (賴清德). The trip underscored the reality that the world is undergoing turmoil, and maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific region is crucial to the security interests of the US and its partners, she said. Her visit to Taiwan demonstrated ways the
GLOBAL ISSUE: If China annexes Taiwan, ‘it will not stop its expansion there, as it only becomes stronger and has more force to expand further,’ the president said China’s military and diplomatic expansion is not a sole issue for Taiwan, but one that risks world peace, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday, adding that Taiwan would stand with the alliance of democratic countries to preserve peace through deterrence. Lai made the remark in an exclusive interview with the Chinese-language Liberty Times (sister paper of the Taipei Times). “China is strategically pushing forward to change the international order,” Lai said, adding that China established the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank, launched the Belt and Road Initiative, and pushed for yuan internationalization, because it wants to replace the democratic rules-based international
WAR’S END ANNIVERSARY: ‘Taiwan does not believe in commemorating peace by holding guns,’ the president said on social media after attending a morning ceremony Countries should uphold peace, and promote freedom and democracy, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday as Taiwan marked 80 years since the end of World War II and the Second Sino-Japanese War. Lai, Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) and other top officials in the morning attended a ceremony at the National Revolutionary Martyrs’ Shrine in Taipei’s Zhongshan District (中山) to honor those who sacrificed their lives in major battles. “Taiwanese are peace-loving. Taiwan does not believe in commemorating peace by holding guns,” Lai wrote on Facebook afterward, apparently to highlight the contrast with the military parade in Beijing marking the same anniversary. “We