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Peace between Taiwan and China to take time
2008-03-22
An end to the more than half a century of hostility and tension between Taiwan and China may be in the offing with the election of a more China-friendly president for the island, but progress will be slow and tortuous. The opposition Nationalist Party's Ma Ying-jeou won in a landslide on Saturday against an opponent who had tried to use recent bloody protests in Tibet to scare people into not voting for Ma. The Democratic Progressive Party's Frank Hsieh said Taiwan risked becoming another Tibet if Ma, with his more pro-China views, won. Though that strategy backfired, Ma now has to try and reach out to China, but without being seen to compromise Taiwan's security. "The people of Taiwan hope for peace across the straits, they don't want war," Ma told thousands of cheering supporters in his victory speech. But Ma said he would not consider talking peace with China, which claims the self-ruled island as its own, until Beijing removes missiles aimed at Taiwan. The two sides have been run separately since 1949, when defeated Nationalist forces fled to Taiwan at the end of a civil war. China has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control. Despite that, economic ties are close, and Taiwanese companies have invested billions of dollars in China, drawn by low costs and a common language and culture. China is also Taiwan's biggest trading partner. Yet there are still no direct flights allowed across the narrow Taiwan Strait. "Voters hope that Ma will help cross-Strait relations to return to normal and that both sides can see a win-win solution," said Jeff Lin, associate dean of the Institute For Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences at National Taiwan University. "But this will be his biggest challenge, because cross-Strait relations take a lot of negotiation and Taiwan does not have the people who will be able to do that. Therefore we could be at a disadvantage," Lin added. ARMED TO THE TEETH The state of war between the two sides still exists, as no peace treaty has ever been signed. Taiwan is armed to the teeth, mainly with U.S. weapons, and China is rapidly modernizing its military to close the technology gap. Chinese President Hu Jintao offered earlier this month peace talks, under the so-called "one China" principle, which contends the island and the mainland are part of a single sovereign country, a concept Taiwan's current government has rejected. Ma may concentrate on the easier aspects of dealing with China, such as practical issues like the ban on direct links, rather than far thornier political problems. And he will have to prioritize Taiwan's pressing domestic economic issues. "Ma Ying-jeou is really focused on cross-Strait relations," said Chao Chien-min, professor at Taipei's National Cheng Chi University. "In the near future we can expect direct flights and tourism. But a peace agreement isn't so easily possible. Our national development is a new priority," Chao added. And don't expect dramatic progress this year, said Bruce Jacobs, Asian Studies professor at Australia's Monash University. "At the end of 2008 I wouldn't expect any breakthroughs with China. The Chinese don't think it's in their interest unless they get their one China," he said. "To be nice to China and expect China to be nice back is not going to work." (Additional reporting by Ralph Jennings and Sheena Lee; Editing by David Fox)
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