Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian's basic problem is that he came to
power about forty years too late. If his Democratic Progressive Party
had won power in 1960, not 2000, he could probably have got away with
his project for an independent Taiwan, at least for a while. But back
then Taiwan was ruled with an iron hand by the Kuomintang (KMT),
refugees from a lost civil war who dreamed of reconquering the
mainland and rejected any thought of a separate Taiwan. Now it's too
late.

Last Saturday Chen's supporters marched through Taipei a hundred
thousand strong to mark the tenth anniversary of the Taiwan Strait
Missile Crisis of 1996, when China "test-fired'' missiles into the
waters off Taiwan to warn voters not to back the pro-independence
party in the island's first free election, and the first anniversary
of Beijing's Anti-Secession Law, which threatens to use "non-peaceful
means'' to block Taiwan's independence.

The marchers carried banners declaring "Anti-annexation'' and
"Terminate the National Unification Council,'' the latter referring to
Chen's decision last month to do just that. Some carried red balloons
shaped like missiles that read "No aggression.'' Chen declared that
"Taiwan is a sovereign nation'' and led the crowd in a chant of
"Protect Taiwan, no to annexation,'' as if China planned to annex
Taiwan against the democratic will of the Taiwanese people. But not
one in ten of the crowd was naive enough to believe that that was
really the issue.

The status quo for most of the time since the KMT retreated to Taiwan
in 1949 has been no annexation, but no independence for Taiwan either.
Both sides agreed that there was only one China; they disagreed about
who should be running it, but they weren't going to have another war
about it. This was the deal formalised in 1972, when President Richard
Nixon shifted US diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing, and it
was ratified by the two Chinese sides themselves in negotiations in
Hong Kong in 1992. What has changed since then is not Beijing's
position; it is Taipei's.

Taiwan's aboriginal inhabitants are related to ethnic groups in the
northern Philippines, but by 400 years ago Chinese settlers were
already a majority. They were maverick Chinese, however, refugees from
the stifling hierarchy and conformity of imperial China-and their
heirs have spent less than half of the time between then and now under
direct Chinese rule.

The arrival of millions of defeated KMT officials, troops and their
families in 1949, and the subsequent four decades of brutally
authoritarian KMT rule, did not make them fonder of the
"mainlanders''.

Once the KMT ended martial law in 1987 and began the transition to
democracy, therefore, identity issues began to play a big role in
Taiwan's politics. Many people who saw themselves as historically
Taiwanese (though ethnically Chinese) wanted a decisive break with the
mainland. There was potential voter support for a policy of outright
independence, and since the DPP won the presidency in 2000, Chen
Shui-bian has been unremitting in his assertions of Taiwan's right to
choose its own course.

Yet there has always been an element of make-believe about the
independence movement. The basic fact is that there are only 23
million people in Taiwan, while there are 1,330 million people in
China-and they almost all believe that there must be only one China.

It's practically in the genes by now. China is an empire that became a
nation some two thousand years ago, but even now only 70 per cent of
the country's citizens speak Mandarin as their first language. They
can all read the same language, thanks to ideographs -which is
probably why Chinese ideographs survived in a world where most other
cultures adopted alphabets millennia ago -but they still see China's
unity as fragile and forever at risk.

It's as if the Roman empire had survived into the present, speaking
highly evolved local dialects of Latin-Spanish, French, Italian,
Romanian-but still united by a common knowledge of the classical
language. In such a case, you would expect modern Romans to be
hypersensitive about national unity questions. Modern Chinese
certainly are, and they will never let Taiwan secede.

Most Taiwanese actually understand this, so the independence movement
is largely a charade. Chen himself came close to admitting that when
he pointed out on March 14 that there was no need to panic over his
demands for a new name, a new constitution, and ultimately formal
independence for Taiwan, since the opposition controls the legislature
and will block all his demands. "So everybody can relax,'' he
concluded, smiling.

Exactly. And in another two years the DPP will almost certainly lose
the presidency, too, for the Taiwanese economy has suffered grievously
due to the uncertainties of the past six years and the deliberate
roadblocks that the DPP has placed in the way of easier relations with
China. All travellers and goods from Taiwan destined for China, for
example, must first pass through Hong Kong, in most cases a
thousand-mile (1,600-km) detour.

Taiwan's per capita income has flat-lined since 2000, and the flow of
jobs and capital to the mainland has become a flood. DPP support is
now below 20 per cent of the electorate, and the 2008 election is
likely to restore the "pan-blue'' coalition centred on the KMT to
power. Unless there is some cross-Strait crisis first, of course, but
nobody would deliberately seek that.

- Gwynne Dyer is a London-based

independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

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