By XUAN
LOC DOAN | Asia Times
Since coming to power in 2012 and
especially after consolidating his power in 2017, President Xi Jinping has
positioned himself as the man mandated to rejuvenate China and lead the Middle
Kingdom to a new era of greatness. As such, in both rhetoric and policy, he has
made numerous big statements, but it’s often the case that such moves backfire
on his country.
At the 19th National
Congress of the Communist Party of China in October 2017, the strongman leader
proclaimed that his country “has stood up, grown rich, and is becoming strong”
and “with an entirely new posture, now stands tall and firm in the East.”
With such confidence, in that three-and-a-half-hour
speech, Xi announced his country had entered “a new era” in which the
Chinese nation will “realize [its] dream of national rejuvenation” and “that
sees China moving closer to [the world’s] center stage.”
In a very
nationalist addressto the National People’s Congress (NPC), the one-party
nation’s rubber-stamp parliament, in March 2018, he reasserted such claims.
In both these key speeches, he
also hailed “socialism with Chinese characteristics,” calling it Chinese
wisdom, approach, solution and strength to the world.
Xi made such bold statements at
the CPC’s quinquennial congress and the NPC’s annual meeting because at those
two key events, he stunningly consolidated his power, making him China’s most
powerful leader since Mao Zedong, who ruled the People’s Republic with absolute
power and at times an iron fist from its founding in 1949 to his death in 1976.
The 2017 congress – aka Xi Jinping’s congress –
enshrined “Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a
New Era” in the party charter at its 2018 meeting. The NPC amended the PRC’s
constitution to include his thought and remove the presidential term-limit,
allowing him to rule the country indefinitely.
Rejuvenating China
To demonstrate that he is the man
capable of rejuvenating China and leading it into a new era and, thereby
justifying his extraordinary power grab and indefinite rule, in policy terms,
he initiated and pursued grandiose projects. “Made in China 2025,” a flagship policy
aimed at transforming “China into a
world science and technology leader” and the Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI), an ambitious global infrastructure project, which he himself dubbed “a project of
the century,” are two of these.
Xi’s propagandists also
fawningly praised him, his leadership and achievements. State broadcaster China
Central Television produced “Amazing China,” a
documentary film, to hail China’s huge accomplishments in many areas, including
science and technology, under his watch.
All of this fueled strong
suspicion, apprehension and opposition in the United
States and other countries. The US government has adopted a hardline
posture vis-à-vis China since June 2018, partly, if not mainly, due to Xi’s
overbearing stance.
Last September, the European
Parliament adopted a resolution that was very critical
of a wide range of China’s domestic and foreignpolicies under Xi, including
the BRI, while the European Commission unveiled a new “Connectivity
Strategy” widely seen
as the EU’s answer to
China’s BRI.
Xi has also faced disquiet,
discontent and dissent in China. Deng Pufeng, the eldest son of Deng
Xiaoping, the architect of China’s reform and opening, and who advised
Chinese leaders to maintain a low profile, urged the
Asian nation to “keep a sober mind” and “know its place.” That Deng Pufeng, who
is, like Xi Jinping, a princeling, made such remarks in the tightly-controlled
country and that his comments were published show how the Chinese elite and
public disapprove of Xi’s assertiveness.
Due to such pushbacks, in recent
months Xi’s China has become less assertive in some key areas – at least at the
rhetoric level. The phrases, such as that China “has stood up, grown rich, and
is becoming strong,” haven’t appeared in Xi’s latest remarks. Beijing has
downplayed the “Made in China 2025”
scheme. The BRI, which had been omnipresent in Xi’s key international
speeches since its conception in 2013, was conspicuously
excluded from his remarks at
the G20 summit in Argentina last month.
Yet, while seemingly softening
his stance on these issues, Xi has continued to be assertive and
aggressive on others.
In remarks to
mark the 40th anniversary of
a key policy statement that led to a thaw in relations with Taiwan on January
2, he declared that Taiwan “must and will be reunited” with the PRC.
While stating that Beijing is seeking
“peaceful reunification with utmost sincerity and greatest efforts,” he said
the mainlanders “make no promise to renounce the use of force and reserve the
option of taking all necessary means” to bring the island into their fold.
Put differently, he bluntly told
the Taiwanese to reunify with the mainland, or if you don’t, we will use arms
to attack you. Thus, his so-called “Message to Compatriots in Taiwan” is, in
fact, a threat.
In his statement Xi also made
other comments that were unacceptable to the Taiwanese people and the Tsai
Ing-wen government in particular. These included Beijing’s willingness to hold
talks with only political parties in Taiwan that hold the so-called “1992
Consensus” and its proposal of “one country, two systems”
as the best way to achieve reunification.
As such, instead of convincing
the island to reunify with the mainland, Xi’s comments have made the former
more determined to defend its sovereignty, identity, democracy and liberty.
More crucially, instead of
weakening President Tsai Ing-wen, who Beijing loves to hate, Xi’s remarks have
provided her with a unique opportunity to galvanize domestic and international
support for her policies.
Indeed, immediately after Xi’s
speech, Taiwan’s first female president issued a statement saying
that the development of cross-strait relations must be based on “four musts,”
including that China “must handle cross-strait differences peacefully, on the
basis of equality, instead of using suppression and intimidation to get
Taiwanese to submit.”
In her New Year message on
January 1, she had already unveiled those “four musts,” which also require that
China must recognize the island’s existence, respect its freedom and democracy
and only communicate through government-authorized channels.
But if such demands in her New
Year message were her own – or her Democratic Progressive Party’s – position,
after Xi’s remarks, they have constituted the “Taiwan consensus” because the
vast majority of Taiwanese would now agree with her “four musts.”
In her January 2 statement as
well as during her press
conference with foreign media three days later, she urged all
political parties in Taiwan to reject Xi’s “one country, two systems” proposal
and the “1992 consensus.” They positively responded to her call.
Three opposition parties, namely
the People First Party (PFP), the Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) and the New
Power Party (NPP), backedher stance
against Beijing’s “one country, two systems” proposition – a framework under
which Hong Kong has operated since Britain returned it to Chinese rule in 1997.
Even the pro-Beijing and main
opposition Kuomintang (KMT), the party behind the 1992 consensus, publicly
rejected Xi’s inclusion of
the “one country, two systems” framework as part of the consensus and his “one
country, two systems” proposal as
a whole because it lacked public support.
Tsai and her DPP lost
ground to the KMT in the local elections in November. There were even calls within her party and pro-Taiwan
independence groups for her not to run for a second term in 2020. But
her prompt, firm and unequivocal response to Xi’s speech has now certainly
strengthened her authority and policies.
Sympathy for Taiwan
Though no country or
international organization has publicly responded to her call to speak up on
Taiwan’s behalf, internationally people will now sympathize more with the
island. After all, like it or not, Taiwan is a de facto independent country
with its own democratically elected government, currency, military and foreign
policy. Its flourishing democracy has – as pointedly observed by two US
presidents, Barack
Obama and George W Bush –
become a shining example for the region and the world.
The mere fact that the Chinese
leader overtly threatened to use force to integrate the island, which the
communist regime in Beijing has never ruled, has already made people more
receptive to Taiwan and more critical of China.
On this reading, it’s clear that
Xi’s forceful statement on January 2 was unwise and counterproductive. It has
made Taiwan’s peaceful reunification with China even more distant.
In fact, as already
noted, such a reunification, which is central to Xi’s Chinese Dream, is
very unlikely, if not impossible, under his regime, which is regressive at home
and assertive abroad.
In her press briefing with
foreign journalists last Saturday, Tsai plainly said the Taiwanese people
cannot accept the “one country, two systems” model for three simple reasons:
that “China lacks a democratic system, has a poor human rights record, and has
never renounced the use of force against Taiwan.”
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*Xuan Loc Doan - Dr Xuan Loc Doan researches and
writes on a number of areas. These include Vietnam’s domestic and foreign
policy, ASEAN, EU, UK’s politics and international politics in the Asia-Pacific
region.
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