[Home]History of Taiwan independence

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Revision 2 . . November 26, 2001 11:44 am by (logged).93.53.xxx
Revision 1 . . November 20, 2001 1:16 pm by Chenyu
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (no other diffs)

Changed: 1c1,9
Political movement whose goal is to create a sovereign, independent Taiwan. This movement
Political movement whose goal is to create a sovereign, independent Taiwan. This movement is internationally signficant in that
a formal declaration of independence is one of the three conditions
under which the PRC has stated that it will take military action
against Taiwan (the other two being that Taiwan develops an atomic
bomb, or if Taiwan allies itself with Russia). This would raise
the possibility of an intervention by the United States under the [Taiwan Relations Act]? and the possibility of
a superpower conflict in East Asia.

This movement

Changed: 3c11,30
movement was as a vehicle for discontent from the native Taiwanese against the rule of mainlanders.
movement was as a vehicle for discontent from the native Taiwanese against the rule of "mainlanders" (i.e. people who came over with Chiang's armies in the late 1940's). Between 1949 and 1991, the official
position of the government on Taiwan was that it was the legitimate
government of all of China and used this position as justification
for authoritarian measures such as the refusal to hold parliamentary
elections. The Taiwan independence movement intensified in response
to this and presented an alternative vision of a sovereign and independent Republic of Taiwan. This vision was represented through
a number of symbols such as the use of Min-nan in opposition to the
school taught Mandarin.

In more recent years, the focus
of the movement has changed to that of insuring the sovereign and
dignity of Taiwan against the possiblity of rule by the People's Republic of China, and as such has been
more willing to take on the symbols of the Republic of China. The movement has also moderated in recent years because of decreasing friction between "Mainlander" and "native" communities on Taiwan, increasing economic ties with the Mainland, continuing threats by
the People's Republic of China to invade if it declares independence,
and doubts as to whether or not the United States would support
a unilateral declaration of independence. Opinion polls suggest that
the vast majority of Taiwanese support the "status quo" which is to
leave Taiwan's status exactly the way that it is. One advantage of
this option is that it avoids the necessity of defining exactly what
Taiwan's status really is.

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