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The CCP has sought to ‘Lebanonize’ or ‘balkanize’ Taiwanese society and its body politic

Exploring China's Political Warfare Against Taiwan


By Macdonald Laurier Institute ——--July 30, 2020

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OTTAWA, ON--Since the arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou on an extradition request from the US, Canada’s political class has become increasingly aware of the threat posed by Chinese political warfare – or “sharp power” – influence operations. However, while Canadian policy-makers are now just waking up to this danger, Taiwan has long been subject to these sharp power attacks against its democracy. In MLI’s latest paper titled “Democracy Under Fire: China’s political warfare against Taiwan during President Tsai Ing-Wen’s first term,” MLI senior Fellow J. Michael Cole examines how Beijing’s sharp power influence operations against Taiwan have played out from 2016 to 2020.
China had relied more on non-coercive means to try to influence the previous Taiwanese government’s agenda. But the election of Tsai Ing-Wen signalled a turn in Beijing’s “strategy by renewing its focus on political warfare and military coercion,” explains Cole. As Beijing failed to get the political results it wanted with tactics such as economic incentives, China instead turned to coercive action. Cole argues that the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) sharp power playbook can be divided across five main aims. The CCP sought to undermine Taiwan’s democracy, weaken the resolve of the Taiwanese people, exacerbate social divisions, co-opt influential Taiwanese, and coerce critics into silence or support. The paper explores how a broad array of activities coordinated by China’s United Front Work Department through a variety of proxy organizations are directed toward all elements of Taiwanese society to exercise Beijing’s authoritarian influence. “The CCP has sought to ‘Lebanonize’ or ‘balkanize’ Taiwanese society and its body politic,” notes Cole. “Efforts to do so increased markedly following Tsai Ing-wen’s 2016 election.” By the end of 2019, the Tsai administration introduced legislation that reduced loopholes and empowered intelligence and law enforcement agencies to combat Chinese interference in advance of the 2020 Taiwanese election. In particular, Taiwan's Anti-Infiltration Act provided teeth for the government’s efforts to combat foreign interference from Beijing. While Taiwan faces more acute and existential challenges than Canada, Cole argues that Canadian policy-makers can benefit greatly from learning from and engaging with Taiwan. Some of these lessons include learning how to counter:
  • Interference and intimidation levied against diaspora communities;
  • Foreign agents of influence;
  • Disinformation and misinformation;
  • Electoral interference;
  • Cyber attacks, and more.
Despite being on the frontline of Beijing’s sharp power operations, “Taiwan has demonstrated that it is possible to stand up to Chinese intimidation and continue to prosper, both economically and in the quality of its democracy,” writes Cole. “Resilience and commitment to a non-negotiable bottom line is probably the most important lesson that Canadians and the citizens of other targeted democracies can learn from Taiwan’s experience with Chinese interference.” To read the full paper, click here.

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Macdonald Laurier Institute——

Canada’s only truly national public policy think tank based in Ottawa. MLI is rigorously independent and non-partisan, as symbolized by its name. Sir John A. Macdonald and Sir Wilfrid Laurier were two outstanding and long-serving former prime ministers who represent the best of Canada’s distinguished political tradition. A Tory and a Grit, an English-speaker and a French-speaker, each of them championed the values that led to the creation of Canada and its emergence as one of the world’s leading democracies and a place where people may live in peace and freedom under the rule of law.


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