As President Ma Ying-jeou prepares to reclaim the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) chairmanship, he has begun asserting that the Republic of China (ROC) has been an independent, sovereign state since 1912 and that no country in the world needs to declare independence twice. This may sound appealing, but it is nothing more than a deceitful trick that does not stand up to the facts.
It is indeed surprising that Ma is confused about the nature of the  revolution launched by Sun Yat-sen.
Sun’s revolution was not to  gain independence and build a new country, in the way that the 13 American  colonies became the original United States of America; it was simply to  overthrow the imperial rule of the foreign Manchu Qing Dynasty and replace it  with a republican system.
In other words, Sun merely established a new  regime that replaced the Qing government of the national territory of the  country known as “China.” The new regime, the ROC, inherited all the territories  — excluding Taiwan and the Pescadores — citizens, foreign treaties and debts of  the Qing Dynasty.
Sun did not declare independence or establish a new  country. The US declared its legal recognition of the ROC government on May 2,  1912; that is, the US recognized the ROC as the successor government to the Qing  imperial government. The ROC did not become an “independent, sovereign state,”  because it inherited the unequal treaties that were signed by the Qing Dynasty  with other countries and because the Western powers still enjoyed  extraterritoriality in China, which meant that they were exempt from the  jurisdiction of local law.
When the Chinese Communist Party took over  China and established the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the ROC became a  government in exile. For the past 60 years, the KMT has offered different  definitions of the ROC.
Dictator Chiang Kai-shek once said that the  rule of the ROC over China had come to an end. Former president Lee Teng-hui was more pragmatic, talking about a “second republic” and placing the ROC  in Taiwan, saying that the ROC was the national title of Taiwan — but that  argument was severely criticized by hardline KMT members.
Ma has opposed  both Chiang’s view that the ROC’s rule over China has come to an end and Lee’s  “second republic” discourse, ignoring the fact that China has been taken over by  the People’s Republic of China (PRC). He naively claims that the ROC has long  been an independent, sovereign state, while at the same time accommodating the  interests of the PRC.
How can he refute his assertions in this way and  then claim that the ROC is an independent, sovereign state?
James  Wang is a media commentator.
TRANSLATED BY TED YANG
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2009/07/02
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