Friday, January 19, 2024

The train to Tamsui

 Jan 19, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan

I took the train to Tamsui today to watch the sunset.  After riding the subway about an hour from central Taipei you walk out of the subway station and are greeted with expansive views of the Tamsui River flowing into the ocean on the horizon.  As the sun sank behind clouds with the earth slowly spinning it out of view I looked across the river to the opposite bank where the lights of the city were coming online, sparks against the fading glow of sunset, and I reflected upon this place.


The character of these Taiwanese!  They know China is just over the horizon, an existential threat to their hopes of internationally recognized statehood, but with a quiet courage unknown to the world at large, they bravely live on, each and every day building their claim to be a peoples and a nation among nations.  I felt a pang of emotion at this hard-won thought.  Each and every day these people are carving out a place in the world for themselves and their shared destiny, without statehood, without membership in many international organizations, but while carrying an essential part of the hopes of the democratic world.  It’s the character of these Taiwanese to keep the flame of democracy burning into the coming night.  They know as well as we do that all their striving today will unlock a brighter world tomorrow as humanity progresses ever higher.  

Taiwan makes an institution out of combatting cognitive warfare

 Jan. 19, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan

After a hard-fought campaign in which Chinese cognitive warfare played a huge part Taiwan is inaugurating the Cognitive Warfare Research Center under the purview of the Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau.  The new center combines resources from three units of the MJIB that intersected during this election season: Information Security, Cross-Strait Research and Internal Security Investigations.  Three divisions will constitute the new center: data compilation and research, analysis of cognitive warfare targeting Taiwan, and a swift response unit to combat fake news.  That’s from the Taipei Times. 


The institutionalization of cognitive warfare response into a government office shows the depth of the problem emanating from China’s authoritarian system as well as Taiwan’s determination to stand with the democratic world against Chinese interference.  Not only has this become a campaign issue, but it has expanded into an overall societal concern.  The experience of Taiwan with Chinese cognitive warfare could be valuable to the world at large this year as many democracies are holding elections this year.  In a world where China’s power is growing, the Taiwanese experience can be a crucial voice on understanding the true behavior of China.  As a crucial outpost of democracy, Taiwan is showing its commitment to being a beacon of democracy and a staunch ally of the US and other democracies even in tough times.  That is why the institution of this cognitive warfare research center is so important showing as it does the commitment of the Taiwanese to the narrative of upholding freedom and democracy in Asia, and their desire to have a platform to express this aspect of their lived reality to the West.  The Western observer should expect that the Taiwanese will now develop a firm grasp on what is cognitive warfare and how to operate in a world where it continues to be a domain of conflict.  

Sunday, January 14, 2024

USA sends envoys to Taiwan

 Jan. 14, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan


The Biden administration has sent two high-ranking former officials to Taiwan to convene with the new Lai administration in Taiwan.  This marks a normal part of the status quo with the caveat that with the higher stakes at play this time around, the American envoys are of higher rank than previously, showing American commitment to regional stability and peace, and very possibly a desire to deepen the relationship between the two countries, both economically and diplomatically. The issue of cognitive warfare is also on the table, undoubtedly a concern for the USA with the elections just around the corner, and an increasingly aggressive and domineering China growing its capacity to engage in election interference towards the world’s democracies. One might say Taiwan and the US are embracing a shared fate as global democracies, with every intention of leading the democratic world in the times ahead.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Taiwan’s election

 Jan. 14, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan

Taiwan’s election


Taiwan went to the polls yesterday, defying Chinese interference by choosing a president in a free and democratic election. William Lai of the DPP has been duly elected Taiwan‘s next president. The race, which was closely watched by the international press and US military and diplomatic observers, including the strike carrier group of the USS Carl Vinson, which was posted in the nearby Philippines, to observe and deter any aggression by China during the election process, featured three parties vying for the presidency and seats in the legislative branch. By all accounts, the race was open and fair, and the only problems came from Chinese interference. Lai has promised to continue the foreign policy of his predecessor, the term-limited Tsai Ing-wen, which will include emphasis on Pacific trade policy with a focus on Southeast Asia and the US, and is open to talk with China on a basis of parity. Relations with China have been a constant flashpoint in Taiwanese politics, including the 2014 Sunflower Movement, which revealed massive popular support for preserving Taiwanese sovereignty and dignity, and its trade relations with its neighbor, who continues to claim Taiwan as a runaway province, and harasses it daily with economic, diplomatic, and short-of-war coercion.  Although most Taiwanese see themselves as Taiwanese – a unique identity as opposed to mainland Chinese – a long history remains of competing governments of China, one on Taiwan, and the other on the mainland. Those tensions have ebbed in recent years as Taiwanese politics has shifted to domestic issues and partnership with the US on trade and technology issues.  This happened under the eight-year term of President Tsai Ing-wen of the DPP, the first female president of Taiwan, and with her former vice president, William Lai, now taking over for an unprecedented third term in office for the DPP, the cooperation with the United States looks to continue and deepen.


It’s hard to look at Taiwan’s now-vibrant democracy, and imagine that in 1979 after the US cut off formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan, the election activities were canceled. Taiwan is a young democracy. Its first free elections for president were in 1996. That was also the year when China sent several missiles into the waters to the north and south of Taiwan, and the world was the closest it has ever been to a war over Taiwan’s status. The Clinton administration then sent a carrier group into the Taiwan Strait in a show of force to quiet the Chinese. Before that seminal event, the status of Taiwan had been overshadowed for several years. This is due to the canceling of diplomatic relations in 1979 by the Carter administration, an event that still leaves a bad taste in the mouth of Taiwanese to this day. When the diplomatic status of Taiwan was revoked at that time, the one-party strongman state that governed Taiwan under martial law canceled local elections. However, they immediately saw the desire of the Taiwanese people for democracy, because this led to the Formosa Incident, a protest in the southern city of Kaohsiung, that led to clashes with the police.  The governing party quickly discovered how deep the roots were in favor of democratization. In truth, Taiwanese people have always been for self rule, because several prominent movements against Japanese colonial rule, and against the one party state had left a legacy of dissent that the popular movements for democracy in the martial law period could draw on.  Although faced at this time by a massive surveillance apparatus, including the latest in police technology, the activists, calling for a return to democracy and elections, used new social and political technology to stay ahead of the times.


How do you organize an opposition in an atmosphere of pervasive surveillance? The Kaohsiung activists used a combination of human rights law, informal networks and associations, and the press to confront authoritarianism and evade the police. Although the ensuing trials of the Kaohsiung activists resulted in heavy punishment for the defendants, the overall result was a political victory. Because the trials were open to the public, the defendants had the opportunity to make their case to the public, the press, and international observers, and this bolstered the fledgling democratization movement that would come into full bloom later.


One can see Su Tseng-chang’s face and hear his voice all over these days, as he has become an elder statesman of the DPP, but in those days he was a lawyer, one of the defense attorneys for the Kaohsiung Eight. His is just one example of the way that the Formosa Incident and the Kaohsiung trial is an integral part of the character of the DPP, and this is likely to continue in the four years to come. The role of the press played a major part in the culture of that movement and time, both in publishing the Formosa Magazine and others like it, but also in the role of the writer himself. 


The Formosa Incident, and all other movements like it, are proof of the power of the press, which functioned in that era as an ad-hoc opposition party.  It also played a huge role in changing the culture of the time through the concept of human rights. Lest we forget, freedom of expression “through any media“ is a fundamental human right encapsulated in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This essential notion of freedom of expression was brought into the democratic culture of Taiwan by the social movements behind the Formosa Magazine, and its peers.  They stand to this day as the forerunners of the thriving media environment in Taiwan, which is, I would argue, one of the pillars of its sovereignty in a very pragmatic sense.


During this election season, one of the successes in defending democracy, was the media’s willingness to report on election interference by China, raising the stakes of the election internationally by garnering the interest of international observers and foreign governments. Even when China diverted a rocket launch to travel over Taiwan, while AI generated deepfake videos were all over social media, and other election interference in trade in diplomacy was also going on, the ability of people to, on the whole, tell the truth from fiction, and avoid fear or paralysis, was notable and worthy of praise.


Although William Lai was victorious in the polls, he will face a government with no party holding a majority in the legislature. This will underscore the importance of coalition building in the years to come, and the sizable amount of seats won by the third-party will be a novel addition to the politics of the country.  A few of the third-party seats would be enough to swing a majority to either party, and so the fundamental governing challenge, facing the Lai Administration may be navigating third-party politics, a first for Taiwan, and interesting in the democratic world. The US should have nothing to fear from this organization of government. The first act Lai took after being declared the victor was to reassure the international press and through them, the world, about the policies his administration will take, including toward the crucial semiconductor industry, which he promised to bolster, and to develop a comprehensive cluster of semiconductor industries in Taiwan.


We now embark on the rest of the year of democratic elections around the world with Taiwan having shown that even in the face of adversity brought on by authoritarian governments, democracy can thrive. The lessons of this moment would be to be active in opposing disinformation, open in your advocacy for democratic governance, and to focus your energies on rallying people in favor of democratic norms. Now we hope that the rest of the world will follow suit, and we as a world community can resist the authoritarian slide. Democracy did not come easy to any country that has it. It is worth defending.

Friday, January 12, 2024

The cognitive warfare of China’s rocket launch

 Jan 12, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan



It’s been a few days since the Chinese rocket flew over Taiwan. The reason the alert was broadcast has become clear. The rocket deviated from its original path, giving the Taiwanese air defenses only a few minutes to decide on a course of action. This leaves us with the unavoidable conclusion that this was an act of cognitive warfare on the part of China, to be classed with the massive release of AI created videos online intended to influence the voters in tomorrow’s election, and indeed, with the endless military provocations by China in the waters and skies around Taiwan. Cognitive warfare does have an effect. I noticed that this incident had a noticeable effect on peoples moods and behaviors. You can tell there is a psychological effect centered on the decision-making capacity of the brain. This is the intended outcome of this class of short-of-war coercive actions. They spread not only fear, but paralysis. It would be to the benefit of the Chinese Communist Party to spread both fear and apathy before Taiwanese elections, after all. And it’s possible that we might see this sort of activity around the US elections too. There have been several balloon sightings in Taiwan over the past few weeks, and we could see a replay of that scenario again during the lead-up to November. China mainly wants to send the message that they are watching and have the capacity to mess with our heads, so it wouldn’t have to be another media spectacle to produce a favorable outcome for the CCP. 


So that broaches the question of what is to be done about these sorts of paramilitary interference actions. The most important thing is awareness, and not only of the spectacle. The Taiwanese have an awareness that this is part of the geostrategic game, and if they couch the events in the context of China’s intentions, based on known facts, that takes the sting out of the actions. The key to democratic resiliency is to focus on democracy, and not on attempts to intimidate democracies, or the effects of the intimidation. Taiwan has done a good job of sticking to its guns, so to speak, and keeping its focus where it belongs: on the democratic process. The US can bring its power to bear on the issue in a helpful way by focusing on the essential reasons China might want to interfere in the US elections, such as support for Taiwan or trade issues, and interpret any acts of interference through that lens. It will help to dispel the cognitive effect of any interference that remains. Cognitive warfare is a new domain, and it will take a new practice of literacy – in media, culture, and geopolitics – to bolster US defense against it.

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

Chinese rocket to space triggers Taiwan missile alert



China launched a rocket this afternoon carrying a satellite that flew over southern Taiwan.  This triggered the missile detection system and all of Taiwan got an alert on their smartphones.  China has launched rockets carrying satellites over Taiwan before, but this is the first time an air raid alert was triggered by it.  Reasons for that are unclear, but tensions are high.  


 

Monday, January 8, 2024

Cognitive warfare directed at Taiwan at this moment is election interference

 Jan. 8, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan

What exactly do we mean by saying election interference by China against Taiwan? I suppose we can start by saying that Taiwan has a robust democratic system, but it is a young democracy, with a legacy of being a government of China in exile, so there are elements in what we are talking about of what you might call traditional cross-Strait relationships, of, for instance, diaspora and nostalgia.  Chinese influence on politics is also a societal and demographic problem. Examples of this would include the many cases being investigated and prosecuted right now of local politicians taking paid propaganda trips to China, where they are told how to act or vote. This is a certain extreme of this social phenomenon of diaspora and nostalgia. 


However, the Chinese influence operations don’t stop there, and here is where we can stop blaming Taiwanese for the influence problem. The central problem to be understood here is that China is using just about everything short of war to coerce Taiwan into eventually accepting reunification, and, as a democratic country facing an authoritarian country, Taiwan is open to influence on its political system in ways that China is not. So China tends to launch operations to influence Taiwan during elections that Taiwan can’t respond to in the same manner. 


So that’s a bit of a dilemma for Taiwan. China’s current strategy is to combine domains of military, diplomatic, economic, and cyber to try to influence Taiwanese attitudes. For example, airplanes will fly over the median line of the Air Defense Identification Zone, while China is considering reneging on tariff exemptions, and Chinese cyber actors also launch cyber attacks and spread disinformation.


All of these actions tend to happen more or less concurrently, and are often launched in retaliation for certain things Taiwan does, like hosting foreign dignitaries, and especially when there are free elections.  In short, there is a rather intense bombardment across several conflict domains whenever Taiwan makes political decisions to engage with the democratic world, almost as if China is trying to be a domestic player in Taiwan’s politics.  This is, as clearly as I can right now state, what I mean by Chinese election interference.  It happens often, and it is not limited to expressions of force, but rather is an attempt to influence what used to be called hearts and minds, or the psychology of the opponent, or the will to fight. What we’re talking about now is the attempt to paralyze the decision-making capacity of the opponent, and this is also called cognitive warfare.


The Chinese have made cognitive warfare one of their main military domains of conflict, because their goal is to unify areas where they have disputed sovereignty into their version of a modern Chinese imperial dynasty. As Xi Jinping continues to consolidate strongman power in China, the tendency of the underlings at his command to exaggerate the goal of retaking disputed territory increases, taking on a more and more unhinged character.  This is the nature of the threat that Taiwan faces daily, which tends to build, even as Taiwan’s civil society grows stronger and more sophisticated.


Taiwan’s economic, technological, and social strength continues to increase in the face of these cognitive warfare threats. To grasp an example of why this might be, I remember talking to a veteran of the Standing Rock protests, who said that in the most tense days of the standoff, with private mercenaries surrounding them with guns and the latest police technology, those were the nights when he had never slept better in his life. I do believe Taiwan thrives in the same way.

Saturday, January 6, 2024

U.S. forces close at hand for Taiwanese elections

 Jan. 7, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan

US aircraft carrier Carl Vinson is in deployment traveling near to Taiwan in the latest move in the geopolitical chess game centering on the Taiwanese elections. The elections are this Saturday. The USS Carl Vinson is traveling to the South China Sea, but the US already has carrier group stationed near Japan, and in the South China Sea, so the clear message is that the USS Carl Vinson and its carrier group are staying in the vicinity of Taiwan to present a show of US support for Taiwan at the time of its free elections. The US is obligated to defend Taiwan, and the potential conflict in the Taiwan Strait over Chinese election interference has been called one of the highest priority defense obligations of the US for the fourth straight year by the Council on Foreign Relations. The US moved an aircraft carrier into the Taiwan Strait during the 1996 Taiwan Strait Crisis, which was the first time Taiwan held free elections, and since then there has usually been some show of support for Taiwan when they hold their elections. It’s impossible to say exactly what will happen this time around with tensions increasing in the region, but defense partnerships and fellow-feeling with Taiwan at a high-level. It is certain that this placement of US forces in the region is part of a deterrence strategy to preserve the sanctity of the Taiwanese democratic elections, and the capacity is there to prevent any overt use of force by China against Taiwan. The regular transit of US forces near Taiwan is part of the status quo. However, more covert and “hard to perceive“ kind of election interference by China are underway in the region and also deserve our attention. There will be a report on these new types by the Taiwanese government forthcoming after the vote that may help to prepare for interference in the US election in November.


US ships stay close ahead of election - Taipei Times

Information on election interference will be consolidated

 Jan. 6, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan

The U.S. National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications reiterated American hopes that the Taiwanese elections are free and fair.  John Kirby said he could not however confirm individual reports of interference, but there are several this bystander could name.  The first is the repeated incursions of ship and aircraft into Taiwan’s defense perimeters, the second is the broadcast by China’s Taiwan Affairs Office saying it was inevitable for Taiwan to be reunified with the mainland which was very overt election interference, and the third is the growing amount of research showing the ways that China is using the internet and media to interfere in the Taiwanese election cycle, whether through social media, TikTok, or hacking and spreading disinformation.  On the last topic, there was some new information in a Taiwanese NGO report about how the social media manipulation is carried out.  Fake accounts follow the orders of a “commander” account, according to AI Labs founder Ethan Tu, who has been studying this.  Some of these commander accounts are run by PR firms, so you can see how this kind of effort has been professionalized.  In general, cases of election interference are still on the rise, and it’s hard for media or anybody to keep track of all of it.  However, Taiwan’s government is promising as of Wednesday that it will publish a report on China’s attempts to interfere in the election, to be released after the vote.

Friday, January 5, 2024

Election interference influences the status quo: Taiwanese foreign minister

 Jan. 5, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan

Chinese election interference has reached such a point that is threatens the status quo, according to Taiwan‘s current foreign minister. He gave an exclusive interview to Le Monde in English on the topic a few days ago.  The status quo is the current military, diplomatic and trade balance across the Taiwan Strait that maintains peace and stability and the possibility of a decent existence for Taiwanese. Both sides are tacit parties to the status quo, but China’s increasing aggressiveness in the Strait, and its increasing consolidation under an authoritarian leader, has undermined the status quo significantly, as evidenced by the Taiwanese foreign minister’s interview. The status quo in the Taiwan Strait is a centerpiece of US-Taiwan relations, and it is unlikely that this interview will go unnoticed by the US security apparatus.


Chinese influence harder to perceive: Joseph Wu - Taipei Times

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

The election 10 days out

Jan 3, 2024

Taipei, Taiwan


The election season is in full swing here.  A common sight in Taipei is to see groups of people decked out in the election gear of their preferred candidate chanting slogans and handing out literature to passers-by.  In the rural areas it is cars that you see outfitted with loudspeakers playing the slogans of their candidates.  There’s been debates of the presidential and vice presidential candidates, and now we’re about to enter the final ten-day period when no one can talk about the polls.  


What are the kinds of things people are talking about in the meantime?  First of all, I believe this election is a referendum on the Sunflower Movement issues; to that extent the death penalty, which Taiwan still has, was discussed in debates.  Also to that extent, one party is calling for a return to CSSTA and another party is open to it in theory; only the DPP is still opposed to CSSTA and in line with the movement politics of the Sunflower Movement.  However, you can see some more sophisticated consensus developing too.  


In light of recent events, the third party candidate Ko Wen-je pointed out that cross strait politics have been augmented or even outright replaced by cross-Pacific politics, with the US and China as the main competitors.  “Cooperate if you must cooperate, compete if you must compete, and deter if you must deter,” he said, paraphrasing the US State Department.  However, the real connection to the world is more simple: the election is a test of Taiwanese society’s commitment to democracy and freedom.  It’s the sanctity of the elections themselves that needs to be protected, because this is exactly what China and authoritarian nations want to subvert and devalue.  


In the pursuit of maintaining and protecting democratic norms, Taiwan and the United States have leaned on their “robust unofficial relationship” which has been in place since the US cut off official ties to the Chiang regime in 1979.


One of the main reasons, I think, that the status quo is to be preferred here is that the unofficial relationship between the US and Taiwan has more preferable substance, including cooperation on human rights issues, that the official relationship with the Chiang regime simply did not.  Of course you can trace the development of that international cooperation through the Formosa Incident events which began right after the end of official ties in 1979. 


Some of the Formosa Incident activists are active DPP politicians now in this government.  Some will doubtless remain if the DPP wins another term.  But one of the most interesting persons to emerge through this election cycle has been the former envoy to the United States, now vice presidential candidate Hsiao Bi-khim.  She’s leveraged a very successful tour of duty in the US into a vice presidential nomination, and she represents a certain continuity between the DPP old guard and the future (that includes Sunflower activists.)


She made note of the framework that I will close with for now before the talk of polls must cease for ten days.  In a speech she outlined Taiwan’s raison d’etat particularly on the global stage in a way any Foucauldean would appreciate.  The reasons that govern Taiwan, she said, are “security, trade, and global cooperation.”  A worthy project for a small island nation punching above its weight in global affairs.  

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