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Taiwan's History

Taiwan Under the Japanese (1895 - 1945)

Being its first colony, Japan was determined to rule Taiwan with an iron glove as much prestige rested on its ability to govern Taiwan properly. Japan was determined to show the Western colonialists that it too was a power to be reckoned with and could govern its colonies just as well as they could. Japan, therefore, treated its occupation of Taiwan as an experiment in colonial management, whereby it planned to use its experiences at colonial administration in Taiwan as precedents for its other future Asian colonies.

One of their first policies was to put an end to Chinese migration from the mainland and to staff the military, bureaucracy and government with Japanese citizens. The Japanese also placed a high priority on establishing domestic law and order by putting an end to warlordism, and eradicating lawlessness and anti-Japanese rebellions - especially in southern Taiwan. Japanese reprisals were harsh during this time, and on one occasion in 1896 when anti-Japanese protests occurred, thirty villages were destroyed and every living thing for a radius of five miles was killed.

The implementation of policies aimed at high economic growth and the integration of Taiwan's economy into the Japanese empire were another high priority of the Japanese rulers. When the Japanese arrived in Taiwan, they immediately faced the effects of decades of neglect by the Qing Dynasty and an economy almost totally based on sugar and rice. The first programme implemented by the Japanese, therefore, concentrated on creating an economic infrastructure by building roads, railways, communication systems and harbours to facilitate exports to Japan. So that Taiwan's agricultural potential could be fully harnessed, they also improved irrigation canals, implemented land reform policies by buying out the landlords and introduced new strains of rice. While the development of agriculture took top priority, the Japanese also allowed the establishment of light industry such as food processing plants, and introduced economic reforms such as a standardised currency and uniform commercial practices. As it turned out, all of these economic reforms met with great success and even laid some of the foundations for Taiwan's later phenomenal economic growth.

Culture and education policies were the next issues with which the Japanese dealt. In an effort to destroy Chinese cultural inheritance in Taiwan, the Japanese introduced Japanese-style schools in an attempt to indoctrinate Taiwanese children with Japanese language, culture and traditions where neither Mandarin Chinese nor the local dialect were taught in schools. Later on, even scholarships to study in Japan were introduced. Generally speaking, however, Taiwan's education system was greatly improved by the Japanese, with marked increases in the island's literacy rate and technological skills.

But while Taiwan made great strides in economic development and education under Japanese occupation, there was also some tremendous costs to be paid. It must be remembered that all of the reforms were aimed primarily serving the Japanese, not the Taiwanese. Taiwanese were not allowed to formulate their own policies, and had to be content with the decisions made thousands of miles away in Tokyo and implemented by local Japanese authorities. The Japanese also failed at completely assimilating Taiwanese into the Japanese empire, and local rebellions continued to plague Japanese rule in Taiwan. The most infamous of such rebellions was the Musha uprising of 1930, where Taiwanese aboriginals rose against the Japanese and were quickly subjugated, leaving thousands dead.

During World War Two, Taiwan was to take on a very important role for the Japanese military. Taiwan's industrial base was expanded and limited industrialisation was allowed so that military related hardware could be supplied to the Japanese war machine - especially textiles, chemicals and machine tools. Taiwan also served as a base from which Japan launched its invasion of the Philippines and Indonesia in pursuit of its 'Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere'.

However, while Japan's reign in Taiwan was bought to an end with its defeat by the allied forces in 1945, Taiwan's fate had already been decided by powers much larger than it. Prior to the War's end, the Cairo Conference in 1941 - attended by China, Great Britain, the U.S. and the Soviet Union - was convened to consider military options against Japan in the Asian arena during World War Two. It was at this conference that the US and Great Britain reached agreement with Chiang Kai-shek - President of the Republic of China (ROC) on the mainland - that Taiwan, the Pescadores, and the four provinces in Northeast China, would be returned to China after the War. After Japan's defeat, the Potsdam Declaration, which was promulgated in July 1945, reaffirmed the Cairo Declaration, thereby becoming law.

On October 25, 1945, Taiwan was officially handed back to the Nationalist government (Kuomintang or KMT) in China after having spent the previous fifty years under Japanese rule. But while Taiwan has now been part of China since this time, its fate has still not been decided even to this day. This is because the Nationalist government that took possession of Taiwan was itself defeated in the Chinese civil war that lasted from 1946 to 1949. This war saw the rise of the Chinese Communist Party to power and the establishment of the PRC in 1949. During the civil war, the ruling KMT government collapsed at breathtaking speed and the Communist led People's Liberation Army (PLA) swept all before it. It soon became painfully obvious to President Chiang Kai-shek that the CCP, under the leadership of Mao Zedong, was to be the final victor, and so the lasting remnants of the KMT's fighting forces and government leaders fled to Taiwan where they ruled until March 2000, ultimately replaced by the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). The DPP governs in Taiwan, the Pescadores (P'eng-hu Islands), the Offshore Islands (the Quemoy and Matsu groups), and a handful of islands in the South China Sea, and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) governs the entire Chinese mainland.

Western imperialism in China left it a divided country split up into three: the PRC, Taiwan and Hong Kong. The future of all of these regions is still very much an issue in today's news and has serious consequences for stability in the Asia-Pacific region. Many hurdles have still yet to be overcome in determining the ultimate fate of Taiwan, but it is certain that its colonial history will play a large role in determining its future.



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