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HOOVER ARCHIVES: Starting Anew on Taiwan
By Ramon H. Myers and Hsiao-ting Lin
In 1949, Chiang Kai-shek faced both utter defeat and a second chance.
What he did next. By Ramon H. Myers and Hsiao-ting Lin.
It was one of the twentieth century’s great surprises: on June 27, 1950, President
Truman ordered the Seventh Fleet into the Taiwan Strait to prevent
the Chinese civil war from leaping across to the island of Taiwan, then
known as Formosa. “The occupation of Formosa by communist forces,”
Truman said, “would be a direct threat to the security of the Pacific area
and to United States forces” in the area; he also called on the “Chinese government
on Formosa to cease all air and sea operations against the mainland.”
Truman announced that Taiwan’s future “must await the restoration
of security in the Pacific, a peace settlement with Japan, or consideration
by the United Nations.”
Chiang Kai-shek owed his regime’s survival to the Korean civil war,
which had erupted two days earlier. Suddenly protected from complete
defeat after his 1949 rout by Mao’s communist forces on the mainland,
Chiang was handed a new start—along with a surge in American military
and economic aid that gave Chiang, his military forces, his followers, and
thousands of refugees from the mainland enough time to establish a new
party and state that would radically change Taiwan and the Asian-Pacific
region.
The Hoover Institution has recently received records from the Kuomintang
(KMT) party archives in Taipei that provide a clearer understanding
of how the discredited Chiang Kai-shek and his son, Chiang
Ching-kuo, along with half a million Chinese soldiers and some 2 million
Chinese refugees, re-established the Republic of China on Taiwan.
THE GENERALISSIMO RETREATS
Chiang and his son had flown to Canton (Guangzhou) in 1949, as Mao’s
army closed in, to meet with Central Standing Committee members of the
KMT and to launch a party reform movement. The Chiangs were told that
effective party reform was out of the question. They then flew to Sichuan
in southwest China, where again local elites gave only a lukewarm response
to Chiang’s idea of initiating a thorough party reform and building a last
anticommunist power base in the southwest. In despair, father and son fled
to Taiwan as the year ended, never to set foot on the mainland again.
During the next months, Chiang assembled his military officers, ordered
Chinese troops on Hainan Island and along the coast of Zhejiang and
Fujian provinces to retreat to Taiwan, and planned for the island’s defense
against a communist attack.
In June 1950, the Korean War brought a surge of U.S. aid and attention to
Chiang.
An atmosphere of defeat hung over the island. Leading officials argued
with each other and with their commander. Chiang quarreled with Premier
Chen Cheng over who should control state finances. Taiwan’s governor,
K. C. Wu, threatened to resign. The legislative and executive branches of
the central government were at each other’s throat; members of powerful
cliques refused to pass an emergency bill giving the Executive Yuan more
power.
As early as the summer of 1947, Chiang had been thinking about
reforming the KMT. Party factional struggles were epidemic. After the war
with Japan ended, the C.C. Clique, controlled by the Chen brothers
(Guofu and Lifu), was so powerful that it threatened to divide the Nationalist
government. In 1948 and 1949, local party branches were collapsing
and people were fleeing to Taiwan. Writing in his diary in January 1949,
Chiang blamed the party’s collapse on his and others’ failed efforts: “We
never established a new, solid organization.”
Chiang realized that his inner circle of party and state officials could not
be trusted. He had little faith that his military officers would defend Taiwan.
On May 31, 1950, he complained that “party members are rude and unreasonable. In their minds they no longer cared about the survival of our
party and state. I must focus on party rectification to ensure our survival.
Without complete party reform, there is no way to save the nation.”
A POLITICAL HOUSECLEANING
Then came June 25, 1950, when Chiang learned that civil war had broken
out on the Korean Peninsula. He knew that the time was ripe.
His first step was to retire his enemies. Chiang created a Central Advisory
Committee, a new organization to be staffed with the political leaders
he detested and wanted removed from political life. Chiang bestowed
prestige on this honorary body but gave it no political power or responsibility,
and he quickly transferred all leading members of the C.C. Clique,
the Guangxi Clique, and the Zhengxue Clique to it.
Chiang expected his revived party to lead the state, provide guidance for a
market economy, protect Taiwan from communism, and create a Han
Chinese society. He saw himself as a benevolent father figure.
Chiang then set up a Central Reform Committee, loyal to him, with real
power to lead his new political party. In June–July of 1950 he carefully selected
its sixteen members, ordering background checks of candidates and consulting
with his close friends. With an average age of 47, this younger generation
of leaders was also well educated: nine had bachelor’s or master’s degrees in
engineering and economics, and several had studied abroad. Two had doctorates
from American universities. Those sixteen became his inner council.
What was their vision for China’s and Taiwan’s future? Chiang advanced
six principles:
First, the Kuomintang was a revolutionary-democratic party that supported
a small, limited electoral democracy.
Second, the party must reach out to all people of Taiwan, poor or rich,
unskilled or professional.
Third, party members must adhere to democratic centralism, in which
all members obey the decisions by the top leadership.
Fourth, party members must participate in work teams or cells to
centralize and inform the new party.
Fifth, all members must submit to the leadership standards approved by
Chiang Kai-shek.
Finally, the party’s doctrine was that of Sun Yat-sen’s Three Principles of
the People (nationalism, democracy, and social welfare).
The Central Reform Committee holds its first meeting in August 1950, setting out on its
mission of re-establishing the state in a new location and on revitalized principles. In the
background are the insignia of the Republic of China and a portrait of Sun Yat-sen, first provisional
president of the republic and co-founder of the Kuomintang (Nationalist) party.
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Chiang first trained his reform committee in these six principles and
emphasized a pragmatic interpretation of Sun’s eclectic doctrine. He elaborated
on the Three Principles by laying out these goals: to harmonize
China’s many ethnic groups by focusing on a Han Chinese identity; to
monopolize political power in the KMT to prepare Chinese society for,
first, a limited democracy led by the KMT, and later, a constitutional republic whose citizens understood their rights and obligations and would practice
them in a new democracy; and finally, to design an economy in which
the state played a facilitating role in industrializing society.
The new KMT concluded that it must “Sinicize” Taiwan if it were ever
to unify mainland China. Textbooks were designed to teach young people
the dialect of North China as a national language. Pupils also were taught
to revere Confucian ethics, to develop Han Chinese nationalism, and to
accept Taiwan as a part of China.
The Kuomintang leadership wanted Taiwan to serve as the model for how
mainland China’s Communist Party might someday reform China.
The party would establish an election system for local leaders and representatives,
but Chiang would not allow other parties to compete. He also
decided to freeze the Republic of China’s 1947 constitution as long as martial
law remained in force on Taiwan.
BUI LDING THE PARTY
Chiang saw himself as a benevolent authoritarian, a father teaching his family
how to build democracy, nationalism, and a thriving economy while
strengthening Confucian moral precepts.
He was now signing off on all state legislation and decisions by the new
party. As early as July 16, 1950, he was optimistic about the reformed party
becoming an instrument of his power. He wrote in his diary that “the Resolution
for Reforming the Party has been adopted, and we have announced
the new members of the Central Reform Committee. Indeed, this development
is a gigantic event in the history of our revolution. This is the final
remedial action we will take to resuscitate our dying KMT. Once we pass
this crucial test, the obstacle blocking our revolutionary achievements will
be behind us and seem trivial.”
Chiang assigned to each member of his executive committee such tasks
as recruiting loyal party members, extending control and influence into Taiwanese
villages, and consolidating the party’s new belief system. He established
a party cadres school, the Academy for the Study of Carrying Out
Revolution, at Yanming Mountain north of Taipei. In its first thirty months, more than 3,000 elite cadres graduated after four to six weeks of
training, and were sent to newly formed party branches around the island.
As head of the academy, Chiang urged students to undergo “inner”
changes by purging themselves of “selfishness, corruption, and the propensity
to bureaucratize.” Chiang reminded them they must be ready to lay
down their lives for the revolutionary task of putting into practice Sun’s
Three Principles. Generations of cadres would be trained at this location
with the textual materials provided by Chiang Kai-shek; only those who
participated in the course would be eligible for high positions in the party
or government.
A RESTORED KUOMINTANG LOOKS AHEAD
By October 1952, when the Seventh Party Congress convened, the revived
party had recruited 282,000 members. The Central Reform Committee’s
role officially came to an end. By the late 1950s, party membership had
reached nearly 1 million.
In the years ahead, the Kuomintang continued its authoritarian rule and
remained committed to the eventual unification of China under the principles
advanced by Chiang Kai-shek and Sun Yat-sen. The KMT, rescued
from demoralization and failure, could now exert its influence on the government
and society in a way it never could while on the mainland.
How this authoritarian party established legitimacy within Taiwan and
persuaded Taiwan’s elites to embrace the Chinese vision for Taiwan’s future
is another story. As the newly available KMT archival materials at Hoover
indicate, social interaction between Taiwanese and mainland Chinese gradually
improved relations between the two groups of ethnic Chinese in the
1950s. The Kuomintang leadership wanted Taiwan to serve as the model
for how mainland China’s Communist Party might someday seek to reform
China. As Chiang Ching-kuo said in 1986, “We must use the doctrine and
spirit of Sun Yat-sen to unify China and Taiwan.”
Available from the Hoover Press is The Struggle across the Taiwan Strait: The Divided
China Problem, by Ramon H. Myers and Jialin Zhang. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit
www.hooverpress.org.
Ramon H. Myers, senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, is curator of the East Asian archives.
Hsiao-ting Lin is a research associate at the Hoover Institution.
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