Robot Warriors

The Danger Room has a story on American armed robots being sent to Iraq (Hat tip to The Drudge Report).  Which reminded me of this similar story from last year, about machine gun wielding South Korean ‘droids on sentry duty.

Anyways, it sounds like they’re not given a very long leash:

In the past, weak signals would keep the robots from getting orders for as much as eight seconds — a significant lag during combat.  Now, the SWORDS won’t act on a command, unless it’s received right away.  A three-part arming process — with both physical and electronic safeties — is required before firing.   Most importantly, the machines now come with kill switches, in case there’s any odd behavior.  "So now we can kill the unit if it goes crazy," Zecca says.  [emphasis added]

Kill switches.  Now, why didn’t the geniuses in the Twelve Colonies ever figure THAT one out?


UPDATE (Aug 5/07):  A blog post on how the laws of war may be used in the future to deal with this issue.  Hat tip to Instapundit.

China Arms Islamofascists

One of the unstated corollaries to Kagan’s piece in the Policy Review is that China can be expected to play the role of the "Arsenal of Autocracy."  Some evidence for that over at the Weekly Standard (allowing that Islamofascism represents a peculiar kind of autocracy):

The Pentagon has known since last August that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards had supplied Chinese-made C-802 antiship missiles with advanced anti-jamming countermeasures to Hezbollah in Lebanon. One slammed into the Israeli destroyer Hanit killing four sailors on July 14, 2006, during the Lebanon war.

Furthermore:

This year, many truckloads of small arms and explosives direct from Chinese government-owned factories to the Iranian Revolutionary Guards have been transshipped to Iraq and Afghanistan, where they are used against American soldiers and Marines and NATO forces. Since April, according to a knowledgeable Bush administration official, "vast amounts" of Chinese-made large caliber sniper rifles, "millions of rounds" of ammunition, rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs), and "IED [improvised explosive device] components" have been convoyed from Iran into Iraq and to the Taliban in Afghanistan.

[…]

Why China is "doing it" need not be a mystery. In 2004, Beijing’s top America analyst, Wang Jisi, noted, "The facts have proven that it is beneficial for our international environment to have the United States militarily and diplomatically deeply sunk in the Mideast to the extent that it can hardly extricate itself." It is sobering to consider that China’s small-arms proliferation behavior since then suggests that this principle is indeed guiding Chinese foreign policy.

Government Overstretch

From the TimesOnline (via The Drudge Report):

Tibet’s living Buddhas have been banned from reincarnation without permission from China’s atheist leaders. The ban is included in new rules intended to assert Beijing’s authority over Tibet’s restive and deeply Buddhist people.  [emphasis added]

“The so-called reincarnated living Buddha without government approval is illegal and invalid,” according to the order, which comes into effect on September 1.

Check out some of the fun comments there, too.  As Eugene from Heidelberg says, "Permission to reincarnate, sir!"

I look forward to hearing of further attempts by Beijing to regulate the afterlife.

File under China – Praying Without a License.

The Rebirth Of Global Autocracy

Terrific piece on international rivalry in the 21st Century by Robert Kagan.  Some things I could quibble with*, but I won’t get into specifics (This post is long enough, as it is!).  Instead, I’ll try to limit my comments to where it dovetails with my own thoughts on China, the Third World and Taiwan.

Back in the ’90s, two books on international relations came into vogue.  Of the two, Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last Man was the more optimistic, positing that ideology (or at least, ideological competition between countries) was dead.  Dead, because virtually all nations on earth had come to the same conclusion that liberal democracy and capitalism were the way of the future.  Since everyone thus agreed on the ultimate goal, the only matter left for countries to determine then, was the speed and precise paths they would take towards democratization and economic liberalization.

Samuel P. Huntington’s The Clash of Civilizations however, had a darker vision.  Although he agreed that ideology was dead as a motivating force of international rivalry, Huntington didn’t see international rivalry therefore coming to a happy Fukuyaman end. Instead, Huntington theorized that sources of irritation, dispute and even warfare would increasingly be civilizational in nature.** (The author has always regretted the fact that for many, the word "clash" seems to invoke the latter connotation almost exclusively.)

And so Kagan begins, dismissing the basic premise of both these authors that nationalism and ideology are dead at all:

Today the nations of the West still cling to that vision. Evidence to the contrary — the turn toward autocracy in Russia or the growing military ambitions of China — is either dismissed as a temporary aberration or denied entirely.

The world has not been transformed, however. Nations remain as strong as ever, and so too the nationalist ambitions, the passions, and the competition among nations that have shaped history. The world is still “unipolar,” with the United States remaining the only superpower. But international competition among great powers has returned, with the United States, Russia, China, Europe, Japan, India, Iran, and others vying for regional predominance. Struggles for honor and status and influence in the world have once again become key features of the international scene. Ideologically, it is a time not of convergence but of divergence. The competition between liberalism and absolutism has reemerged, with the nations of the world increasingly lining up, as in the past, along ideological lines.

Thus he begins explaining the unipolar world as he sees it, then goes on to describe the nationalistic predominance various countries are seeking. Of particular interest for this blog is what he has to say regarding China and Japan:

National ambition drives China’s foreign policy today, and although it is tempered by prudence and the desire to appear as unthreatening as possible to the rest of the world, the Chinese are powerfully motivated to return their nation to what they regard as its traditional position as the preeminent power in East Asia. They do not share a European, postmodern view that power is passé; hence their now two-decades-long military buildup and modernization. Like the Americans, they believe power, including military power, is a good thing to have and that it is better to have more of it than less. Perhaps more significant is the Chinese perception, also shared by Americans, that status and honor, and not just wealth and security, are important for a nation.

Japan, meanwhile, which in the past could have been counted as an aspiring postmodern power — with its pacifist constitution and low defense spending — now appears embarked on a more traditional national course. Partly this is in reaction to the rising power of China and concerns about North Korea ’s nuclear weapons. But it is also driven by Japan’s own national ambition to be a leader in East Asia or at least not to play second fiddle or “little brother” to China. China and Japan are now in a competitive quest with each trying to augment its own status and power and to prevent the other’s rise to predominance, and this competition has a military and strategic as well as an economic and political component.

Elsewhere, he points out one possible ironic outcome to China’s efforts to become the local hegemon:

…even China, which seeks gradually to supplant the United States as the dominant power in the region, faces the dilemma that an American withdrawal [from Asia] could unleash an ambitious, independent, nationalist Japan.

His assessment of the role of ideology is particularly worth the read:

Complicating the equation and adding to the stakes is that the return to the international competition of ambitious nations has been accompanied by a return to global ideological competition. More precisely, the two-centuries-old struggle between political liberalism and autocracy has reemerged as a third defining characteristic of the present era.

The Cold War may have caused us to forget that the more enduring ideological conflict since the Enlightenment has not been between capitalism and communism but between liberalism and autocracy.  That was the issue that divided the United States from much of Europe in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and it divided Europe itself through much of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth. The assumption that the death of communism would bring an end to disagreements about the proper form of government and society seemed more plausible in the 1990s, when both Russia and China were thought to be moving toward political as well as economic liberalism. Such a development would have produced a remarkable ideological convergence among all the great powers of the world and heralded a genuinely new era in
human development.

But those expectations have proved misplaced. China has not liberalized but has shored up its autocratic government. Russia has turned away from imperfect liberalism decisively toward autocracy. Of the world ’s great powers today, therefore, two of the largest, with over a billion and a half people, have governments that are committed to autocratic rule and seem to have the ability to sustain themselves in power for the foreseeable future with apparent popular approval.

Many assume that Russian and Chinese leaders do not believe in anything, and therefore they cannot be said to represent an ideology, but that is mistaken. The rulers of China and Russia do have a set of beliefs that guide them in both domestic and foreign policy. They believe autocracy is better for their nations than democracy. They believe it offers order and stability and the possibility of prosperity. They believe that for their large, fractious nations, a strong government is essential to prevent chaos and collapse. They believe democracy is not the answer and that they are serving the best interests of their peoples by holding and wielding power the way they do. [emphasis added throughout]

Kagan examines the ideological self-interest these two autocracies have in the principle of non-interference in other autocrats’ affairs:

Autocrats can hardly be expected to aid in legitimizing an evolution in the international system toward “limited sovereignty” and “the responsibility to protect.” … China, after all, has been a victim of international sanctions imposed by the U.S.-led liberal world, and for killing far fewer people than the governments of Sudan or Zimbabwe. Nor do China ’s rulers forget that if the liberal world had had its way in 1989, they would now be out of office, probably imprisoned, possibly dead.

[…]

To ask one dictatorship to aid in the undermining of another dictatorship, however, is asking a great deal. Chinese leaders will always be extremely reluctant to impose sanctions on autocrats when they themselves remain subject to sanctions for their own autocratic behavior.  [emphasis added throughout]

Here, he admits the odd exception:

They may bend occasionally so as to avoid too-close association with what the West calls “rogue regimes.”

But on the whole:

Neither Russia nor China has any interest in assisting liberal nations in their crusade against autocracies around the world. Moreover, they can see their comparative advantage over the West when it comes to gaining influence with African, Asian, or Latin American governments that can provide access to oil and other vital natural resources or that, in the case of Burma, are strategically located. Moscow knows it can have more influence with governments in Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan because, unlike the liberal West, it can unreservedly support their regimes.  [emphasis added]

This is an old observation, dating at least as far back as the Peloponnesian Wars, when Spartan oligarchs preferred foreign oligarchic allies, while Athenian democrats were more comfortable with democratic ones. Closer to our own time, how many communist allies did the Soviets ever abandon during the Cold War?   The democratic West was certainly far quicker in judging the failings of IT’S  authoritarian allies.

Because of this comparative advantage autocrats have in supporting other autocrats, Kagan predicts an authoritarian resurgence:

…the more autocracies there are in the world, the less isolated Beijing and Moscow will be in international forums such as the United Nations…The general effect of the rise of these two large autocratic powers, therefore, will be to increase the likelihood that autocracy will spread in some parts of the world. This is not because Russia and China are evangelists for autocracy or want to set off a worldwide autocratic revolution. It is not the Cold War redux. It is more like the nineteenth century redux…The great-power autocracies will inevitably offer support and friendship to those who feel besieged by the United States and other liberal nations. This in itself will strengthen the hand of autocracy in the world. Autocrats and would-be autocrats will know they can again find powerful allies and patrons, something that was not as true in the 1990s.

It is in this light that I view China’s current diplomatic charm offensive in the Third World. If YOU were an authoritarian African ruler bent on preserving your own power, who would you rather receive aid and support from?  Western nations, which attach strings and all kinds of benchmarks and requirements regarding corruption, human rights, economic liberalization and democratization?  Or China, which doesn’t?  This isn’t a criticism of the strings that Western countries place upon aid – those requirements were implemented for good reasons.  Western taxpayers have seen too much of their money disappear into the bank accounts of kleptocrats, and aren’t eager to vote for governments that persist in looking the other way.  Western politicians have to explain to hostile electorates why their money seems to be propping up disreputable dictators; Chinese politicians don’t. 

China DOES have a comparative advantage in winning over Third World regimes, at least in the short and medium terms.  And no doubt about it, that is something that bodes ill for Taiwan’s efforts to retain its diplomatic partners.

Getting back to Kagan’s article, he later examines China’s weaknesses:

It is easy to look at China and Russia today and believe they are simply getting stronger and stronger. But one should not overlook their fragility. These autocratic regimes may be stronger than they were in the past in terms of wealth and global influence. But they do still live in a predominantly liberal era. That means they face an unavoidable problem of legitimacy. They are not like the autocracies of nineteenth-century Europe, which still enjoyed a historical legitimacy derived partly from the fact that the world had known nothing but autocracy for centuries. To be an autocrat today is to be constantly concerned that the powerful forces of liberalism, backed by a collection of rich, advanced nations, including the world’s only superpower, will erode or undermine the controls necessary to stay in power. Today’s autocracies struggle to create a new kind of legitimacy, and it is no easy task. The Chinese leaders race forward with their economy in fear that any slowing will be their undoing. They fitfully stamp out signs of political opposition partly because they live in fear of repeating the Soviet experience. Having watched the Soviet Union succumb to the liberal West, thanks to what they regard as Mikhail Gorbachev’s weakness and mistakes, they are determined neither to show weakness nor to make the same mistakes.

[…]

Leaders in Beijing rightly fear they are riding a tiger at home, and they fear external support for a political opposition more than they fear foreign invasion. Even promoting nationalism as a means of enhancing legitimacy is a dangerous business, since in Chinese history, nationalist movements have [often] evolved into revolutionary movements.  [emphasis added throughout]

To these, I would add one other internal weakness as well (which isn’t original, but what the hey).  All that aid that China gives, it gives without consent of Chinese citizens.  If you’re a poor Chinese peasant, and you hear your government is giving away heaps of money to foreigners, you’re probably not going to care about how much "goodwill" or "soft power" all that largesse is buying your country.  No, you’re gonna look at your less-than-fancy hovel one day and you’re gonna get mad.  Real mad.  But unlike the electorate in democratic countries though, when YOU get mad, you don’t get the choice to vote for some mean, tight-fisted, old guy who promises to cut back foreign aid.  Only choice YOU ever get is to bottle up that rage deep down inside…or grab a pitchfork and join the mob stormin’ the castle.

(No matter what kind of guff some KMT-affiliated papers tell us about "stability" and "harmonious societies", the most harmonious society in the world is the one where change happens WITHOUT people breakin’ the china.)

In addition, China’s foreign aid causes a couple of external problems for it as well.  First, ANY country (Taiwan included) that ties its economy too closely with that of China renders itself vulnerable to shocks in the Chinese economy.  A Chinese recession, or even a sufficiently worrisome Chinese product scare, has the potential to quickly turn public opinion in a dependent Third World country against its benefactor.  And secondly, Chinese support of repressive governments is likely to stir anti-Chinese feelings in members of the opposition in the long-term, while aid to corrupt governments could do the same amongst ordinary people.

A single example should suffice.  Earlier this year, Hu Jintao went on what was billed a triumphant tour of Africa.  That’s it, we’re DOOMED, said Taiwan’s China Post.  Yet one thing I noticed was that the opposition in one country (Zaire, I believe), REFUSED to meet with him.   Now, THERE’S a sign all that aid isn’t making everybody happy. 

Now, should that opposition win, or ever seize power, what then?  Doubtless the Chinese will be quick to offer support to the new government, but they may be surprised to find it spurned.  People sometimes have harsh memories about the foreigners who came and armed the local tyrant; who came and trained the secret police that kept the populace down.

And that’s why I think the prospects for Taiwan’s diplomatic relations with the Third World aren’t so bleak.  Some countries are going to get absolutely BURNED by China, make no mistake of that.  And when that happens, Taiwan will still be around.  Around to maybe grab an ally or two.


* This criticism,
for example, may arguably be true; however, the claim by the same author that China is not an autocracy but in fact a "one party meritocracy" seems a bit further off the mark.

** Conversely, Huntington believes civilizational SIMILARITIES will be a powerful unifying factor in the years to come.  I’ve often thought that Taiwan serves as a kind of crucible for his theory, poised as it is between democratic independence or unification with a civilizationally-similar autocracy.  If ideology is truly dead, then the theory predicts Taiwan’s ultimate unification with China, no matter what China’s political make-up.  But if ideology yet lives, then Taiwan will prefer democratic independence (be it legal or de facto), for at least as long as China remains authoritarian.


UPDATE (Aug 5/07):  The country where the opposition refused to meet Hu Jintao may have been Zambia, not Zaire.

Generalissimo

Another review of a Taiwan-related book from David Frum at the National Review:

It all started in China. It was here in the 1930s and 1940s that the United States was first presented with a dilemma that has recurred again and again over the decades since: a strategically important country; a tradition-minded authoritarian ruler, at the head of a corrupt and incompetent government; a violent insurgency led by a totalitarian and anti-western movement. What to do?

This question, so haunting and difficult, is well illuminated by Jonathan Fenby’s fine Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-Shek and the China He Lost.

In China, the US never could quite make up its mind, and Fenby helps us to understand why.

[…]

Understandably, the Chiang problem flummoxed the Americans who had to deal with him. While a few Americans (Edgar Snow, John S Service, John K Fairbank) disgraced themselves either as apologists for Mao or as easy dupes, most of the US government and military badly wanted to defeat Mao – but were absolutely baffled by the problem of how to do it. Arm and aid Chiang? And when Chiang allowed his family and friends to steal the arms and aid and then begged for more – what then?

Fenby raises one interesting historical might have been. The US never seriously considered intervening against Mao on the ground: US military forces were fully committed to the defense of Europe. But as late as May 1949, the Chinese Nationalists securely held the territory south of the Yangtze, including the cities of Shanghai and Canton. What if the US had used air and naval power to prevent the Communists from crossing the river? The richest parts of China might have joined South Korea, South Vietnam, and West Germany as one of the divided nations of the Cold War.

Interesting counterfactual there.  Discuss amongst yourselves.

Diverting The Issue (Of Stolen Assets)

UPDATE (Aug 5/07):  It just occurred to me that I spent this entire post talking about "transitional justice" without actually explaining what that even means.  David on Formosa begins his post on the subject the smart way – by defining the term.  Stealing from his source:

Transitional justice refers to a range of approaches that societies undertake to reckon with legacies of widespread or systematic human rights abuse as they move from a period of violent conflict or oppression towards peace, democracy, the rule of law, and respect for individual and collective rights.

There.  NOW this post should make sense, especially to the uninitiated.


Over at Jerome Keating’s website, Dr. Keating believes transitional justice needs to be a campaign issue in Taiwan in 2008 (Hat tip to Tim Maddog at Taiwan Matters!).  In an earlier post, Dr. Keating describes the structural advantage the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) has over other parties:

…we had seen how the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) has gone on record to admit it has over [NT$ 25 billion] in assets [US$ 757 million].  Its closest rival, the ruling party Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) has barely about one per cent of that, it has approximately [NT$ 25 million] in assets, or US$ 7.5 million.

A great deal of this 100:1 advantage can be explained by the forced sales and outright confiscations that the KMT was the beneficiary of during 38 years of martial law.  He notes one irony:  communist parties from former Soviet Bloc nations, ideologically dedicated to confiscation, were eventually forced to return assets they had confiscated.  Meanwhile, the KMT, ideologically opposed to confiscation, not only confiscated vast amounts of property, but has STILL never returned it!

That this might be an issue of vulnerability for the KMT was highlighted a week ago, in a column by Dr. Joe Hung.  Towards the end of the piece, Dr. Hung began casting out wildly, looking for other transitional justice issues that the country should attend to besides this one:

Why not help the former patients of Hansen’s disease segregated by the Japanese? President Chen Shui-bian has apologized for their continued segregation after 1945, but his government wants to remove them from the sanatorium they now call home and raze it to make way for a mass transit system.

Why not help Taiwan’s dwindling number of "comfort women"? They were forced to work as sex slaves, serving troops of the Japanese imperial army in the Pacific War. All they want is an apology from the Japanese government. Has Taipei done anything to get Tokyo to offer it?

Why not reckon with the slaughter of ten times more than the victims of the 2/28 Incident the Japanese committed in the first decade of their colonization of Taiwan. For a mere five years, from 1898 to 1902, at least 11,950 people were slain as rebels. How about the Wushe Incident of 1930? The Atayal village of Wushe, with 270 inhabitants and 60 families, was totally destroyed. Nearly all of the men, women and children in the village were massacred by Japanese troops. Japanese army warplanes bombed the Atayal reservation. Gas bombs were dropped to smoke out those "rebels" who refused to surrender.

Why not seek transitional assistance for all the indigenous people whose forebears the ethnic Chinese killed on Taiwan, to grab their land and go into their forests to fell camphor trees? In 1662, when Koxinga took Taiwan from the Dutch their population was estimated at 200,000. That population remained almost the same in 1945. It may not be genocide, but the fact is that countless thousands of Austronesians were slaughtered by the ethnic Chinese, as well as the Japanese colonizers. James Davidson, the first American-born U.S. consul in Taipei at the turn of the twentieth century, reported that aborigines were killed and their flesh sold to ethnic Chinese, who ate it. Why not reckon with these horrible legacies?

I’m not necessarily opposed to action on any of these issues, but I think Dr. Hung overstates the urgency  of his cases:

1)  The Lo-Sheng Sanatorium. What this is is a classic case of competition for a finite resource. At least 10,000 residents of the town of Hsin-juang want the sanatorium leveled so that they can get an MRT station.  You know – reduce traffic on the streets, clean up the air a bit, and all those other nice things that mass transit is good for.  Meanwhile, the project is being held up by a mere 75 former lepers who want the sanatorium to stay.

Now, Hung would have his readers believe that cruel President Chen Shui-bian stroked his Snidely Whiplash moustache one day and decided on a whim to throw all those poor, disfigured old lepers into the gutter. But the truth is, it was the former KMT government that sold Lo-Sheng for use as an MRT depot, all the way back in 1994.

The KMT wants to run on THIS issue of transitional justice?  Fine. Maybe they can start by explaining why they sold Lo-Sheng WITHOUT EVER CONSULTING THE BLOODY RESIDENTS.   Forget consultation – the KMT never bothered to NOTIFY the poor bastards even AFTER the sale.  The first the lepers ever heard of the deal was TEN YEARS LATER when the BULLDOZERS arrived, Hitch-hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy-style.

The reality is that 150 former Hansen’s disease patients have already moved into the brand-new hospital just next door, while the 75 that remain prefer the open air and gardens of the sanatorium they live in now.  Can’t say I blame the ones that want to stay.  But surely, the solution is obvious.  Just build ’em another sanatorium SOMEWHERE ELSE.  And make sure it’s bigger.  And nicer.

Oh, and don’t forget to put it all on the KMT’s tab.  Because as far as I can make out, they’re the idiots responsible for the whole mess in the first place.

2)  The "comfort women".  An apology from Japan would be nice.  And future help from Japan against a Chinese attack would also be nice.  If Taiwan can get both through amiable diplomatic means, then great.  But if aggressive pursuit of the former alienates Japan from providing the later, then prefer the latter instead.  I don’t see allies America and Britain demanding apologies from each other for old wounds.

National survival trumps apologies to a tiny minority.  Welcome to realpolitik.

3)  Other, earlier Japanese atrocities.  Um, at this point, exactly how many first generation descendants of these victims are still alive to benefit from the transitional justice Dr. Hung proposes?  Moreover, the KMT had 55 years to deal with this (and the "comfort women" issue as well).  If their efforts were half-hearted, perhaps they can be forgiven because of the realpolitik mentioned in Case #2.

4)  The aborigines.  Dr. Hung discusses the injustices done to Taiwanese aborigines that date back to the year 1662.  1662?  FOUR HUNDRED years ago?  By now, I get the distinct impression Hung isn’t just asking for TRANSITIONAL justice – he’s asking for something Thomas Sowell calls COSMIC justice.  He’s asking that every injustice that was EVER DONE IN THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE be attended to.

And it can’t.  It simply can’t.

And Dr. Hung knows that.  So what in effect he’s saying is that the KMT shouldn’t give back ANY of the $757 million it plundered until ALL THE WRONGS IN THE WORLD are made right.  Which of course, might just be a while.

Hung closes on this note:

Of course, President Chen and his government are not going to do anything to get transitional justice done for all these people, for the very simple reason that any help rendered won’t be translated into votes at the ballot boxes in December’s legislative elections, and the presidential race in March next year.

But while he sees cynicism, I see democracy.  Let the Taiwanese talk about the relative merits of Joe Hung’s cases, as well as that of the KMT’s looted assets.  Let the jurors decide which cases are more urgent, and which are more marginal.  Then, let the members of the jury vote.

All 13 million of them.


POSTSCRIPT:  Another aspect of the program for transitionaljustice in Taiwan is the de-glorification of its former dictators.  Dr. Hung also discussed this in his column; my reply can be found here.

Classic Headline

And no, it’s not a spelling mistake:  Japanese singer in hot water over pubic appearance

Police charged a Japanese rock singer yesterday with violating public decency laws after he briefly stripped on-stage during a concert in Taipei on Saturday night.

The Taiwan News helpfully adds:

"Some female fans were astonished, but males in the audience were thrilled and screamed," a United Daily News report added.

The MALE fans were thrilled and screamed?  OK.  I’m officially creeped-out now.

Responsibility

I’m hoping to get at least a couple of posts out of Joe Hung’s Monday column in Taiwan’s China Post, because I think it’s got a lot of interesting stuff to chew on.  Here I’ll discuss responsibility of political leaders.  Dr. Hung admits that Chiang Kai-shek bears some responsibility for the 2/28 Massacre, but it’s unfair to have him shoulder the lion’s share of the blame:

Generalissimo Chiang — he was not elected president yet in 1947 — certainly was responsible for the 2/28 Incident, for he was then head of state and head of government at the same time. But he wasn’t either the chief culprit or the murderer, as some government-provided historians painted him to be. The Gimo didn’t order the slaughter. It was carried out by troops so ordered by their commanders. One example suffices. Innocent people were summarily executed under martial law. At least one city in Taiwan saw no such execution[s], because the commander who had to enforce martial law didn’t order his troops to arrest people and shoot them to death. He was Maj. Gen. Su Shao-wen, who set up his command in the city of Hsinchu. Under no orders to shoot and kill, General Su did not even impose a curfew. In fact, the people of Hsinchu lived totally unperturbed for two weeks, while soldiers were on a killing spree in some other parts of Taiwan.

If I understand this correctly, ONE of Chiang’s commanders behaved honorably during the affair, ergo Chiang was innocent.  By that logic then, Erwin Rommel’s boss wasn’t a "chief culprit" during the Second World War.  Because after all, even those who fought Rommel spoke admiringly of him.

(Furthermore, if I’m not mistaken, there is no paper trail showing that Hitler ever explicitly gave orders for the Holocaust.  So in that respect, he was like the Gimo, in that he didn’t order the slaughter.  Therefore, Hitler was innocent too, Q.E.D.)

With that reductio ad absurdum out of the way, I do think that Hung raises an interesting question here.  Evil leaders can have subordinates that behave honorably, and decent leaders can have subordinates that behave less than honorably.  When a subordinate commits crimes in an official capacity, how are we to judge the relative responsibility of their superiors?  Is it a case of an unscrupulous subordinate betraying the intentions of a decent leader, or of an unscrupulous subordinate faithfully executing the policies of an immoral one?

Obviously, the case is trivial if explicit orders are issued from on high.  Absent those, judgment becomes trickier.  What of implicit orders?  Plenty of mob bosses make "suggestions" that their underlings hasten to fulfill; a godfather’s guilt is none the lesser because his orders weren’t spelled out in black and white.  But on the other hand, vague statements, or ones made in moments of anger, are sometimes misinterpreted.  Henry II didn’t want St. Thomas Becket assassinated, but his exclamation, "Will no one rid me of this troublesome priest?" led some of his knights to that unfortunate conclusion.

Doubtless someone schooled in law could think about this more systematically, but for me, judgment should be based on at least two factors: information and incentives.

First, information.  As the now-cliched statement goes, "What did the president know, and when did he know it?"  As I wrote in an update to a March 13th post:

[Johnny Neihu] expresses astonishment that Chiang could not have known what his subordinates were doing in Taiwan around the time of the 2/28 Massacre:

Unaware! Chiang was a control freak who distrusted his subordinates so deeply that he countermanded his generals mid-battle. At one point he held 82 government posts simultaneously, including chief of the government, army and party, plus — rather bizarrely, the presidencies of the Boy Scouts and National Glider Association. To believe that he could have been "unaware of conditions on Taiwan" is pushing it just a little.

…Neihu’s list DID jog my memory about something else – that Chiang’s army was based on Leninist lines, with each unit having both a military and a POLITICAL officer.  The job of the latter was to spy on the former, to make certain he was loyal.  If it looked like the military officer might be mutinous, the political officer was authorized to put a bullet in his head.

It’s therefore hard to imagine Chiang not being aware of the situation in Taiwan with all of those political officers floating around, each one of them regularly reporting back home.

If someone wants to make Chiang’s case, then I think the onus is upon them to explain how he was unaware of his subordinates’ misconduct despite the existence of the pervasive intelligence apparatus that he instituted in the first place.

Secondly, whether a leader is responsible for a subordinate’s malfeasance depends upon the incentives the leader presents his people with.  What incentives did the leader give for ethical conduct, and what disincentives did the leader give for unethical behavior?  It might be instructive here to see how similar uprisings due to KMT misgovernance were handled in China prior to 2/28, and how the people  responsible for restoring order were rewarded or punished.  That is something beyond my own purview.  However, it is my understanding that some of the most brutal commanders of the 2/28 Massacre were later promoted.  That, of course, is particularly damning.  To reward a subordinate is generally taken as a sign that one approves, not disapproves, of their actions.

Although this discussion was mostly about political leaders, the thinking here is more generally applicable to leaders in other areas as well.  CEOs of major corporations, and owners of small businesses.  For the sake of illustration, suppose a pizza deliveryman runs down a pedestrian while driving unsafely.  What would a jury want to know before pronouncing judgment on the owner of the pizza parlor?

Many things – mostly related to information and incentives.  Was the restaurant owner aware of the deliveryman’s driving record?  Did he make an effort to learn about that record?  Did the owner make unreasonable promises to customers about the speed of delivery?  Did the owner explicitly tell his deliverymen to break speed limits, or observe them?  And regardless of those explicit instructions, did the owner have a policy of punishing or rewarding deliverymen who drove unsafely?

Notice that they probably wouldn’t be too interested in whether the owner could produce some OTHER deliveryman who HADN’T hit anyone.

Imagine this for a second.  A jury would want all of this information, about a PIZZA PARLOR OWNER whose employee had killed or injured a SINGLE pedestrian.  Yet lower standards apply in the case of Chiang Kai-shek, accused of being responsible for the deaths of 28,000 during the 2/28 Massacre.  According to Dr. Hung, we’re not supposed to use our own minds and consciences to even THINK on the matter:

But history demands understanding, not judgment.  History is a dialogue between the past and present.

Regarding that – history and judgment – Theodore Dalrymple had this to say in a recent critique of Tony Blair’s record:

Strictly speaking, history doesn’t absolve, or for that matter, vindicate, anybody;  only people absolve or vindicate, and except in the most obvious cases of villainy or sainthood, they come to different conclusions, using basically the same evidence.

Time To Call His Non-Union Mexican Equivalent

From ABC News:

Steven Spielberg, under pressure from Darfur activists, may quit his post as artistic adviser to the 2008 Beijing Olympics, unless China takes a harder line against Sudan, a representative of the film director told ABC News.

Reading further, I was surprised to see that Spielberg isn’t being paid for his work for China’s ’08 Games.  Not that he needs the money, but still. 

So what we’ve got is a 60 year old mogul, probably at an age where he’s starting to think about his legacy in the industry when he passes on, and he’s getting grief about the Genocide Olympics.  And what’s more, he’s gotta realize that people like Mia Farrow DO have some kind of a point.

I think he quits.  The Chinese aren’t the only ones for whom "Face" is important.

Looking forward to the editorial from Taiwan’s China Post.  The one lambasting Spielberg for mixing politics and sport.  From the same folks who never criticize China for preventing Taiwan’s national anthem from being played during Olympic ceremonies.

Mixing politics and sport?  That’s just WRONG.

Unless of course, it’s China that does it.