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History Unplugged Podcast

Taiwan’s 100-Year Rise From Japanese Colony to Monopoly Producer of Microchips

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

Society & Culture, History

4.23.7K Ratings

🗓️ 18 July 2024

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When global supply chains were shut down in 2020 and messily rebooted after COVID lockdowns ceased, one island nation emerged as the most important player in getting critical components to factories around the world. That was Taiwan, which produces 90 percent of the world’s advanced semiconductors. Without this island nation of 23 million, there are no smart phones, new cars, or any advanced consumer electronics.

Things were no less dull on the foreign policy side, as US-Chinese relations deteriorated. When Nancy Pelosi declared her intent to visit Taiwan in 2022, it sparked frenzied discussions across the United States, China, and Taiwan—a discourse that was characterized by amnesia and half-truths about the history of this pivotal island nation. Today, as relations between Washington and Beijing deteriorate and as tensions over Taiwan reach a boiling point, its survival as an independent democracy is precarious indeed. Any attempt to resolve the impasse and avert a devastating war demands that we understand how it all began.

To explore Taiwan’s modern history is toda’s guest Sulmaan Wasif Khan, author of “The Struggle for Taiwan: A History of America, China, and the Island Caught Between.’ The story begins in 1943, when the Allies declared that Japanese-held Taiwan would return to China at the conclusion of World War II. When the Communist Party came to power in China, the defeated Nationalist leader, Chiang Kai-shek, fled to Taiwan, where he was afforded US protection despite establishing a brutal police state. From the White Terror to the Taiwan Straits Crises, from the normalization of Sino-American relations to the tensions of the Trump-era, we look at the tortuous paths that led to our present predicament. War is not inevitable, Khan shows, but to avoid it, decision-makers must heed the lessons of the past.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Scott here with another episode of the History Unplugged Podcast.

0:07.0

Factories across the world were shut down in 2020 due to coronavirus,

0:11.0

and when they reopened, it quickly became clear that an international supply

0:15.2

chain couldn't be rebooted overnight. But there was one major bottleneck for nearly all the world's

0:20.6

international manufacturing, and that passed through Taiwan. That's because

0:24.7

Taiwan produces 90% of the world's advanced semiconductors that are found in smartphones, cars,

0:30.7

that's why cars were sitting on parking lots for months waiting for chips to be put in.

0:34.3

And Taiwan is an order of magnitude more important for electronics than Saudi Arabia is for oil.

0:40.3

When tensions between the United States and China began to ratchet up in 2022,

0:44.0

it centered on fears of an invasion of Taiwan.

0:47.0

How did this island, with a little more than 20 million people,

0:50.0

become the manufacturing center of the world,

0:52.0

and would most likely be the

0:54.2

causes bell-eye for war between China and America. Well the history of Taiwan is a

0:58.0

very interesting one. It had historical and ethnic connections to mainland China

1:02.1

but was ruled for Japan for nearly 50 years

1:04.9

from 1890 to 1940, then became the last outpost of Chiang Kai Shek after he lost the Chinese

1:10.8

Civil War and the People's Republic of China took over the mainland,

1:14.0

then became a democracy in the late 80s, and is now pound for pound, one of the most important places in the world today.

1:20.3

To look at this eight-decade history of China, I'm speaking to today's guest,

1:24.1

Suleman Wasef Khan, author of the struggle for Taiwan, a history of America, China, and

1:29.1

the island caught between. We look at this history, starting in the 19th century, jump into World War II, when the allies

...

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