顯示具有 Chiang Kai-shek 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章
顯示具有 Chiang Kai-shek 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章

2026年4月1日 星期三

The Third Way to Nowhere: The Fragile Dreams of Hong Kong’s "Third Force"

 

The Third Way to Nowhere: The Fragile Dreams of Hong Kong’s "Third Force"

In the brutal binary of the early Cold War—where you were either with the Communists in Beijing or the Nationalists in Taipei—there existed a brief, idealistic, and ultimately doomed attempt to find a middle path. Huang Ko-wu’s analysis of "Gu Meng-yu and the Rise and Fall of the Hong Kong Third Force (1949-1953)" is a clinical study of how political movements are crushed by the cold reality of geopolitical interests.

The "business model" of the Third Force was built on the hope of American sponsorship. Led by intellectual heavyweights like Gu Meng-yu and military men like Zhang Fa-kui, the movement sought to create a "liberal and democratic" alternative that was both anti-Communist and anti-Chiang Kai-shek. They launched magazines like The Road and Voice of China to market their vision of a "Third Choice" for the Chinese people.

Human nature, however, tends to favor the side with the most guns. The Third Force was plagued by internal contradictions: a collection of strong-willed individuals who couldn't agree on leadership or ideology. While they theorized about democracy in Hong Kong, the British colonial government—ever the pragmatists—viewed them as a nuisance that threatened their delicate relationship with both the mainland and Taiwan, eventually banning their political activities.

The ultimate cynicism came from the United States. Initially, the U.S. toyed with the Third Force as a "Titoist" fantasy to pressure Chiang Kai-shek. But once the Korean War broke out and the Eisenhower administration took office, the Americans pivoted to a strategy of stability. They threw their full support behind the "Devil they knew" in Taipei and pulled the financial plug on the Third Force.

By 1953, the movement had vanished into the footnotes of history. Gu Meng-yu left for Japan and then the U.S., a man whose "third way" ended in political exile. It serves as a reminder that in the grand theater of power, the middle ground is often the most dangerous place to stand—a place where dreams of liberal democracy go to die when they no longer serve the interests of the empires on either side

The Art of the Perpetual Comeback: A Masterclass in Cynicism

 

The Art of the Perpetual Comeback: A Masterclass in Cynicism

If history is written by the winners, then diaries are the consolation prizes for those who didn’t quite cross the finish line but refuse to leave the stadium. Examining the private scribblings of Chiang Kai-shek from the late 1950s—as meticulously dissected by Su-ya Chang—is like watching a corporate CEO who lost the company but kept the corner office and a very expensive stationery set.

Chiang’s life in Taiwan was a masterclass in performative discipline. He lived with the clockwork precision of a man who believed that if he just woke up early enough and sat still enough, the lost Mainland would somehow reappear on the horizon like a ghost ship. His days were a rhythmic dance of "lessons"—morning, noon, and night—consisting of hymns, prayers, and silent sitting. It’s the ultimate irony: a man responsible for tectonic shifts in geopolitical history spending his twilight years recording "snowing humiliation" (雪恥) in his diary every single day for decades. One must admire the sheer, stubborn commitment to a grudge.

The diaries served as a private burn book, a psychological pressure valve for a man whose temper was as legendary as his failures. Forbidden by his "Great Leader" status from screaming at his subordinates or the Americans in public, he took to his pages to call US Secretary of State Dean Rusk a "clown" (魯丑) and Indian Prime Minister Nehru a "muddy black road" (泥黑路). Even his chosen successor, Chen Cheng, wasn't safe from the ink, frequently dismissed as "small-minded" and "ignorant of the revolutionary way".

Yet, there is a dark humor in his "self-reflection." This was a man who would record a "demerit" against himself for losing his temper at a servant over a smoky stove, all while grappling with the "shame" of losing a subcontinent. He diagnosed his own fatal flaw as being "impetuous and superficial" (急迫浮露)—a realization that came about ten years and one lost civil war too late.

Chiang’s survival strategy was the "perpetual struggle" (屢敗屢戰). He convinced himself that his comfort in Taiwan wasn't just luck or American protection, but "divine grace" for his ancestors' virtues. It’s the ultimate survival mechanism of the powerful: when you fail on a global scale, simply rebrand your exile as a "spiritual refinement" and keep the diary running until the ink—or the heart—finally gives out.