Taiwanese activists and officials have shared their experience in fighting Chinese interference in the recent presidential elections in Taiwan during an open discussion in the European Parliament hosted by Petras Austrevicius.

This kind of interference would be considered an act of war in atoriatarian states, but in democracies it is just a challenge. The resilience of civil society to foreign interference in Taiwan, in the EU countries and in Ukraine are sometimes taken for granted.

I witnessed Russian interference in the presidential elections in Ukraine in 2004. The results of the elections were falsified – Victor Yanukovych was announced as president, and Vladimir Putin congratulated him too quickly. The Orange revolution that followed corrected this injustice but after years of “cognitive warfare” (term used by Taiwanese activists and officials) and infiltration of Russian agents in Ukrainian society, Yanukovych was elected in 2010. This time, the elections were sort of democratic, but the people had not recognised that they had suffered from indirect influence by Russia years before the elections. The “democratically elected president” was in fact a marionette of the Kremlin. He signed Kharkiv agreements to give up the Black Sea Fleet to Russia (the latter could place its military there until 2042), put his rival Yulia Tymoshenko in prison, and finished it all with rejecting European integration entirely. This all happened on the order of a foreign country. Yanukovych served foreign ineterests, and that led to the occupation of Crimea, and then to full-scale war on Ukraine. The contry is today liberating itself from infiltration that has been happening for decades if not centuries, and doing it with blood of its sons and daughters.

Russia and China use cognitive warfare beyond the borders of their territorial objectives. They spread ideas regarding American biolabs, American ownership of Ukraine and Taiwan, or narratives that “NATO is approaching.”

At the same time, silencing is not a solution in democracies as silencing may compromise the legitimate political landscape and thus impact falsification of the results of the debates, votings or elections.

Fact checks by the people, openness of discussion, and inclusion of ideas are the basis for resilience to both, foreign interference and manipulation of national discourse.

Having said that, I believe that parties and members of parliaments that are caught serving foreign governments should be investigated and prosecuted. All over Europe there are politicians that on the payment from the Kremlin or from China harm their own people. The ideas that they have been promoting should be tested, and the main question here is: who is the ultimate beneficiary of it all?

Marta BARANDIY, founder of Promote Ukraine

All News ›