Lee Teng-hui’s introducer to the party, Wu Ke-tai

When the June 4 massacre occurred, China Times reporter Xu Zongmao, who was reporting in Beijing, was also hit by the Communist forces and woke up only three days later, narrowly escaping becoming a June 4 victim. Through his report I noticed Wu Ke-tai, a Taiwanese communist who was officially a member of the Standing Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference.

Wu Ketai said in the interview: “At that Time, I still only knew the Kuomintang, and was bent on finding the Kuomintang led by Chiang Kai-shek. …… Fortunately, there was still a Chiang Shih-chin in Shanghai; during this period, he not only took care of me in Life: through the books he showed me by Lu Xun and other left-wing progressive writers, my ideological understanding also unconsciously changed profoundly. I was very disappointed with the Kuomintang because of the strange phenomena I saw in Shanghai! …… I learned about the Communist Party in China and the history of their “Long March” through Snow’s “A Journey to the West”, which Chiang Shih-chin showed me. I also learned that there are two Chinas, one is the old China and the other is the new China; one is dictatorship and the other is democracy. From then on, there was a decisive change in my thinking”. In other words, Wu Ketai also defected to the motherland because he rose up against The Japanese after being discriminated against and even brutally beaten by the Japanese in his studies in Taiwan, but was misled by the red propaganda and the red idol Lu Xun launched by the Communist International spy network, and joined the Communist Party, which falsely resisted the Japanese but really opposed China.

With the help of Xu Zongmao, Wu Ketai published his autobiography in Taiwan in 2002, “making a record of his life in an honest manner,” claiming not only that the contents were true, but also that “finally, I declare that the manuscript has not been read by anyone, and that the responsibility for the text is entirely his own.” Since this is the case, without any counter-evidence, the author accepts the facts stated by Wu Ketai.

In 1946, when he was sent back to Taiwan and entered NTU, he made the same mistake as the Red School Movement on the mainland. He also revealed in the interview that once Japan surrendered, the Chinese Communist Party sent someone to infiltrate Taiwan to set up the “Taiwan Student Union”, whose main organizer was Connie Kuo, who also organized the “Xiezhi Society”, in which “Shi Ming, Pan Yuanjing, He Bin, etc. all participated. He also organized the Xiezhi Society, in which “Shi Ming, Pan Yuanjing, He Bin, and others participated, holding exhibitions on Medicine, Culture, photography, and vernacular, ostensibly without political overtones. On May 4, 1946, Taiwan’s underground, led by the Chinese Communist Party, mobilized Keelung High School students to march in the name of commemorating the May Fourth Incident. The Red School Movement was moved to Taiwan! Wu Ke-tai confirmed that the “Shen Chong Incident” created by the Communist Underground was also the largest “January 9 Student Movement” in Taiwan due to the operation of Wu Ke-tai and other Communist students. The themes of the movement were ‘opposing civil war and demanding peace’ and ‘opposing the U.S. empire’s interference in China’s internal affairs. During the march, the procession sang the “March of the Volunteer Army”, which was the only anti-war song sung by the people, from the beginning to the end of the march. Through this demonstration, the student movement in Taiwan finally merged with the student movement in mainland China”. The “March of the Volunteer Army” was originally the anthem of the Blood League Salvation Army founded by anti-Japanese heroes Sun Mingwu and Sun Mingchen brothers, and was introduced in 1935 by members of the Chinese Communist Party underground in their anti-Japanese film “Children of the Wind and Cloud”, which has been widely circulated ever since. Wu Ke-tai sang the “March of the Volunteer Army” 17 months after the victory of the war, when the Republic of China was ready to implement the Constitution, just to propagate hatred and encourage hostility.

Wu Ketai also confessed: “Soon after this anti-American demonstration, the February 28th Incident broke out. The February 28th Incident broke out; students who had participated in several student movements joined the fighting ranks”. Among them was Wu Yu-de, a cadre of the Communist Party’s Taiwan Provincial Working Committee, who was lurking at NTU. “On the morning of the 28th, Wu Yu-de led the crowd to beat and insult civil servants and destroy government offices. And when the crowd smashed the monopoly office, two banners in big letters came down from the roof next to it: “Down with Chen Yi’s dictatorship, establish a democratic government in Taiwan Province”! In the documentary “Restoring February 28th”, Wu Ke-tai confessed as an interviewee that he wrote these two slogans. In other words, it was not only the underground communists who were involved in the “battle”, but also the students who had been reddened, otherwise, a security incident could not have been intensified into an armed riot by occupying a radio station, burning a hospital, and attacking an airport, not to mention that on the afternoon of March 1, Wu Ke-tai was told by Liao Ruifa that “we have organized We have organized an island-wide armed struggle committee. The division of labor for organizing the armed struggle in Taipei was as follows: one part of the party members was fully prepared to organize the armed struggle, while the other part was engaged in propaganda work”.

During the “February 28th” period, Wu Ke-tai and his leader, Cai Hsiao-gan (alias Lao Chen), and other communists actively “organized the masses into battle” and involved communists in every aspect of the struggle, most of whom retreated unscathed. After being sent to Taiwan, Wu Ketai was engaged in various redistribution activities, engaged in the school movement, introduced Lee Teng-hui and other students to the underground Communist Party, engaged in propaganda, and wrote articles for the red media, which is considered excellent work. “This means that the CCP used the May Fourth Movement and its commemorative activities to expand its influence and reverse black and white before it usurped power. Under the totalitarian tyranny of the Chinese Communist Party, Wu Ketai was given the important task of “head of the Japanese language team of China Radio International”. Although he was a senior CCP official, Wu came to Taiwan at least four times, was invited to many events, and had close talks with Lee Teng-hui.

Wu Ke-tai also confirmed that nearly 100 participants of the February 28th Incident fled to the mainland after the Nationalist Army came to Taiwan. “They included Xie Xuehong, Lin Liangcai, Su Xin, Pan Qinxin, Xiao Laifu, Wang Wande, Yang Kehuang, Li Qiaosong, Wang Tianqiang, and Li Shuokai. Most of them joined the ‘Taiwan Democratic Self-Government League’ established in Hong Kong after the riots” and all accepted the leadership of the Communist Party. The frank-hearted Lin Maosheng and Ruan Chao-ri and other tabletop figures were secretly cut by Chen Yi and made scapegoats. After the liberation of Taiwan, senior Communist officials of Taiwanese origin were branded as “old Taiwanese” to carry out united warfare in Taiwan, including Susanna Lin, the Japanese interpreter of Zhou Enlai in his early years. She became a member of the Communist Party’s Central Committee and president of the All-China Federation of Taiwanese Associations.

Among the “old Taiwanese” is also Zhang Guangzheng, the eldest son of Zhang Wejun. After joining the Communist movement, Zhang Guangzheng changed his name to He Biao and became a high-ranking official in the Communist army. As an “old compatriot”, He Biao revealed in an interview that after the Japanese surrender, the Communists attempted to occupy Beiping, and Zhang I-jun accepted an invitation from a Communist officer, Zhen Hua, to go for a “long talk overnight”. Zhang Ijun “out of the city to meet the Eighth Route Army, he never told anyone about it. I wonder how many similar secrets Zhang Ijun has kept?

Not only was Zhang I-jun “the first person to formally introduce Lu Xun to Taiwan,” but he was also teaching Japanese in Beiping to students, including Zhen Hua, who joined the Communist Party in 1926: “When I was a student in Beiping, I often went to the Japanese tutorial class at Zhang I-jun’s Home. The content he taught [omitted] included materialistic dialectics, which promoted my interest in studying Marxist-Leninist philosophy.”

Chang I-jun also returned to Taiwan in June 1946 and became the director of the Education group of the Taiwan Provincial Education Codification and Convergence Association. “He was in Taiwan at the time of the February 28th Incident, so could he have done nothing?

The Communist Party not only infiltrated Taiwan through the media and manipulated public opinion, but also misled students through the “national language” and its teaching. Wei Chien-kung (1901-1980), who was hired by Chen Yi as the chairman of the Taiwan Provincial Mandarin Implementation Committee, took orders from the Communist Party, and Xu Zheng, who was considered a Mandarin instructor, was also an underground Communist. Wei advocated the use of the Mandarin Movement (1946-1968) to realize the ideals of the “New Culture Movement,” so the Mandarin Movement was considered the May Fourth Movement in Taiwan.