Yu Beichen

Yu Beichen is a former major general in the Republic of China Army and currently a Taiwanese non-partisan politician. His personnel background in the military was from the fraction of General Kao Hua-chu and General Lee Hsiang-chou. He was involved in Taiwanese politics after his retirement and currently runs his own YouTube channel, and was owned the nickname of the “Donated-General”.[1]

Yu Beichen
Born (1968-01-02) January 2, 1968
Taipei
Allegiance Taiwan
Service/branch Republic of China Army
Years of service1990-2015
Rank Major General
Unit542 Armor Brigade

Personal life

Yu Beichen was born on January 2, 1968, in Taipei. His ancestry goes back to China's Shandong province.

Military career

He joined the military in 1990. He moved up the ranks and was a major general at the time of his retirement in 2015. In 2015, citing concerns relating to his health and work-related stress, he retired from the military.[2]

Political career

Yu Beichen was a member of the Kuomintang party in Taiwan from 1985 to 2021. After his retirement from the military, he served as chairman of Huangfuxing's Taoyuan Kuomintang party headquarters, as well as the vice-chairman of the KMT's Taoyuan city party headquarters. He was dismissed from these roles in 2020. Later, at the end of 2021, he publicly announced that he was quitting the Kuomintang party over disagreements regarding the party's direction, including disagreement about a lack of strength in standing up to the mainland.[3]

Commentator

He currently has his own YouTube channel with over 100,000 subscribers as of May 2022. He has appeared in political talk shows in Taiwan. In May 2022, he criticized the Chen Mingtong the head of the RoC's intelligence for publicly revealing specific intelligence regarding Chinese plans for invading Taiwan and the makeup of Xi Jinping's cabinet following the 20th CCP party congress [4]

Controversy

On August 4, 2022, Yu Beichen said on a TV program: "Usually, the interception rate of the Tiangong missile is about 70%, so if I launch three to intercept one, it will be 210%, how could it not be intercepted?" He also claimed that "it must be three, using a method of trigonometric functions to intercept," stating that if it can't be intercepted in this way, National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology can close down. This statement has sparked ridicule from netizens on both sides of the strait.[5][6]

References

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