When Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) was elected president, the immediate US reaction was to  heave a sigh of relief because Ma’s pro-China policies were expected to relax  the tense cross-strait relationship. In practice, things have turned out  slightly differently, as “pro-China” became “submit to China,” and this raised  flags in the US, as can be seen from a series of recent events.
When the  new director of the American Institute in Taiwan, William Stanton, visited  Minister of Justice Wang Ching-feng (王清峰) on Sept. 30, he said that “people  overseas had some different thoughts” on the trial of former president Chen  Shui-bian (陳水扁). Why would he risk being accused of interfering with Taiwan’s  internal affairs by bringing up this case? Clearly because the US now feels it  is no longer a clear-cut judicial matter. 
In his Oct. 7 column, New York  Times columnist Philip Bowring said: “Chen upset a natural ally in [former US  president] George W. Bush by needlessly provoking Beijing in an attempt to score  political points at home. Now the KMT [Chinese Nationalist Party] seems to have  gone to the other extreme.” 
To some people, the Chen trial is evidence  that pro-unification advocates are demonizing Chen for his support for  Taiwanese independence and for breaking the KMT’s authoritarian rule so they can  play up to Beijing.
The editorial in last month’s issue of Taiwan  Business Topics, published by the American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei, said  one topic that deserves to be high on the Cabinet’s priority list is “balancing  the advances in cross-Strait ties with further strengthening of relations with  the United States, Taiwan’s most important source of international support.”  
Bowring makes the same point in his column, saying: “Taiwan seems to be  talking itself into believing that it is even more dependent on the mainland  than need be the case … [and] dependence on China is often  overstated.”
Prior to this, because pro-green supporters were allegedly  being excluded from the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy, Carl Gershman,  president of the Washington-based National Endowment for Democracy, an  organization that is also supported by the US Congress, sent a letter to Ma  saying: “It has come to my attention through reports in the press that broad  changes are being proposed for the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy. I am  concerned that such an overhaul could well compromise both the Foundation’s  independence and the quality of its work.” 
These incidents not only tell  us that Ma has been unable to give balanced treatment to Taiwan’s relations with  the US and China, but also that this imbalance involves a deterioration of the  basic democratic values that any democracy must respect.
What is most  upsetting to the US is that during the Typhoon Morakot disaster, Ma blocked US  aid teams from entering Taiwan while attempting to bring in rescue personnel  from China’s People’s Liberation Army. Ma still has not offered an explanation  for this. When the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) was refusing to accept US  aid, its minister, Francisco Ou (歐鴻鍊), “could not be found.” 
Why hasn’t  the government provided an explanation of Ou’s whereabouts and who he was  meeting with? Maybe Ou, who was made a scapegoat and had to step down in the  Cabinet reshuffle, should give the public an explanation.
Not long ago,  the government announced that it would not issue visas to World Uyghur Congress  leader Rebiya Kadeer and its secretary-general Dolkun Isa because the government  claims Kadeer is closely connected with terrorists and because Isa was said to  be a terrorist. Because the government feared a lawsuit, it has changed its tune  and says the reason for not issuing visas is that it would jeopardize  cross-strait relations. 
Premier Wu Den-yih (吳敦義) said it would “make  China feel uncomfortable.” The same reason is given for not letting Falun Gong  founder Li Hongzhi (李洪志) into the country. Who would have thought that Ma’s  guiding principle was to make the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) feel comfortable  and that he therefore must keep anyone the CCP doesn’t like out of  Taiwan?
As Taiwan is leaning heavily toward the CCP, the US has finally  seen Ma’s true colors. On Oct. 7, the Liberty Times, the Taipei Times’ sister  publication, reported that sources in Washington revealed that the US  administration has completed an internal Taiwan policy review and now intends to  send US Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki, a retired US Army four-star  general, to visit Taiwan next spring to strengthen US-Taiwan relations. That  would be the first such visit since before George W. Bush took office.  
Such a move would be certain to make China, which wants to bring down US  imperialism and “liberate” Taiwan, feel uncomfortable. It would also make Ma,  who is cooperating with China to suppress Taiwanese independence, feel  uncomfortable. The question is whether Ma will dare make the US feel  uncomfortable by making China feel comfortable.
Paul Lin is a  political commentator.
TRANSLATED BY PERRY SVENSSON
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2009/10/16
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