During separate press conferences with local and foreign media on Tuesday, President Ma Ying-jeou announced that Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Andrew Hsia — who came under fire over a leaked memo ordering overseas missions to decline offers of aid in the wake of Typhoon Morakot — had tendered his resignation.
That Ma would make this information public implies that Hsia’s resignation  has, for all intents and purposes, been accepted.
Heads are starting to  roll following the government’s amateurish handling of the emergency, and this  is a welcome development, but it is also evident that Hsia is a scapegoat.  Admittedly, Minister of Foreign Affairs Francisco Ou was not in the  country when the decision to refuse aid was made, but it is hard to believe that  he was not aware of the matter. 
Furthermore, Ou was on a diplomatic  mission that sources claim included Jordan and the Czech Republic. In other  words, he should have been in the decision-making chain — and should be  reprimanded for his ministry’s inappropriate policy and the likely deadly  consequences.
A well-placed source claims that the aid memo came from  above Hsia (who would not have had the authority to decide on the matter) and  probably even higher than Ou, which means that it was either the National  Security Council, the premier or the president who was responsible. Why they  would have ordered this remains a mystery.
The top officials who were  behind this decision, therefore, are likely to remain unaccountable, while Hsia  is being sacrificed to an angry Taiwanese public.
One possible reason for  the decision to delay the approval of foreign aid, another source said, was that  the top leadership did not know what kind of material assistance was required  and therefore did not want other governments to start sending planeloads of  unnecessary material. What allegedly followed was an internal screw-up and a  departure from the internal chain of approval for the memo, which may have  bypassed both a section director-general for review of the draft and Hsia  altogether. If this is true, then Hsia is being forced out for something he did  not do.
It is unlikely that Beijing would have ordered Taipei to reject  foreign aid, or to have threatened retaliation if it did. After all, Beijing  does not stand to gain anything by Ma coming under criticism or his  administration being undermined. What China needs is a strong, popular Ma who  can forge ahead with his cross-strait policies and bring Taiwan closer to  unification.
It is possible, however, that Taiwan’s policymakers decided  to wait for a green light from Beijing for fear of “angering” it by opening the  doors to foreign aid, especially from the US and Japan, whose presence on  Taiwanese soil has sensitive implications. In other words, a misreading by  Taipei of the importance that Beijing attaches to the symbolism of foreign help  in Taiwan, rather than actual Chinese interference, could help explain the  decision to reject or delay approval of aid.
Hsia is the first fall guy  for a development that, in the end, was far less consequential than the more  pressing question of why it took so long for the military to deploy in the south  to launch rescue operations. Ma can claim all he wants that heavy rain over  three days prevented the deployment of helicopters, but the fact remains: Rain  or no rain, there should have been boots on the ground — and there  weren’t.
Whose head will roll for that one?
J. Michael  Cole is a writer based in Taipei. 
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2009/08/22
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