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Home The News News PEACE PACT POLEMIC: AIT warned Ma on peace pact: cable

PEACE PACT POLEMIC: AIT warned Ma on peace pact: cable

A leaked US cable shows that American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) Chairman Raymond Burghardt warned President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) in 2007 that cross-strait dialogue on various issues, including a peace agreement, could be at the expense of US arms sales to Taiwan.

Following heated debate on whether to start political talks with China that could potentially lead to unification if Ma is re-elected in January after he proposed the idea on Monday, Ma said on Thursday that a pact would not be signed unless strict prerequisites were met.

However, a cable dated June 18, 2007, and released by WikiLeaks on Aug. 30 details a meeting between Ma, then the Chinese Nationalist Party’s (KMT) presidential candidate, and Burghardt, which appears to suggest otherwise.

The cable quoted Ma as telling Burghardt that he “would accept a peace agreement of either limited or unlimited duration” if elected president on March 20, 2008.

Burghardt, in the company of then-AIT director Stephen Young, visited Ma, who was accompanied by his top national security aide, Su Chi (蘇起), on June 16.

During their talks, Ma told the US officials that he would implement “five do’s” and honor then-president Chen Shui-bian’s (陳水扁) “four noes” pledge if he were elected president.

The “five do’s” included resuming dialogue with Beijing, establishing military confidence-building measures, creating a China--Taiwan common market, reaching a modus vivendi on international organizations and expanding cross-strait cultural and educational exchanges, the cable says.

The cable says Ma told Burghardt that he “would condition any negotiation of a peace agreement on the PRC’s [People’s Republic of China] removal of missiles aimed at Taiwan, adding that he would accept a peace agreement of either limited or unlimited duration.”

Burghardt predicted that China would attempt to condition any dialogue on Taiwan suspending arms purchases from the US, the cable says.

Both Ma and Su in response said that would be “unacceptable.”

They said Beijing would tolerate continued US arms sales as long as Taiwan’s leadership did not antagonize China by pushing an independence agenda, the cable says.

When they talked about the 2008 presidential election, Ma told Burghardt that then-Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) presidential candidate Frank Hsieh (謝長廷) had rehashed charges that Ma was “a Mainlander,” that he “does not love Taiwan” and that he intended to counter such attacks by emphasizing the KMT would stabilize cross-strait relations, which he added would produce economic opportunities.

“Unlike the DPP, the KMT enjoys a strong intra-party consensus on cross-strait policy. Moreover, while the PRC does not trust President Chen or the DPP, the KMT already shares common ground with Beijing, both sides having accepted the ‘one China, different interpretations’ formulation of the ‘1992 consensus,’” Ma is quoted as saying in the cable.

With a KMT government, and under proper circumstances, negotiations for a peace agreement and for economic cooperation could begin immediately, the cable quotes Ma as saying.

Furthermore, Ma said that a KMT government would “remove the question of Taiwan independence from the table,” stabilizing cross-strait relations and thereby enhancing Taiwan’s attractiveness to foreign investors and its trading partners, the cable says.


Source: Taipei Times - 2011/10/22



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Newsflash

The Constitution is a lot like air. We neither feel it nor see it, but it surrounds us at all times and it is involved in every aspect of our lives. That was why a recent plan by the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and the Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) caucuses to propose establishing a Constitution Amendment Committee in the next legislative session was encouraging and appropriate.

Perhaps because Taiwan has been plagued by a sluggish economy for too long or perhaps because of the high threshold for approving amendments to the Republic of China (ROC) Constitution, the talk of amending it or writing a new constitution has been on hold since the TSU and former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) briefly flirted with the idea years ago.