Former American Institute in Taiwan chairman  Richard Bush pointed to the essential dilemma in cross-strait relations last  week when he questioned why Beijing is still deploying missiles to threaten  Taiwan despite the "reconciliation" policy of President Ma Ying-jeou and his  Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) government. 
Unfortunately, Bush, now director for East Asian policy studies at the  Brookings Institution, failed to note that it is precisely the capitulationist  nature of the KMT's "reconciliation" with the Chinese Communist Party that has  placed Taiwan in an increasingly unfavorable position in dealings with the PRC.  The KMT has been conducting negotiations with its former bitter rival since KMT  honorary chairman Lien Chan embarked on a kowtowing visit to CCP General  Secretary and PRC State Chairman Hu Jintao in Beijing in April 2005 and Ma has  made the "reconciliation" and an unilateral "diplomatic truce" official policy  since taking office in May 2008.