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That¡¦s how Su Chi ¡¥resurfaces¡¦?
Tuesday, Mar 23, 2010, Page 8
When National Security Council (NSC) secretary-general Su Chi (Ĭ°_) stepped down
last month, he did so because he had become a disgrace. Despite his claim that
family and health reasons were behind his decision, we all know that he made it,
or was told to do so, because the chorus clamoring for his resignation was
getting too loud to ignore.
True, his ham-fisted handling of the US beef issue was the straw that broke the
camel¡¦s back, but the reasons he had to go were far more numerous. He had lost
the trust of US officials and alienated Ministry of Foreign Affairs staff and
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) members. His murky involvement in the delaying
of foreign humanitarian assistance during Typhoon Morakot ¡X ostensibly over
cross-strait political considerations ¡X also left a wound that Taiwanese would
not forget anytime soon. Many, from ministry officials to specialists on Taiwan
used one word to describe Su at the NSC: incompetent.
This, of course, wasn¡¦t enough to dissuade an equally amateurish Ma Ying-jeou
(°¨^¤E) administration from conferring upon Su the Order of Propitious Clouds,
First Class earlier this month for his ¡§meritorious¡¨ service.
So ¡§meritorious¡¨ was Su¡¦s service to this nation that he was part of the very
same KMT-led legislature that, during eight ¡§sick¡¨ ¡X so Su claims ¡X years of
Democratic Progressive Party rule under then-president Chen Shui-bian (³¯¤ô«ó),
blocked hundreds of resolutions and brought national development to a
standstill. So ¡§meritorious¡¨ was legislator Su that he made unsubstantiated
claims that the Chen administration was seeking to develop nuclear weapons. If
lies and incompetence are signs of merit, then Su truly deserved Ma¡¦s medal.
That said, there is no doubt that Su, with his extensive experience in
government has had access to large amounts of state secrets. Equally problematic
is intelligence that placed him in Beijing, sometime in March 2005, getting
really friendly with senior Chinese Communist Party officials.
A little more than a month after he stepped down, the now unemployed Su has
confirmed that he will ¡§resurface¡¨ by attending the Boao Forum in China next
month. Beijing has already confirmed that Vice President Xi Jinping (²ßªñ¥),
President Hu Jintao¡¦s (JÀAÀÜ) likely successor, will be attending.
While Su has said that he will not be delivering speeches at the meeting, this
will be an occasion for him to meet people and possibly engage in the type of
backdoor, quasi-official diplomacy that has characterized the Ma
administration¡¦s approach to cross-strait affairs. Given the lack of
transparency that has accompanied such talks in the past 20 months, Su could now
find himself in a position where he can cause even more harm to Taiwan¡¦s
interests than he did when he was in government.
At a time when the Ma administration is portraying a controversial economic
cooperation framework agreement (ECFA) as an inevitability ¡X contradicting
officials¡¦ comments that it would only sign the deal if it was widely supported
by the public, which it isn¡¦t ¡X and amid fears that Taiwan¡¦s sovereignty is
hanging in the balance, the government should put the brakes on Su¡¦s desire to
¡§make new friends¡¨ by preventing him from attending the forum. Laws exist that
regulate the ability of former officials who, in the exercise of their functions
had access to classified material, from going to China.
If ever such laws applied, they should in Su¡¦s case, both because of what he had
access to and his track record as an official and academic who seems to put
China¡¦s interests first and Taiwan¡¦s second.
Su fell from grace. He should keep a low profile a little longer.
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