¡@
Government policy will sow further
division
By Michael Danielsen
Monday, Apr 19, 2010, Page 8
¡§Welcome to China¡¨ ¡X the greeting I received at the Chinese Nationalist Party¡¦s
(KMT) National Policy Foundation in January is symptomatic of current
cross-strait developments in Taiwan. The government¡¦s cross-strait package of
technical agreements and the forthcoming economic cooperation framework
agreement (ECFA) will drain Taiwan¡¦s political energy and divert attention away
from other key matters for years to come. This is unavoidable as the
government¡¦s policies are out of touch with reality. Indeed, they blindly
inflate divisions instead of attempting to unify people in Taiwan¡¦s divided
society.
The cross-strait package also diverts attention from efforts to inform others
about what Taiwan can bring to the world. Instead, an increasing amount of hard
work is now being spent to correct misunderstandings about Taiwan in Europe. For
example, an ECFA is believed to be an approach that fits with the EU¡¦s ¡§one
China¡¨ policy.
All this is worrying. The package is planned as the start of a long journey that
will result in the integration of Taiwan with China. The deal is also a key
element in moving towards the KMT¡¦s envisioned common market with China.
However, it does not help Taiwan to start such a long journey by dividing
instead of uniting Taiwanese society or by pretending it is Chinese.
It can only lead to increased divisions when the government wants to sign an
agreement with China under the highly disputed ¡§1992 consensus,¡¨ or when the
issue of sovereignty is fudged by portraying the two countries as two ¡§areas¡¨
under the outdated 1947 Constitution of the Republic of China and states that
this is what makes ECFA possible. No unification agenda could possibly meet the
realities of today. Most importantly, Taiwanese have not given their approval.
From a Taiwan-centered perspective, the government ought to make use of its seat
at the WTO and initiate negotiations between official government institutions.
China should accept such an approach as it chose not to discuss the political
content of the ¡§one China¡¨ policy in talks on pragmatic issues during
negotiations in the early 1990s.
The current dialogue will not reduce tensions in the long run because neither
side can really give the other what it wants ¡X China can hardly give Taiwan real
international space while Ma is constrained by Taiwan¡¦s democracy and cannot
give China what it really wants, sovereignty over Taiwan.
It is also questionable whether China is in any urgent economic need of an ECFA.
China¡¦s agenda is politically motivated and thus sets political goals above
economics. In other words, the current economic deal is intended to give China
political influence in Taiwan.
The European Parliament and its Taiwan Friendship Group seem to be blithely
ignorant of what is happening or that they are supporting China when they praise
the current dialogue without mentioning the Taiwanese people¡¦s democratic right
to self-determination. There is no valid excuse for being unaware of the current
debate in Taiwan or that sovereignty lies at its core. Additionally, few voices
have been raised about the worrying political developments taking place in
Taiwan. Instead of uniting European opinion, Taipei has sent mixed signals
emphasizing how equal Taiwan and China are rather than focusing on Taiwan¡¦s
uniqueness.
This journey is likely to end in disappointment for the EU, China and the KMT,
and divide Taiwanese society. Self-determination is the only way forward and a
referendum on an ECFA would be a respectful and democratic step towards uniting
Taiwan. In the short term, Ma¡¦s agenda will marginalize Taiwan in the
international community and all but push the country into China¡¦s very
undemocratic sphere of influence ¡X ¡§Welcome to China.¡¨
Michael Danielsen is chairman of Taiwan Corner.
¡@
|