Cables outline PRC
view on ¡¥consensus¡¦
WHAT CONSENSUS? Taiwan Affairs Office Director
Wang Yi told the US ambassador in Beijing in 2008 that ¡¥both sides essentially
accept there is only one China¡¦
By Chris Wang / Staff Reporter
While President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E) has reiterated that the so-called ¡§1992
consensus¡¨ was reached by Taiwan and China in 1992 to the effect that each side
recognizes ¡§one China, with each side having its own interpretation,¡¨ US cables
recently released by WikiLeaks show that Chinese officials and academics clearly
have a different understanding on what constitutes the ¡§consensus.¡¨
Both the Ma administration and China have stated that the consensus has been and
should remain the foundation of cross-strait relations and dialogue.
In a cable dated Dec. 11, 2007, then-Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT)
presidential candidate Ma told visiting American Institute in Taiwan Chairman
Raymond Burghardt that the ¡§one China, different interpretations¡¨ rubric of the
consensus would be the key to any dialogue with China, adding that the KMT would
reassure Beijing that its interpretation of the consensus is ¡§steadfastly
opposed to [Taiwan] independence.¡¨
As recently as a press conference on Aug. 28, Ma said that despite the fact that
no concrete results were reached during the cross-strait negotiations in 1992,
both sides agreed that each side could have its own interpretation of ¡§one
China,¡¨ adding that while the term ¡§1992 consensus¡¨ was indeed coined later, the
idea of ¡§one China, with each side having its own interpretation¡¨ did exist.
However, according to a leaked US cable dated Dec. 24, 2008, Taiwan Affairs
Office Director Wang Yi (¤ý¼Ý) mentioned ¡§different interpretations¡¨ when the
Chinese official discussed cross-strait relations with then-US ambassador to
China Clark Randt.
¡§Both sides now accept and recognize the 1992 consensus, which means that both
sides essentially accept there is only one China,¡¨ Wang was quoted as telling
Randt, adding that in order ¡§to solve [Taiwan¡¦s] international space problem,
the two sides must stick to the one China framework, because the improvement in
cross-strait relations thus far has been on the basis of the one China
principle.¡¨
The international community accepts the ¡§one China consensus¡¨ and UN-affiliated
organizations also legally accept one China, therefore on the international
stage ¡§the rules are set and [they] cannot be changed,¡¨ Wang was quoted by the
cable as saying.
Chinese academics expressed similar views in another cable dated March 21, 2008,
issued by the US embassy in Beijing.
Zhou Zhihuai (©P§ÓÃh), vice president of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences¡¦
Institute of Taiwan Studies, was quoted in the cable as saying that the
consensus is flawed because ¡§there is too much wiggle room for interpretation
and because the Taiwan position of ¡¥each with its own interpretation¡¦ is
tantamount to [an] acceptance of two Chinas.¡¨
While both sides want to improve relations, Zhou said, neither side has much
room to make concessions.
The cable also quoted Sun Shengliang (®]²±¨}), director of the same institute¡¦s
economics department, as saying the ¡§consensus was basically invented by KMT
scholar Su Chi (Ĭ°_).¡¨
The cable showed Randt making a side note that it was the first time his embassy
had heard the Chinese acknowledge this point.
In a recent forum held in Taipei, Taiwanese academics highlighted the different
views on the ¡§1992 consensus¡¨ held by officials in Taipei and Beijing, with Lo
Chih-cheng (ùP¬F), a political scientist at Soochow University, saying: ¡§China
never talks about the 1992 consensus without mentioning its opposition to Taiwan
independence.¡¨
Tung Cheng-yuan (µ£®¶·½), a professor at National Chengchi University said at the
same forum that the real consensus between the Ma administration and Beijing was
a ¡§recognition of the one China principle¡¨ and ¡§opposition to Taiwan
independence.¡¨
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