Peace accord with
China ‘naive’: DPP
PLAYING WITH FIRE: The DPP said a peace treaty
with Beijing would not ensure Taiwan’s security and that it was ‘unnecessary’
given that only one party — China — was hostile
By Chris Wang / Staff Reporter
President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) intention to sign a peace accord with China is
“naive,” the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) said yesterday, adding that such
an accord would be “unnecessary.”
Ma, who is seeking re-election next year, plans to engage in political talks and
seek a peace accord with China, Vice President Vincent Siew (蕭萬長) told then-AIT
director Stephen Young in June 2009, according to a diplomatic cable released by
WikiLeaks on Aug. 30.
While the Presidential Office has denied the contents of the cable, a growing
body of evidence shows that Ma plans to address the issues of “a peace treaty, a
formal end to hostilities and development of bilateral military confidence
mechanisms,” DPP spokesperson Liang Wen-jie (梁文傑) said.
Former Chinese president Jiang Zemin (江澤民) and Chinese President Hu Jintao (胡錦濤)
both mentioned signing a peace treaty with Taiwan in their major statements in
1995 and 2008, Liang said.
“However, both of them underlined that the negotiation would have to take place
under the precondition of the ‘one China’ principle,” Liang said, adding that
China’s insistence on the prerequisite has not changed during the past dozen
years.
The DPP’s position has been clear, he said, as the party does not think there
are hostilities between the two sides — rather, it is China that is hostile to
Taiwan — and that no peace accord, especially with the precondition of “one
China,” was necessary.
Ma has talked about signing a peace treaty, but he has “hidden the ‘one China’
principle from Taiwanese,” Liang said.
At the same time, Ma was “naive” to believe a peace accord could ensure Taiwan’s
security, DPP spokesperson Chen Chi-mai (陳其邁) said.
China signed a “peace treaty” with Tibet in May 1951 with a pledge to respect
Tibet’s autonomy, but the People’s Liberation Army entered Lhasa five months
later, Chen said.
In addition, a peace agreement only exists between countries at war or between a
government army and rebel military force, Chen said.
“Relations between Taiwan and China are neither,” he said.
If Taiwan were to sign a peace agreement with China, it would have to come with
assurances from a third country and the international community, Chen added.
While former US president Bill Clinton and Ken Lieberthal, who served in the US
National Security Council during the Clinton administration, have both mentioned
the proposal of a cross-strait peace treaty, they could not guarantee what would
happen after the agreement, Chen said.
Ma has made conflicting public statements on how Taiwan would engage in
cross-strait negotiations, DPP Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) said.
“He said the time was not ripe and then he said he had a plan [to enter
political talks in his second term]. He said the talks would be held without
prerequisites and then he said it should be conducted under the precondition of
the so-called ‘1992 consensus,’” Tsai said.
It was time for Ma to clearly explain his position to the public after three
years in office, the DPP presidential candidate added.
Responding to Chen’s comments, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Culture and
Communications Committee Director Chuang Po-chung (莊伯仲) said Ma was proceeding
with cross-trait issues in a peaceful manner.
Regarding the DPP’s comments on the so-called “1992 consensus,” Chuang said the
KMT has said many times that the consensus did not give up nor intend to
downgrade Taiwan’s sovereignty.
What Ma means by “each side having its own interpretation” was in effect “no
unification,” while “one China” was “no independence” and love for peace meant
“no armed conflict,” Chuang said.
Cross-strait policies would have a heavy influence on Taiwan’s future and is an
important policy for the nation, Chuang said.
As such, it needs to be continually debated so the most acceptable version can
be found, he said.
Additional reporting by Jake Chung and CNA
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