| Bob Dole lobbied for 
Taiwan for six months: documents
 By William Lowther / Staff reporter in Washington
 
 Former US senator Bob Dole was lobbying for Taiwan during a six-month period 
that ended in April, recently released documents show.
 
 He contacted at least eight Washington officials on Taipei¡¦s behalf and the law 
and lobbying firm he represents ¡X Alston & Bird ¡X was paid a total of 
US$120,000.
 
 Lobbying documents made public this week by the non-profit Sunlight Foundation 
show that Taipei was particularly interested in developing relations with the US 
presidential campaign of Republican Mitt Romney.
 
 Dole, the 1996 Republican presidential nominee, wrote separate letters to Romney 
advisers Dov Zakheim, Mitchell Reiss, Eric Edelman, Alex Wong and Kerry Healey.
 
 The letters were aimed primarily at persuading the advisers to meet with 
Representative to the US Jason Yuan (°K°·¥Í).
 
 In addition, the 88-year-old Dole wrote to Hogan Gidley, an adviser to former US 
senator Rick Santorum, and CIA Director David Petraeus requesting that they meet 
with Yuan.
 
 During the same period, Dole also contacted US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham 
Clinton asking her to negotiate a new diplomatic immunity agreement with Taipei 
and White House official Valerie Jarrett to request presidential support for the 
Dragon Boat Festival.
 
 The letter to Gidley was a curious development because it was written two weeks 
after Santorum had dropped out of the Republican presidential nominee race.
 
 He was the second Taiwan lobbyist in Washington to make the news recently.
 
 Last month, US Representative Bill Owens ordered his staff to undergo special 
ethics training in the aftermath of a controversial trip to Taiwan that he and 
his wife took late last year.
 
 Owens paid back the US$22,000 cost of the trip to the Taipei-based Chinese 
Culture University, which was supposed to organize the trip ¡§to promote 
international cultural exchange.¡¨
 
 It has been alleged in the US that the trip was actually organized by Park 
Strategies, a lobbying company employed by the Taiwanese government.
 
 Park Strategies was paid US$250,000 for lobbying services by the Taipei Economic 
and Cultural Representative Office in Washington last year.
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