Keep Us Strong WikiLeaks logo

Currently released so far... 64621 / 251,287

Articles

Browse latest releases

Browse by creation date

Browse by origin

A B C D F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z

Browse by tag

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Browse by classification

Community resources

courage is contagious

Viewing cable 08AITTAIPEI704, MEDIA REACTION: PRESIDENT MA YING-JEOU'S INAUGURAL SPEECH

If you are new to these pages, please read an introduction on the structure of a cable as well as how to discuss them with others. See also the FAQs

Understanding cables
Every cable message consists of three parts:
  • The top box shows each cables unique reference number, when and by whom it originally was sent, and what its initial classification was.
  • The middle box contains the header information that is associated with the cable. It includes information about the receiver(s) as well as a general subject.
  • The bottom box presents the body of the cable. The opening can contain a more specific subject, references to other cables (browse by origin to find them) or additional comment. This is followed by the main contents of the cable: a summary, a collection of specific topics and a comment section.
To understand the justification used for the classification of each cable, please use this WikiSource article as reference.

Discussing cables
If you find meaningful or important information in a cable, please link directly to its unique reference number. Linking to a specific paragraph in the body of a cable is also possible by copying the appropriate link (to be found at theparagraph symbol). Please mark messages for social networking services like Twitter with the hash tags #cablegate and a hash containing the reference ID e.g. #08AITTAIPEI704.
Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08AITTAIPEI704 2008-05-21 12:02 2011-08-23 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED American Institute Taiwan, Taipei
VZCZCXYZ0007
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHIN #0704/01 1421202
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 211202Z MAY 08
FM AIT TAIPEI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 8976
INFO RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 8293
RUEHHK/AMCONSUL HONG KONG 9535
UNCLAS AIT TAIPEI 000704 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPARTMENT FOR INR/R/MR, EAP/TC, EAP/PA, EAP/PD - NIDA EMMONS 
DEPARTMENT PASS AIT/WASHINGTON 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OPRC KMDR KPAO TW
SUBJECT: MEDIA REACTION: PRESIDENT MA YING-JEOU'S INAUGURAL SPEECH 
 
 
1. Summary:  Taiwan's major Chinese-language dailies gave 
significant news reporting and editorial coverage May 21 to 
President Ma Ying-jeou's inauguration ceremony and his inaugural 
speech Tuesday, in which he emphasized that both sides across the 
Taiwan Strait will resume dialogue based on the "1992 consensus." 
The centrist, KMT-leaning "China Times" ran a banner headline on 
page five which said "[Ma's Camp Has] Communicated with the United 
States over the Draft of [Ma's] Inaugural Speech, but It Has Not 
Been Reviewed by the United States."  The pro-unification "United 
Daily News" front-paged an opinion survey, which showed Ma with a 66 
percent approval rating after he was sworn in Tuesday. 
 
2. In terms of editorials and commentaries, an editorial in the 
pro-independence "Liberty Times" criticized Ma for failing to 
mention Taiwan's sovereignty in his inaugural speech and said Taiwan 
will embark on an "irreversible journey of being united by China." 
An editorial in the pro-independence, English-language "Taipei 
Times" said "a crossroads is approaching, and the KMT must decide 
whether it wishes to promote Taiwanese interests or act as a proxy 
for a foreign government that quietly despises it."  An editorial in 
the pro-independence, English-language "Taiwan News" also feared 
that Ma will not lead Taiwan forward to the future but will drag its 
hard-won democracy back into the past.  An analysis in the centrist, 
KMT-leaning "China Times" said Ma's inaugural speech indicated that 
he had taken the strategic high ground by especially emphasizing the 
U.S. in order to counterbalance China's military and economic power. 
 An editorial in the pro-unification "United Daily News" hailed Ma's 
inaugural speech as having revived Taiwan's internal recognition of 
"the Republic of China" and urged Chinese President Hu Jintao to 
recognize the reality of the existence of "the Republic of China." 
An editorial in the conservative, pro-unification, English-language 
"China Post" expressed high hopes for Ma and said that Ma "will be 
able to rally all the people of Taiwan behind him to usher in a new 
era of prosperity."  End summary. 
 
A) "A Taiwan That Is Ripped off of Its Sovereignty Will Embark on 
the Irreversible Journey of Being Unified [by China]" 
 
The pro-independence "Liberty Times" [circulation: 720,000] 
editorialized (5/21): 
 
"... President Ma's inaugural speech discussed a wide range of 
issues, but throughout the entire speech, he never mentioned a word 
about Taiwan's sovereignty.  He even firmly believes that 'in 
resolving cross-Strait issues, what matters is not sovereignty but 
core values and way of life.  Was Ma implying that that were other 
core values more important than that Taiwan is a sovereign nation? 
...  The Republic of China (ROC) in Taiwan right now is nothing but 
a shell company for an alien regime in Taiwan.  Not only does the 
ROC not possess Taiwan's sovereignty, but it is also a big barrier 
against Taiwan becoming a normal country.  President Ma came up with 
the incorrect discourse on 'one China with respective 
interpretations' because of his lack of an accurate understanding of 
historical facts. ... 
 
"China enacted the Anti-Secession Law in 2005, which incorporates 
[the idea that] 'Taiwan is part of China' as its domestic law and 
thus makes it a plain fact that there is no room for respective 
interpretation under the one-China principle.  This incidence also 
indicated that the key to the final resolution of cross-Strait 
issues lies in the controversy over [Taiwan's] sovereignty, and the 
source of such a controversy is that Taiwan is a sovereign state, 
but China is keen on suppressing Taiwan's status as a sovereign 
nation, and it intends to annex Taiwan using military intimidation 
and economic united front tactics.  President Ma [seeks to] rip 
Taiwan off of its sovereignty and is bent on significant opening [of 
Taiwan's market] and puts his hope for [the island's] economic 
revival on measures such as [easing the bans on] direct 
transportation and visits of Chinese tourists.  Even though Ma 
claimed that 'unification with China was not likely within our 
lifetimes,' there are chances that Taiwan will follow Ma's line and 
embark on the irreversible journey of 'being unified' [by China]. 
This was why President Ma's inaugural speech worries 
 us." 
 
B) "Ma Ying-jeou: Crossroads President" 
 
The pro-independence, English-language "Taipei Times" [circulation: 
30,000] editorialized (5/21): 
 
" Following his 'no unification, no independence, no use of force' 
campaign pledge, President Ma Ying-jeou told The Associated Press 
recently that unification with China was not likely 'within our 
lifetimes,' an extraordinary comment that discredits the narrative 
of detente that haunts credulous media coverage of cross-strait 
affairs. 
Hopes for the acceleration of cross-strait cooperation with a view 
to a peace deal are likely to be dashed if China is unwilling to 
fall into step with Ma's realistic assessment. But a human lifetime 
 
is an eternity in geopolitics:  It is ludicrous to think that 
Beijing would indefinitely tolerate a Taiwanese agenda rooted in 
this assumption. A crossroads is approaching, and the KMT must 
decide whether it wishes to promote Taiwanese interests or act as a 
proxy for a foreign government that quietly despises it. ... 
 
"Ma's undertaking to improve relations with the US is welcome and 
necessary, though it should be stressed that a lot of the practical 
damage to that relationship was the doing of Ma's colleagues in the 
KMT. On substantial matters such as weapons sales, Ma has an 
opportunity to use his party influence to strike deals with a 
KMT-dominated legislature.  However, KMT figureheads such as 
Chairman Wu Poh-hsiung and Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng are not 
going to lie down to do the Presidential Office's bidding, even on 
matters of obvious benefit to the nation. Ma must also overcome the 
profound hostility toward the US that remains among hardline KMT 
legislators, as well as battle the notorious kickback culture of the 
Legislative Yuan. ... 
 
"Ma has not been seriously tested as a high official, and as a loyal 
KMT man, he has rarely had to live up to the highest of public 
expectations. But no one should be under any illusions: These tests 
are coming. It will only be a short time before Ma begins to feel 
the pressure from Beijing, KMT hardliners and ordinary Taiwanese to 
deliver results. These are incompatible agendas, and Ma's customary 
kneejerk responses when under heavy political pressure would 
exacerbate problems rather than deflect them.  Now is the time for 
Ma to be his own man, stare down his party rivals and implement an 
agenda that upholds the living standards and freedoms afforded by a 
sovereign, democratic state, as well as rallying people who share 
these goals around him." 
 
C) "Ma Begins Road with Step back" 
 
The pro-independence, English-language "Taiwan News" [circulation: 
20,000] editorialized (5/21): 
 
"In his inaugural address yesterday, Kuomintang President Ma 
Ying-jeou declared that he was ready to lead Taiwan into a 'new era' 
that will bring political reconciliation and ethnic harmony, clean 
governance, economic liberalization, social progress and peaceful 
cross-strait relations with the People's Republic of China. 
However, the content of Ma's woodenly delivered speech served to 
deepen concerns that his presidency and the restored KMT 'complete 
governance' will not lead Taiwan to 'open our arms to the future' 
but drag our hard-won democracy back into the past. ... 
 
"Ma's failure to reaffirm the right of the Taiwan people to decide 
their own destiny is therefore a fundamental negation of the Taiwan 
democracy which he praised at the end of his speech.  Another aspect 
that was regretfully absent was any reference to how to safeguard 
Taiwan's national security, collective interests and the social 
security of our 23 million people in the process of promoting 
'reconciliation and co-prosperity' with the authoritarian PRC and 
the implicit authoritarian position that such concerns should not be 
discussed or the dangerously naive assumption that security problems 
did not even exist in Taiwan-PRC relations. ... 
 
"Ma's call for a 'truce' between Taipei and Beijing is an exercise 
in wishful thinking, as has been discussed on numerous occasions, 
but the more serious aspect is the new president's evident intent to 
exaggerate his electoral victory into a blank check to adopt a 
'China-centric' ideology and as a mandate to enter into a 
'co-prosperity' sphere with the unstable and inequitable PRC 
economy.  By unfairly completely negating the record of the DPP 
government, the KMT leader lost an opportunity to demonstrate a 
statesman-like rationality and pragmatic tolerance through offering 
a more balanced evaluation of the DPP's experience and instead 
delivered a ringing insult to the opposition party and to the 5.44 
million people who cast their ballots for Hsieh on March 22. ..." 
 
D) "Ma's Strategic Thinking of Befriending the United States to 
Counterbalance China" 
 
Journalist Lin Ting-yao noted in an analysis in the centrist, 
KMT-leaning "China Times" [circulation: 400,000] (5/21): 
 
"Judging both from the contents of Ma Ying-jeou's inaugural speech 
on May 20 and his itinerary that day for receiving foreign VIPs, 
they all manifested a special signal:  Namely, the Ma administration 
paid more and unusual attention to its ally, the United States, than 
to the goodwill gesture it extended to Beijing. ...  If one wants to 
interpret Ma's inaugural speech precisely, one needs to scrutinize 
the cross-Strait relations under the light of international 
situation.  Ma started out [his elaborations on the cross-Strait 
relations] from his insistence on what is best for Taiwan and for 
its people, and he is aiming at the global market, not just the 
Chinese market, to which he will eventually open Taiwan. ... 
 
"At the current stage, it is Ma who is making all the moves, 
dictating the cross-Strait issues and awaiting Beijing's responses. 
But the hidden concern is, as a Chinese scholar specializing in 
Taiwan affairs indicated, that 'this is creating a difficult problem 
for Beijing.  Now, in order to enlarge Taiwan's elbow room in the 
international community, Ma has again tossed off [the idea of] 
'reconciliation and truce' to Beijing.  Unlike the DPP's order in 
calling for 'dignity, security, and prosperity' [for Taiwan], Ma 
adjusted it and said [Taiwan] wants 'security, prosperity and also 
dignity.'  His re-assertion of [Taiwan's] dignity will surely create 
another headache for the other side of the Taiwan Strait.  The fact 
that Ma took the international strategic high ground to 
counterbalance China's military and economic strength by befriending 
the United States deserved affirmation.  But Beijing definitely will 
see [Ma's intention] and as a result, even though Ma has assumed 
presidency, it remains to be seen as to whether spring will arrive 
for cross-Strait relations." 
 
E) "The New Birth of Taiwan Is Established on the Rebirth of the 
Republic of China" 
 
The pro-unification "United Daily News" [circulation: 400,000] 
editorialized (5/21): 
 
"... [Taiwan's] President Ma Ying-jeou and [Chinese] President Hu 
Jintao both used the term 'historical opportunity' to describe the 
current time and circumstances that both sides across the Strait are 
in.  Both [Ma and Hu] should have known clearly that, as [this 
article] described above, this presidential election [in Taiwan held 
in March] is as good as letting Taiwan's voters save the Republic of 
China from the hand of [former Taiwan President] Chen Shui-bian, who 
cursed that 'the Republic of China' has died.  Therefore, it will 
only be when Ma is able to create 'the regeneration of the Republic 
of China' in the future and Hu respects 'the 1992 consensus, one 
China with respective interpretations' that the Taiwan voters 
standing in front of ballot boxes will be willing to support the 
political identification and cross-Strait policy of the Republic of 
China.  If 'the Republic of China' cannot be maintained, 
cross-Strait relations will be difficult to maintain as well.  If 
both authorities across the Strait have this recognition, then they 
will know that the two slogans in the end of Ma's speech yesterday, 
which Ma said 'long live Taiwan's democracy and long live the 
Republic of China!' might echo with each other.  In fact, a normal 
relationship between both sides across the Strait has to be built 
upon a normal relationship between 'Taiwan's democracy' and 'the 
Republic of China.'  When 'the Republic of China' loses the support 
of 'Taiwan's democracy', cross-Strait relations will definitely go 
off.  This is a difficult problem for Ma, and a realization Hu 
should have. ..." 
 
F) "Ma Breathes a New Life into Taiwan" 
 
The conservative, pro-unification, English-language "China Post" 
[circulation: 30,000] editorialized (5/21): 
 
"... With Ma at the helm of the state, Taiwan ceases to be a 
flashpoint of the world.  Ma isn't a trouble-maker like President 
Chen, who provoked China with his brinksmanship by pushing for 
Taiwan independence to win elections for the Democratic Progressive 
Party.  Mutual trust between Taipei and Washington may be 
re-established with the change of government.  Relations between 
Taiwan and China are expected to improve after Ma begins calling the 
shots in Taipei.  For starters, he called on Chinese President Hu 
Jintao to resume dialogue between Taipei and Beijing on the basis of 
the consensus of 1992, under which both acknowledge there is but one 
China, whose connotation can be orally and individually expressed. 
... 
 
"With his inauguration, President Ma will be able to rally all the 
people of Taiwan behind him to usher in a new era of prosperity. 
Taiwan brought an economic miracle of the Twentieth Century.  There 
is no reason why the people with their 'Taiwan spirit' can't work 
hard together under him to rewrite a new page in history.  The way 
to prosperity isn't strewn with roses.  Plenty of obstacles lie 
ahead.  They can be removed if the people, who have a new unity of 
purpose, join hands to get things done.  Ma is working to get that 
unity of purpose.  People have faith in him.  He has inspired them 
to work for a better future, not just for Taiwan but for the other 
side of the Strait as well." 
 
YOUNG