Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Thursday, December 11, 2003
Chen Shui-bian's move benefits neither China nor US
Washington has finally come to recognize that Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian's push for independence benefits neither China nor the United States, mainland experts on cross-Straits ties said Wednesday.
Washington has finally come to recognize that Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian's push for independence benefits neither China nor the United States, mainland experts on cross-Straits ties said Wednesday.
While appreciating US President George W. Bush's blunt warning against Taipei's pro-independence moves, they urged the US Government to take more concrete steps to honour its commitment to the one-China policy.
Xu Shiquan, vice-chairman of the National Society of Taiwan Studies, described Chen as a "new troublemaker,'' adding that the United States should learn an important lesson from his lack of political credibility.
The Taiwan leader has been engaging in creeping separatist activities despite his earlier pledge not to press for independence during his four-year term, which ends next year.
This double-dealing has well demonstrated that Chen has been flirting with Washington while counting on its support for his political ambitions, according to Xu.
"It is high time that the US side knew the separatist forces led by Chen are just serving their own self-interests rather than the interests of Washington,'' the researcher told China Daily.
"If not checked, Chen's pursuit of Taiwan independence will end up impairing peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region and hurting US interests.''
Xu made the comments after President Bush sent a stern warning to Taipei on Tuesday not to take any action toward independence during his meeting with visiting Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao.
Washington "opposes any unilateral decision'' by either side of the Taiwan Straits "to change the status quo,'' Bush said when asked about a planned March 20 referendum on the island.
"And the comments and actions made by the leader of Taiwan indicate that he may be willing to make decisions unilaterally to change the status quo, which we oppose.''
His statement marked a delicate hardening of the usual US line that Washington does "not support'' independence moves by the island.
The planned "defensive referendum'' would allow the Taiwanese people to vote on whether they want to formally demand that the mainland remove hundreds of missiles aimed at the island.
But the plebiscite is widely considered by both Beijing and Washington a poll that could push Taiwan closer to independence.
Premier Wen accused Chen of planning the referendum as a cover to split the island from China.
But Chen sought to defend his plans for the planned vote yesterday, saying "the topic of the defensive referendum ballot is very simple, very concrete and very important''.
Li Jiaquan, a senior researcher with the Institute of Taiwan Studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said Chen's insistence on the referendum plan suggested his penchant for brinkmanship in dealing with cross-Straits relations.
Chen has been bent on staging provocative acts to challenge the mainland's bottom line in a bid to woo votes in next year's "presidential'' elections, he added.
"His political trick threatens to push the island and cross-Straits ties to a dangerous level,'' Li said.
The researcher went as far to urge Washington to stop selling arms to the island, which may become a wrong signal to the separatist forces and be interpreted as the US support for the island's pro-independence attempt.
Under the Taiwan Relations Act, the United States has been Taiwan's biggest supplier of sophisticated weapons.
Indeed, Chen, who is preoccupied with a military build-up, has never given up his dream of refusing reunification with the Chinese mainland through huge pileups of advanced weapons.
Since taking power in May 2000, Chen's pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party administration has spent US$12.5 billion on US arms, including fighter jets, Kidd-class destroyers and diesel submarines.