Sunday, April 06, 2008

Japanese Paper interviews Lee

The Daily Yomiuri hosts an interview with former President Lee Teng-hui.

Some observers of Japan-Taiwan affairs have been concerned that Ma, who swept to victory in last month's presidential election, could take the wind out of attempts to improve relations. Ma has previously taken a hard-line stance on the Senkaku Islands, which also are claimed by China and Taiwan.

But after a meeting with Lee last month, Ma seemed to be willing to take a more pragmatic tack with Tokyo.

"We discussed using his influence to help develop Japan-Taiwan ties. I'd like to continue receiving Mr. Lee's advice," said Ma, who will officially take office on May 20.

Observers suggested the meeting also indicated Lee was keen to act as a conduit between Ma and Japan.

Lee also spoke of his plan to make a sightseeing visit to Japan before the end of the year, which will include a trip following the path 17th-century haiku poet Matsuo Basho took during the early Edo period (1603-1867), as recounted in his work, "Oku no Hosomichi." Lee, a prominent Japanophile, said he plans to visit Niigata and Fukui prefectures, among other places.

March's presidential election, in which Ma, a former chairman of the Nationalist Party (Kuomintang), thumped ruling Democratic Progressive Party candidate Frank Hsieh to herald the second democratic change of government since the end of the war, epitomized the growing maturity of Taiwan's democracy, Lee said.

"The election showed the depth of our democracy. I expect the democracy that I built up over 12 years will grow stronger," he said.

However, he had some stinging words for the Democratic Progressive Party.

"The DPP's win in 2000 was a step forward for democracy, but what has happened in the eight years since? The people were fed up--they became disillusioned with the corruption-riddled DPP," Lee said.

The return to power of the KMT, which favors closer relations with China, has made some DPP members skittish over whether the new administration will lean more toward unification with the mainland. However, Lee believes the possibility of a union between Taipei and Beijing remains remote--at least in the near term.

"Taiwan is, to all intents and purposes, a single country. The China-Taiwan issue won't be resolved for quite some time," he said. "China has its hands full dealing with its own knotty internal problems, so the administration there doesn't have the wherewithal to focus on the Taiwan issue."

Lee praised Ma's plan to start direct flights between China and Taiwan and welcome Chinese tourists, saying these moves would improve Beijing-Taipei ties. But he was more skeptical of the incoming president's hopes for a peace accord with China.

"I doubt that will happen," Lee said.
And there was Lee not a month ago saying a Ma win might set democracy back twenty years.

6 comments:

skiingkow said...

.
.
.
All I can say is I lost a lot of respect for Lee in the last few months.

He's either a shameless opportunist or stupid.
.
.
.

Anonymous said...

Perhaps it was apt that the Classic TV channel was broadcasting "Casablanca" yesterday. This scene popped out at me in particular:

Strasser: You see, Captain, the situation is not as much under control as you believe.

Renault: My dear Major, we are trying to cooperate with your government, but we cannot regulate the feelings of our people.

Strasser: Captain Renault, are you entirely certain which side you're on?

Renault: I have no conviction, if that's what you mean. I blow with the wind, and the prevailing wind happens to be from Vichy.

Strasser: And if it should change?

Renault: Surely the Reich doesn't admit that possibility?

Anonymous said...

Correction, clarification department:

Actully, sir, this is not an article from the Daily Yomiuri, it is from the Daily Yomiuri's mother-ship parent newspaper, the 1 million circulation Japanese-language Yomiuri Shimbun and was written first in Japanese by Toshinao Ishii, the Yomiuri Shimbun Correspondent in Taipei, and then translated into English by some highly paid expat rewriters at the English-language PR vehicle the Yomiuri runs for foreign diplomats called the Daily Yomiuri. Please do correct when time allows.

It would be like saying something that appeared in the Liberty Times by a Liberty Times reporter was somehow published in the Taipei Times. The Daily Yomiuri is just a PR tool for the Yomiuri Shimbun. So for future archives of your blog, you should state "An article in the Yomiuri Shimbun, later translated into English for Daily Yomiuri readers...." in print and online.....

David
Bangkok Copee Editor (sic)

Unknown said...

You guys must not be following the primaries in America to be at all surprised by that. Hell, you know Taiwan's democracy is maturing when it's starting to hit America's level of cronyism, opportunism, and spin.

Democracy + politics = "oh I never REALLY meant he would bring on the apocalypse and that our country would go to hell, I now think he/she would be our best choice! and that is why i am supporting blah blah for president."

Anonymous said...

Hey Michael, were you in Taiwan during the SARS outbreak here?

Taiwan trying to become a member of the WHO is yet again becoming an issue, with Ma, already suffering from election amnesia doesn't remember how much he "loves Taiwan" criticized the government for using the name Taiwan and advocates using Chinese Taipei instead.

But anyways, what I'm thinking is this--with increased transportation links with China, there is opportunity for economic growth in certain industries (as well as the accelerated hollowing out of others), but what if another SARS or avian flu breaks out and makes its way to Taiwan because of direct flights? What if the WHO again, refuses to mark Taiwan SARS free because it considers Taiwan a part of China?

Wasn't all this just in 2002-2003? I don't even remember hearing anything about it during the presidential election with all that talk of direct flights and common market. I don't know, I wasn't in Taiwan way back then, but would like to see if you have any comments on this issue especially any recollection of when SARS was in Taiwan.

Anonymous said...

Lee is getting old. Yet, he still has considerable sway in some circles.

I am glad to see interest in a Japan connection with Taiwan. I hope Lee can play a positive role in that effort.

I don't agree with some of your blog commenter's comments about his character. He is above all a politician.