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Sunday, July 18, 2010

KMT-CCP United Front Tactics

I can't resist repeating this story because it is so incredibly outrageous especially given what I heard today. US authorities moved on two Chen Shui-bian family properties in the US. US officials said:
Homeland Security Director for Immigration and Customs Enforcement John Morton said the complaints reflect the US’ determination not to allow itself to be abused by corrupt foreign officials.

“This serves as a warning to those ... officials who abuse their power for personal financial gain and then attempt to place those funds in the US financial system,” he said.
Meanwhile this week Bloomberg reported that Wachovia Bank laundered $380 billion in drug money and received.... a $160 million fine. Oh, and they had to promise never never never to do it again. As Alternet points out, if you were actually busted selling Mexican drugs on the street, you'd go to jail for many years (and have your assets seized). But laundering Mexican drug cash? No problemo! I'm sure we're all safer now that Chen Shui-bian's family had two homes seized, and those Mexican drug cartels, duly warned, are running for cover.

Running around the net this week is Ben Goren's A Very Regional Leader, hilarious comedic send up of the President's policies. Looking forward to more. You'll need some comic relief for the next couple of news items....

The Ma Administration's curtailment of Taiwan's ability to engage in independent action on its own behalf continues... Today's Taipei Times reports a couple of terrifying developments. First, that Chinese tourist who "wandered" into a sensitive area was probably a spy looking at Taiwan's cyberwarfare center.
A former government official who handled intelligence matters under the former Democratic Progressive Party administration told the Taipei Times earlier this week that the Ma case was far more alarming than it first appeared and hinted that political intervention may have played a role in the decision not to charge him.

The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that aside from the off-limit computer warfare command area, which falls under the Ministry of National Defense, the area also houses the government’s Information and Communication Security Technology (ICST) center, a little-known unit under the Executive Yuan’s Research, Development and Evaluation Commission that plays a crucial coordination role in ensuring information security for all government agencies. In the government hierarchy, the ICST ranks above the ministry’s computer warfare center.
I blogged a couple of posts below about the quiet importance of the RDEC; here's a good example -- the government's cybersecurity program is conducted under its aegis. Somehow this tourist accidentally stumbled into a sensitive area that contained this program. The TT report goes on to say:
The Chinese-language Liberty Times (the Taipei Times’ sister newspaper) in February last year reported that the National Security Council may have ordered the National Security Bureau to cease recruitment of agents to work inside China.

A drawdown in human intelligence in China and a deprioritization of China as a counterintelligence target would make it even more difficult for Taiwanese agencies to determine what information Chinese spies are looking for and what has been compromised, the source said.

The former official suggested that in its efforts to foster closer relations with Beijing, the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) government may not only have imposed further restrictions on espionage against China, but could also have downplayed the Ma incident.

Asked if Ma [the spy, not the Regional Administrator -- MT] knew what he was looking for on May 25 — in other words, if he knew of, or had been directed to ascertain, the location of the ICST center — the source said it was “very probable.”
Of course,a spy swap would be understandable. Even a quiet repatriation would be acceptable, if the government in Taipei could be trusted to guard the island's interests. But in the context of other moves, it gives every appearance of being just more service to Beijing.

Speaking of serving Beijing, it turns out that another Uighur activist won't be able to get a visa to come to Taiwan:
After exiled World Uyghur Congress president Rebiya Kadeer was denied entry into Taiwan last year, another Uighur activist yesterday said he would not be able to make a scheduled trip to Taiwan because the Taiwanese office in Washington was still reviewing his visa application. World Uyghur Congress vice president Omer Kanat was supposed to accompany Kadeer's daughter, Raela Tosh, to Taiwan to attend screenings of The 10 Conditions of Love, following the official release of the movie on DVD in Taiwan last month.

Guts United Taiwan (GUT), which is hosting the screenings of the film on Kadeer, was originally planning to invite the US-based exiled leader, but learned recently that after being denied entry into Taiwan last year, the Taipei government had placed her on a three-year blacklist.
It is shameful that Taiwan blacklists Kadeer, but let's recall that not only is it allied to the CCP, but the KMT government actually claims East Turkestan for "China". The KMT has a long history of working with the CCP against local activism on issues of independence for the more recently colonized territories. GUT leader and Chthonic star Freddy Lim said it best:
“It's ironic that officials from China can come to Taiwan any time, while human rights advocates from other countries like Kadeer and Kanat are banned from coming to Taiwan,” he added.
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8 comments:

  1. Laundering billions does not mean you made billions. They probably made a small percent if that. Thus the fine is huge.

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  2. Readers should recall that blacklisting is one of the tactics used by the Chinese Nationalist Party's (KMT) during their White Terror.

    In other words, this is "your father's" Chinese KMT.

    Tim Maddog

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  3. They made something like $12 billion, and that's with our incredible system that gives them every break. Their real profit is even higher. $160 million is 1.3% of the profit. As a friend remarked, "I'm sure that will deter them, until monday."

    Meanwhile, if you or I had been caught with $15,000 in drug cash crossing the border, we'd have gone to jail and the cash would have been confiscated.

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  4. Michael, thanks for answering my e-mail the other day. Following the link in your signature this is the first time I've seen your blog. (Good stuff!)

    As I'm in Shanghai at the moment, watching the way Taiwan is portrayed in the evening news is well... Sickening. Your blog is refreshing to say the least.

    Keep it coming.

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  5. From what I've read about Obama's visits with foreign dictators from Cuba to Venezuela to China to wherever, not to mention his speeches such as those on Iran, Obama is not a friend to political prisoners in any corner of the globe. I'm not suprised so much that the Obama administration is hostile rather than friendly toward Chen, rather I'm surpised they're even bothering.

    About a week ago I thought I had finally found some good in the Obama administration, that it might be turning a corner on Taiwan. Sadly it seems that hope was misplaced.

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  6. It's nice to know this blog is getting through to China. I wonder if any Chinese (other than government agents) are reading it.

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