Friday, July 20, 2012

Taiwanese Independence Senkaku Nuttiness

A commentary in the Taipei Times reminds that there are quite a few pro-independence types who think Taiwan owns the Senkaku Islands (called Diaoyutai by the Chinese).
China’s sovereignty claims often refer back to the Ming Dynasty and records of a mission to the Liuqiu (Ryukyu) Islands, something that of course cannot be used by Taiwan today.

Japan’s sovereignty claims, on the other hand, often refer to a Cabinet resolution from January 1895 allowing the governor of Okinawa Prefecture to stake a claim to the islands. Even more important, in 1972, the US finally returned the Diaoyutais and the Ryukyu Islands to Japan. After that, Taiwan’s claims can only be based on geographical factors such as the continental shelf and the Ryukyu Trench.

In short, the Diaoyutais discussion is still too weak from a Taiwanese sovereignty perspective and must be further developed. During the Japanese colonial era, Taiwan belonged to Japan, but what sense would it make to say that the Diaoyutais at that time were made part of Yilan County? If, after World War II, Taiwan belonged to China, then it equally makes no sense to say that the Diaoyutais belong to Taiwan.

Only by first creating an independent Taiwan will we have a foundation on which to join this dispute.
There can be no Taiwan claim to the Senkakus. There has never been an independent Taiwanese state that owned them. Any claim based on administration by the Qing dynasty -- the Qing owned it, so Taiwan owned -- implicitly recognizes that Qing sovereignty = modern sovereignty, which means that China owns Taiwan. TIers are going to have to become sane on the Senkakus, especially since Taiwan will need Japan's support if it wants to become independent.

This kind of thinking shows that....
  1. Locals understand that in Chinese nationalist minds the claim to the Senkakus and to Okinawa are intermingled. See Ma Ying-jeou, arch-nationalist, on the issue.
  2. This clever little poison pill of the claim to the Senkakus shows how intermingling "Taiwan" and "the ROC" drags Taiwan into territorial issues is always to Taiwan's detriment
  3. It also shows how much the DPP and other pro-Taiwan parties need to educate their people. 
  4. In the end, Taiwan cannot win -- either Japan will retain the Senkakus or China will annex them, but either way Taipei can do nothing. If Beijing wins what will Taiwan do? Demand the return of the Senkakus from new Imperial state?
  5. Another sad example of the way in which the rhetorical stances and behavior of Chinese Nationalists are mimicked by their opponents even when the specific claims of Chinese nationalism are being denied.
As I've noted before, an important function of the Senkakus from the PRC standpoint is that they constitute an irritant that prevents smooth Taiwan-Japan relations. TIers need to stop acting like Beijingers and claiming the territories of other nations. This hurts Taiwan independence and helps Beijing.

MEDIA: Speaking of the islands, Far Eastern Sweet Potato rips a poll claiming that majority in Taiwan and China want cooperation on Senkaku issue.
Before Taiwan sets sail for the contested islets and claims its rightful property, let’s take a closer look at the numbers and what they really say. And prior to that, it would be useful to pause for a second and restate a few caveats: The China Times is owned by the Want Want China Times Group, whose chairman — Taiwan’s wealthiest person — Tsai Eng-meng (蔡衍明), made his fortune in China and is a known supporter of Beijing. For its part, the Global Times is affiliated with the Chinese Communist Party and has a long tradition of publishing highly nationalistic, and oftentimes militaristic, propaganda. It cannot be trusted to honestly handle an opinion poll.
Now just google to find of the completely irresponsible and unethical international media stenographic organizations that passed along that poll without warning readers of its background -- it actually should not have been passed along by any news organization. Thanks guys! As long as you simply pass this crap undigested through your system, we bloggers will always be in business.
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Thursday, July 19, 2012

KMT slides further into the maw of the Lin scandal

Temple Lanterns in Taitung City.

Heh. The Lin Yi-shih scandal took a dramatic turn last week and again this week, moving closer to Vice President Wu Dun-yi. A friend passed around this China Times piece from today in which a local political associate of Wu's admitted he got NT$10 million from Chen Chi-hsiang, the same businessman who allegedly bribed Lin Yi-shih, the now-disgraced former Sec-Gen of the Cabinet who resigned after revelations of the scandal. The Taipei Times recapped:
Speculations about the vice president’s involvement in the case first surfaced last week when political commentator Hu Chung-hsin (胡忠信) said a high-ranking government official was also involved in the corruption scandal, claiming that “Mr X” introduced Chen to Lin and implying that Mr X was Wu Den-yih.

......

Following accusations that Wu introduced businessman Chen Chi-hsiang (陳啟祥) to Lin, who allegedly accepted NT$63 million (US$2.15 million) from Chen to help secure contracts with China Steel Corp (中鋼) and its subsidiaries, the Chinese-language Next Magazine yesterday claimed Wu’s wife, Tsai Ling-yi (蔡令怡), had made a phone call to a family friend, Wu Men-chung (吳門忠), to complain about their relationship being exposed by the magazine.

Wu Men-chung, a major votes broker for the vice president in his Nantou County hometown, is the father of Chen’s girlfriend’s daughter-in-law.

The magazine claimed that when Wu Den-yih denied having a relationship with Chen last week, Tsai made a call to Wu Men-chung on the same day and said he should have told Wu Den-yih about his family’s relationship with Chen’s girlfriend, Cheng Tsai-mei (程彩梅), before the magazine picked up the story, prompting Wu Men-chung to publicly clarify the issue.

The magazine also claimed that Wu Men-chung’s wife had accepted NT$10 million from Chen.
More revelations are due out on this one, I predict. Ma is taking a double whammy -- in addition to this mess, which will likely drag on for some time, the economy is tanking... The Academia Sinica slashed this year's growth forecast to just 1.94%. Foreign economic analysts have been taking pessimistic views on Taiwan's growth possibilities this year as well, especially with China entering a slowdown, Europe still a mess, and American politicians apparently uninterested in the future economic health of the nation. Ma's claims that Taiwan had to have ECFA in order to get the FTAs that will prevent economic isolation have been undercut by events -- trade with ASEAN is growing, trade with China is shrinking, and Taiwan has experienced no broad benefits from ECFA. What will he turn to next?

It will also be interesting to see how the DPP handles this scandal. Too bad there are no major elections coming up soon....
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Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Hanging....

Photo12
Hanging out in the Rift Valley this week. No posts for a while yet....
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Stay tuned...and some links

Traveling this week.... enjoy some links.

EBAY FUN: A longtime reader alerted me (thanks!!) to this collection on ebay of stuff that purports to be war loot:

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Saturday, July 14, 2012

Peace adrift off China, sinking rapidly

J Michael Cole has another superb piece in The Diplomat, this one on the China-Taiwan-Japan confrontation over the Senkaku Islands, arguing that the conflict is rapidly becoming militarized.....
Without any of the underlying causes of the conflict having been resolved, the two principal claimants, Japan and China, seem to have concluded that the time has come to move beyond political rhetoric and to take action, something hardliners on both sides have been requesting for years. (Although a claimant, Taiwan’s role remains marginal and relatively non-threatening to Japan and China; Taipei has also made it clear, despite claims in Chinese media, that it will not side with China in the dispute. One reason is that military-to-military relations between Taipei and Tokyo, though not publicized, remain stable, and both sides have no interest in seeing that changed.)

Negotiations and half-hearted attempts to set aside political disputes and jointly develop the area, with its large, albeit unproven, oil and natural gas reserves, having stalled, we are now witnessing a rapid militarization of the conflict, which could have serious implications for regional security.

To many observers, the road to the military phase of the Senkaku/Diaoyutai dispute was akin watching a train wreck in the making: everybody knows this will end in disaster, and yet no one does anything to fix the tracks while it is still possible to do so. As the diplomacy phase died tortuously from broken promises, neglect, conflicting legal interpretations, and flare-ups of nationalism on both sides, mistrust and resentment grew. This was accompanied by increments in the military capabilities both sides were willing to dispatch to the area to protect their interests. Consequently, fishing boats navigated by self-made patriots were replaced by coast guard and maritime security vessels and surveillance aircraft, not only adding firepower to the mix, but also bringing the antagonists within greater proximity of each other, thus increasing the likelihood of accident.
As readers know, this blog has been saying for several years now that the Senkakus are a major flashpoint. Recall that not only are Tokyo and Beijing snarling at each other, but the US has a mutual defense treaty with Tokyo and it considers the Senkakus to be Japanese for the purposes of that treaty. It has backed that up by conducting military exercises in the islands. As I've noted many times, this means that the sellout Taiwan crowd can't solve the problem of the US getting dragged into a war in Asia by handing Taiwan over to Beijing Czechoslovakia-style, because in the north the US has a defense treaty with Japan and in the South China Sea dispute, the US is formally obligated to defend Philippines.

Half Moon Shoal

Speaking of the South China Sea mess, the issue took a dark turn this week as well as China gave itself a pie in the face. Fresh off the failure of ASEAN ministers to hammer out a deal to handle China's belligerence, the Chinese navy was forced to admit that one of its ships had run aground on Half-Moon Shoal.....
Given the disputes in the area and China's positions on those disputes, the presence of a naval vessel may itself be provocative. The Sydney Morning Herald reports: “The stranded People's Liberation Army Navy boat, believed to be No 560, a Jianghu class frigate, has in the past been involved in aggressively discouraging Filipino fishing boats from the area.”

China’s Embassy in the Philippines issued a statement on its website:

“Some local media friends asked the Chinese Embassy in the Philippines to confirm the news of a grounded Chinese Navy vessel at Half Moon Shoal in Nansha Islands. According to the information we got from the Information Department of the Ministry of National Defense of China, around 7pm of July 11, a frigate of Chinese Navy ran aground accidentally at Half Moon Shoal of Nansha Isands during a routine patrol mission, with no personnel injured. Currently the rescue work by the Chinese Navy is underway.”

Half Moon Shoal, known in the Philippines as Hasahasa Shoal, is located just 65 nautical miles west from the island-municipality of Balabac in Palawan.

As The Diplomat and its contributors have reported, China’s claims in the area have been pursued through specifically non-military vessels. Trefor Moss notes in a recent piece that “Beijing has an intermediate option – an increasingly impressive array of not-so-hard power tools in the form of the country’s numerous civilian or paramilitary maritime law enforcement agencies.”
News reports had five Chinese ships working to free the stuck frigate. The incident was deeply embarrassing to China but more importantly shows how China regards its agreements with the nations around it. After the incident earlier this year with the two month long standoff at Scarborough Shoal, Beijing agreed in principle to a withdrawal of its ships though it did not commit to a date. The reality is that nothing has changed and Beijing's expansionist policies continue unchecked. Can Beijing be trusted to carry out its agreements in good faith? Hahaha. Why am I still asking questions like that?

So what will ASEAN's other member states do when they hammer out some kind of agreement with China about how the dispute will be handled and China ignores it immediately?

People like to argue that the various protagonists in the story of Chinese expansion in the 20th and 21st centuries do not want war and thus will avoid it. I'd like to point out that avoiding war in East Asia as a consequence of Chinese expansion means multiple outbreaks of sanity: war is avoided over the Senkakus, the South China Sea claims (involving multiple countries) and Taiwan, among others. The odds of multiple successes are....?

After learning last week that the ROC still stands strong on its hopeless claim to the Senkaku Islands, President Ma offered one of those silly moments that the Senkaku mess seems to bring out in the ROCers who advocate it -- like that fellow from Taiwan a couple of weeks ago who waved a PRC flag in the islands.  In this case President Ma listened benevolently as the crew of the Free China, possibly the oldest Chinese junk still in existence, claimed they actually stopped in the Senkakus on their way across the Pacific 57 years ago....
The century-old junk “Free China” (自由中國號), became 57 years ago the first traditional Chinese wooden sailing vessel in Chinese history to cross the Pacific Ocean, powered only by wind and muscle, a Taiwan-US success story. Yesterday six members of the crew of “Free China” talked with President Ma Ying-jeou and recounted that they had landed on the Diaoyutai Islands.

...............

President Ma pointed out that the Ching Dynasty navy stationed on Taiwan had once sailed to the Diaoyutai Islands, recording that there was a mountain they named Diaoyutai, and that the island could berth a dozen or so boats. President Ma went on to say that the annals of the Kavalan prefecture also carried the same record. President Ma stated that when the Ming and Ching Dynasties sent special emissaries to confer the royal title on Okinawa kings about thirty or forty times, they had all sailed from Fuzhou, Fujian Province, passing by the Diaoyutai Islands to Okinawa because this course was the shortest distance with fair winds and sea currents, so “Free China” also sailed by the Diaoyutai Islands.
The last time Ma gave that talk, he pointed out that Okinawa also belonged to China based on this same information. Clearly, since the junk put in at the Senkakus on its way across the Pacific, it must mean that the Senkakus have belonged to China for every picosecond of the last 5,000 years.

The junk story itself is actually quite intriguing. One site observes:
The Free China is an authentic cargo vessel built in Fujian Province, China at around the turn of the century. It’s colorful past included ferrying salted fish and smuggling contraband. It has survived to be perhaps the oldest Chinese wooden sailing vessel in existence, and a living historical treasure.

 As originally constructed, the 80-foot Free China was representative of Chinese working vessels, and characterized by a flat bottom, decorative oval stern and square bow, turret-built hull design, two masts and long sheer lines with prominent wales. The Free China resembles a smaller version of the Fujian-style coastal merchant, the pole junk. The junk featured ten interior watertight bulkheads and compartments. In its original condition, the Free China did not include an engine, shroud or stays, or modern rudder.

Few drawings and photographs exist of technical details of Chinese ship construction. For many observers, junks are among the most mysterious vessels to have sailed the open seas, according to maritime historian and archeologist Hans Van Tilburg. The Free China is a “historic survivor” worth studying as a specific technical example of a historical ship type and cultural artifact, as well as the historical circumstances of its transpacific voyage.
Another notes:
Constructed in Mawei, Fujian province, China in 1890, Free China is the only existing wooden Chinese junk that has ever successfully completed a trans-Pacific voyage under its own sail-power. Originally named Keelung after Keelung Harbor, located in the northern tip of Taiwan, it was renamed Free China in order to participate in the international yacht race on June 11, 1955. Measuring around 82-feet in length, Free China is over a century old and is the only recorded Chinese wooden junk to have sailed across the Pacific Ocean.

.....

In 1955, hostilities between the Communist and the Nationalist governments were still raging across the Taiwan Strait. Taiwanese citizens could not easily apply for a passport to go abroad, but Taiwan’s government gave permission for the five young men, none of whom knew how to sail, to leave the country and cross the Pacific on the Free China. The United Evening News reported that Lung Yingtai, minister of the Council for Cultural Affairs (CCA), pointed out that the departure of the Free China was permitted as a special case by the government of Chiang Kai-shek to create a sense of “breaking through the isolation in pursuit of freedom” in the international community.
Cool, eh? Unfortunately the claim in the KMT paper that the Free China is the only junk to have ever crossed the Pacific is garbled and incorrect; the claim in the bottom link is correct -- it is the only existing junk to have crossed the Pacific. There are numerous previous instances of junks transiting the Pacific. For example, according to Needham (Sci and Civ, Vol IV, page 485), a junk arrived in the UK in 1848 after successfully crossing both the Atlantic and the Pacific.
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More FTV with Michella

Visiting Ruifang and Jiufen in Chinese..... (FTV website)
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Haha

A clever bilingual pun.
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Friday, July 13, 2012

South Losing Faith in the KMT? Again?


Haha. The pro-pan-Green Taipei Times hopefully reports:
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) heavyweights and members of the party’s Central Standing Committee have warned that the party’s southern support base has crashed through the floor and that the party could be on the verge of fragmenting.

According to a source within the KMT, President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) has grown even more distant from party bigwigs since the presidential election in January and has had little, if any, interaction with them.
I must be getting old, because I can recall many reports like this. From 2006:
Disappointed by the recent party split over constitutional amendments, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Vice Chairman Wu Poh-hsiung (吳伯雄) yesterday lectured KMT Chairman Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) for his "ineffective communication" with party legislators, and urged him to handle relationships with senior party members with more delicacy.
Yep, heard this tune before, again in April of 2007:
Ma has faced continuous speculation that his relationships with former chairman Lien Chan (連戰) and Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (王金平), as well as People First Party Chairman James Soong (宋楚瑜) are problematic. His dependence on the opinions of the so-called "Ma troop," which refers to the chairman's top aides and followers, including Taipei Deputy Mayor King Pu-tsung (金溥聰), KMT Legislator Wu Yu-sheng (吳育昇) and Lai Shyh-bao (賴士葆), have sparked resentment among some party members.
The themes of these reports are all very similar -- KMT heavyweights bickering amongst themselves, Ma himself aloof and disconnected and not supported by other elites, the southerners who form the Taiwanese KMT just about ready to bolt... for example, from 2009:
Growing resentment for the caucus' hawkish faction -- dubbed the "Ma troop" -- has prompted some party legislators from the south of Taiwan, led by Hsu Shu-bo (許舒博), to hold their own forum on Monday.
..or this one on the legislative election from Nov of 2011. This tension between the KMT's faction politicians/legislators and its mainlander elite core, as well as between the northerners and southerners, is a structural feature of the KMT's internal politics. Ma's leadership style, widely reputed to be un-deft, simply exposes it whenever his public support plummets or when the KMT hits a rough patch, as it has with the Lin Yi-shih scandal. The South is not losing faith in the KMT, at least not due to these transient events, and this too shall blow over.... only to surface again...
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Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Worried about invisible cutthroats?

IMG_3464
Since I started using this spray, no invisible cutthroats have attacked me.

Too tired to blog today, but you can enjoy this pic.....

But read this excellent analysis of the decline in US-Taiwan relations as China rises.
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Sunday, July 08, 2012

Matsu Votes for Casinos

A 200mm telephoto is great for portraits. She was shy and wouldn't face the camera.

“Honestly, I don’t believe that the future casino operator would be able to give us the NT$80,000 per month subsidy, I don’t even care if the casino goes out of business in a few years,” she said. “When the casino closes, the bridge and the airport that they built would still be around, right?” -- Woman quoted in Taipei Times

The Taipei Times reports:
According to final figures announced by the Lienchiang County Government, 56 percent voted in favor of the initiative, against 42 percent who opposed it. A total of 3,162 of 7,762 eligible voters cast ballots, for a voter turnout of 40.7 percent. Among those who voted, 1,795 supported the casino plan, while 1,341 were against it. There were 28 invalid ballots.
Turnout of 40%... the legislature had changed the referendum law for gambling for the previous referendum on gambling in the Penghu. The law had previously required that 50% of the electorate had to vote on a referendum to make it valid. After held two votes on referenda for gambling, perhaps it will become more difficult for the KMT gov't to avoid a referendum if it attempts to annex the island to China in some meaningful way. Despite the alleged importance of the vote to the island's economy, 60% of the electorate of this totally pro-KMT island couldn't be bothered to come out and vote, likely because it was inevitable that it would win.

The developer made all sorts of promises: an international airport (which must be built if the casino is going to operate), a college town, a causeway linking the two islands in the area, and buckets of money, $18,000 a month after the first year (basically minimum wage) rising to $80,000 a month in the fifth year if profits reach a certain level.  A legislator pointed out in the Taipei Times piece that things might not be so easy:
“Before a casino resort can be built, the legislature first needs to pass the proposed Gambling Act [博奕法],” he said. “Besides, most of the land in Matsu is either government or military property. Some is even restricted military zones — so there is a long and complicated administrative procedure to go through.”

He also questioned Weidner Resorts Taiwan’s willingness to make such a huge investment to improve or build transportation and tourism facilities in Matsu.

“I’m personally opposed to the casino plan, but I respect the opinion of the majority,” Chen said.
I think the history of developmentalist state projects in Taiwan suggests three things (1) the KMT-controlled legislature will pass the gambling law; (2) the developer is going to renege on most of the promises except the airport; and (3) if the developer wants to build on government land, they will just go ahead and do it and worry about the permits later if ever -- the usual practice for developers in Taiwan. That will not be so easy for military land.... however, I don't think that any great casino development will ever occur on Matsu, because....

Reuters reported:
Analysts say a casino in Matsu would have minimal impact on gambling revenues in Macau which is located on China's southern coast. It is also not clear how easy it would be for Chinese citizens to get visas to travel to the Taiwanese islands.

"Five percent of overall visitation to Macau is from Taiwan, and Matsu is less conveniently located from Taipei than Macau," Macau and Las Vegas-based Union Gaming said in a note.

Weidner Resorts Taiwan, a company run by former Las Vegas Sands executive Bill Weidner, has unveiled plans to build a casino resort that includes luxury hotels, professional sports venues and convention halls.
"Professional sports venues"?? On Matsu?

The putative casinos are obviously aimed at punters from neighboring Fujian province in China, not Taiwanese.....

In my previous post on this topic I collected the following information.....
The AmCham article notes that infrastructure on Matsu is primitive and bad weather often shuts down transportation, making it the less preferable of the two islands. It seems intuitively obvious that a referendum for Kinmen is in the cards at some point.
This suggests also that this whole Matsu casino thing is vapor and no casinos are ever going to appear on the island -- the real point is to have the referendum in a place where it can't lose, get the necessary gambling laws passed, and then put pressure on Kinmen to allow casino gambling.

The AmCham article also makes the comical claim that casinos in Taiwan can be kept free of gangsterism. Kinda like the way professional baseball in Taiwan is, eh? I also observed that those casinos are covered under the offshore islands act, which frees businesses on the island of taxation. Meaning that those casinos will pay no taxes to the government, as far as I can see. Does anyone know different?

UPDATE: Comments are great.

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In Jiji with FTV: Chinese version

...and for your edification and enjoyment, on the road with Michella and FTV in Jiji, this version in Chinese.
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Saturday, July 07, 2012

Enjoy a few links

Taking my new Tamron 18-200 out for a test drive

Just too busy at the moment....
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With FTV in Jiji, Nantou

Ok, here's the Jiji segment of my travels with FTV two weeks ago (pix).
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Friday, July 06, 2012

Paul Sharpe Circumnavigates Taiwan: 15 days of blog posts

julyrandom__9
I thought I'd blog on this separately because it's truly great. Paul Sharpe's 15 day ride around the island has been followed by many people. His final overview post, with links to each of his posts on the ride, is now up. Advice, pics, links, and reminisces. Go thou and enjoy!
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Foreign Relations Irritant Watch =UPDATED X 2=

Waiting for the bus in Hoping Village in the hills north of Dongshih.

Will the ractobeef irritant in Taiwan-US relations soon pass into history? The Codex Alimentarius Commission surprisingly voted to establish minimum residue levels for ractopamine in meat.
Last night, the Executive Yuan learned that the draft MRLs proposed by the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA), which serves as a scientific advisory body to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, the WHO and the Codex Alimentarius Commission — the international food standards body — were ratified at the 35th Codex Alimentarius Commission meeting in Rome this week.

In 2004, the JECFA recommended MRLs of ractopamine of 10 parts per billion (ppb) in muscle and fatty tissues, 40ppb in livers and 90ppb in kidneys of cattle and pigs.

The government learned that the US called for a vote on the adoption, deviating from normal practice, in which food-safety standards are decided by consensus.
Opposition parties, including the DPP, had been calling for the government to wait on the decision of the CAC. Now everyone has the face-saving decision they need to change their positions. What new irritant will be manufactured for US-Taiwan relations? No need, for as an analysis article in the TT notes:
Several Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) lawmakers have privately expressed their reluctance to vote on the amendment and are hoping that in the wake of his falling poll figures Ma will now change his mind about pushing it through the legislature, Chen said.

In addition, Ma’s low approval ratings mean that he lacks the necessary popular mandate relax the ban on ractopamine by an executive order, Chen added.
Yes, if Ma too politically weak to issue an executive order, and the KMT is too shell-shocked by the Lin scandal to move on the ractobeef issue. What a coincidence that, once again, nothing can be done for another long while. UPDATE: EU slams this decision. In my crystal ball I see more delay and deferral.

Meanwhile, new drama unfolds in the Senkakus, where "activists" from "Taiwan" are out there staking a claim to the islands. The TT says:
Members of the Coast Guard Administration (CGA) said they did not see the Chinese flag during a controversial visit to the Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台) on Wednesday by members of the Chunghua Baodiao Alliance.

The alliance’s executive director, Huang Hsi-lin (黃錫麟), and others on Wednesday set sail for the Diaoyutai Islands in an effort to draw attention to Taiwan’s claim of sovereignty over the archipelago, but allegedly brought along the national flag of China.
First you have to shuffle through the mixed up reportage -- the Senkaku Islands mess does not stem from World War II claims as the TT wrongly reports -- Chinese and ROC maps and texts confirm the Senkakus as uncontroversially Japanese until about 1970 -- but from the potential for oil announced for the area in the late 1960s, and it is the ROC, not "Taiwan" that claims the islands. One would expect that the pro-Taiwan paper would clarify these claims, especially since conflating the ROC with Taiwan is a prime goal of KMT political indoctrination tactics.

Just to make sure this particular burr under the Japanese saddle was properly sharp, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Taipei then re-iterated "Taiwan's" claim to the Senkakus and ignored Japanese protests.
Taipei, July 4 (CNA) The Ministry of Foreign Affairs reiterated Taiwan's sovereignty over the disputed Tiaoyutai Islands Wednesday amid reports that Japanese authorities demanded that a Taiwanese boat leave waters around the islands in the East China Sea.

"Taiwan has refused to accept a protest lodged by Japan over the incident," Steve Hsia, deputy director-general of the ministry's Department of Information and Cultural Affairs, said in a telephone interview Wednesday morning.

Hsia confirmed that a Taiwanese boat was operating near the Tiaoyutais, which he described as an "inherent" part of Taiwan.
Note the use of the term "Taiwan" there, repeated to make sure that locals hear that the Senkakus are part of "Taiwan" instead of the "ROC". And note the deliberate insult to Japan. Just keepin' those irritants fresh and painful?

UPDATE: Phoenix TV has film of the PRC flag the Taiwan Coast Guard said it didn't see, as maddog points out. How could they have missed that, especially since the person who waved it convened a press conference to discuss his actions?
UPDATE II: Haha WSJ has the PRC flag wavers' tale of how he grabbed the wrong flag. Yeah right.
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