Saturday, May 24, 2008

Nelson Report on Ma Speech

The latest Nelson Report contains more insight on the Ma inaugural address. My comments in brackets:

+++++++++++++
TAIWAN...President Ma was inaugurated this week, an event witnessed by a large and varied US delegation, and his speech was much anticipated as an indicator of how he intends to pitch the political/diplomatic relationship with "the Mainland"...and with the US.

We note in the Summary our sense of the letter personally delivered to Ma by a representative of Obama, that it reflects a sophisticated understanding of the language and nuances required in the cross Strait relationship for all three players...Washington, Taipei, and Beijing.[MT: the neglect of Japan and other nations is not just a Ma problem. Japan is also a player here, potentially a big one. More on that in a moment.]

US-Taiwan relations under Ma's predecessor can best be described as "difficult", and as we reported at the time, they frequently sank to the level of toxic.

The net is that friends of Taiwan, regardless of their political persuasion, have every reason to be concerned that the loss of trust may have fundamentally altered the equation between Washington and Taipei.

Ma knows all of this, of course, and it will be interesting to see if his administration take advice suggesting a more sophisticated approach to making friends in Washington, one which includes a more serious focus on who is actually able to deliver help, and not just throw bombs.[MT: Haha. Washington is going to be very surprised when its love of Ma is returned with contempt.]

In any event, we asked a senior US observer for an informed reaction to President Ma's speech:

"The first task of any such speech is to do no harm. Don't make any big mistakes and don't offend anyone, for that can define the future. President Ma certainly fulfilled that goal.[MT: the "senior US observer" really missed one here. First, the Japanese were miffed that Ma didn't mention them. And second, Ma deeply offended his core aboriginal constituency with his comments on the "Chinese race," along with many on the pro-democracy side.][UPDATE: Max Hirsch at Kyodo has a great piece on the Japanese take on all this. A quote:
Despite reports last week that Ma would pledge to bolster ties with Japan and reiterate his support for the U.S.-Japan Security Alliance in the speech, he made no mention of Tokyo.

''Some Japanese delegation members were disappointed by the omission and aired complaints to President Ma,'' says a Japanese official on condition of anonymity.

Namely, delegation leader Takeo Hiranuma, who serves in Japan's powerful House of Representatives and leads a pro-Taiwan caucus, politely rapped Ma after the speech.

''If you are reelected in four years, I hope you'll clearly mention Japan in your next inaugural speech,'' Hiranuma told Ma, according to Taiwan's Government Information Office and the Japanese source. UPDATE: This is now revealed as a translator error -- Hiranuma merely asked him to make his next inaugural speech in Japanese.]
[Nelson Report continued]
One could take slight issue with some of his formulations about cross-Strait relations (sovereignty is an issue), but there were no medium or big mistakes at all.

At best, a speech should be very inspiring. It should reshape the mental outlook of the listener. Barack Obama's speeches come to mind, but Obama is a very high standard to reach. And there are other considerations.

Ma's speech, I am told, was written by a group. A group product is never completely satisfactory. Second, an inauguration speech has a different job from a campaign speech. Third, this speech came at the end of a long series of campaign speeches, so it's hard to be too much better.

There is, I am sure, a cultural dimension here. American listeners may expect more from their politicians as speakers than Taiwan audiences. The language that Ma used may be as satisfying for a Taiwan audiences as that Obama uses for an American one.

One potential task of an inaugural speech is to lay out a detailed program or detailed vision. Ma chose not to do that, and that is fine. It would be interesting to compare it in length to Lee Teng-hui's 1996 inaugural and CSB's two speeches. But after all the speeches and policy papers he had provided on a variety of subjects, the length was just right.

It certainly was right for the crowd, which had been waiting for a long time, listening to often deafening music.

An essential task of an inaugural speech is to reassure the various constituencies and stakeholders of a society. On the whole he did this very well. To the business community, he said, a KMT government will reshape economic policy to adapt to globalization (I hope he is truly serious on this).

To the international community: Taiwan will not be a trouble-maker. To the Taiwanese majority: in terms of my upbringing, I am as Taiwanese as you are and will not betray your interests.[MT: but Ma clearly said that sovereignty is not important, a gross betrayal of Taiwanese interests. And further, there is the problem of Ma's concept of "the nation" as a distinctly Chinese polity.]

I was particularly pleased that he began with his stress on making the Taiwan political system work better for Taiwan citizens. This is a crucial challenge and cannot be ignored.[MT: since the KMT is the chief architect of its problems, it is hard to see Ma making progress here.]

The section on cross-Strait relations wasn't particularly new, which is fine. There were two important elements. One was to make an appeal for improving cross-Strait relations by referring to Hu Jintao's own recent statements. That is probably appropriate because it will be Hu who will have to make the strategic choice to engage Ma.

The other is to talk about how the Republic of China and Taiwan have been intertwined. That is important because it is a reminder of the reality of the ROC and Beijing's need to face that reality at some time and in a way that is acceptable to the people of Taiwan."

A shorter, but also informed take on Ma's speech by an observer on the (now minority) DPP side of the discussion...let's listen to see how the new Opposition might approach the handling of issues like sovereignty in the coming months:

"I must say that on first reading I find Ma's speech interesting in three respects: first he mentions the relationship with the US in one short sentence, albeit with an emphasis on how the US is 'our foremost security ally and trading partner,' but then goes on at great length about the relationship with 'mainland' China.[MT: Yep. Ma placated the US but he identified with China. Can anyone guess which direction he's moving?]

I realize this is all traditional territory for the KMT, but it does strike my ears as overwhelmingly focused on the relationship with the 'mainland.

I was particularly struck by the sentence, 'In resolving cross-strait issues, what matters is not sovereignty but core values and way of life.'

Sovereignty doesn't matter in resolving cross-strait issues? A lot of people are going to ask, 'What, is he giving away the farm already?'

Second thing that I find interesting is the emphatic 'Chineseness' of the speech - the emphasis on the whole overseas Chinese community, Chinese values, the Chinese nation.

Apparently a KMT Legislator who is an aborigine walked out of the speech and held a news conference when Ma said in the Chinese text, but not the translation as given, that 'we are all Chinese people'."
+++++++++++

Affairs with China proceed apace -- Kyodo News is reporting that China and Taiwan plan to open representative offices in their respective capitals to facilitate the burgeoning exchanges. Bruce Stokes has a piece in the National Journal on policy changes associated with Ma. As a piece of analysis it is thoroughly conventional and not very useful -- it even repeats the "Harvard-trained lawyer" nonsense -- but it does provide some insight into the way that many US analysts view Ma. I'll be examining it in detail when I have time today or tomorrow.

12 comments:

Tommy said...

I would say that the assertion that Ma's speech pleased everyone is not surprising. It seems typical of US analysts to forget that their are any actors to please but themselves, the Chinese and the government in power in Taipei. How often do you see any analysis at all out of the US or the Western media that acknowledges the complexity of public opinions in Taiwan?

This report only refers to the opinions of "the majority" of the island without even mentioning that many in that majority that voted for Ma, such as that aboriginal legislator, might have reservations with what he said.

Anonymous said...

I watched one of the Taiwan TV stations play the clip of Max Hirsch asking his question. You could see Ma becoming flustered trying to answer. (stupid foreigner, what business is it of yours....) Anyway he just hemmed & hawed and mumbled some lame response.

BTW, the ChinaPost also had the Harvard trained lawyer b.s. on their front page. They should know better. The lead paragraph is also something that may come back and haunt them in a few years "....and the beginning of closer relations with the mainland and a better life for its 23 million people.

Let's see if the editor will have a better life when he gets shitcanned and a CCP Xinhua News mouthpiece gets put in his place. (and lets see if Chinese labors don't take over jobs here, and lets see if the RE market doesn't go ballistic, and fisherman and farmers don't get screwed, and engineers lose their jobs, and people start getting throw in jail for commenting on the gov, and Japanese businesses slowing get antagonized, and the auto industry gets decimated, and on and on.....)

Me thinks the 57% of the Taiwanese that support Ma are so blinded by Ma's halo that that can't see the freight train that is heading their way.

Anonymous said...

Is Ma so blinded by his focus on the mainland that he is neglecting other interests important to Taiwan's future?

Anonymous said...

You are now officially a "pundit". Congratulations!

Anonymous said...

Ma is a Chinese patriot, which is precisely what he should be as he is the President of the Republic of China.

So what if he doesn't make mention of Japan in an inauguration speech. Big whoop. The only people who consider this somehow anti-Japanese are those who's only frame of reference include the arch-quisling otherwise known as Lee Teng Hui and Chen Shui "Bend Over to the Jap" Bian.

Anonymous said...

Wow, Jing, I didn't realize that laying the foundations of a democratic political system and promoting a sense of Taiwanese identity, in the face of a threat posed by an authoritarian regime, were actually high crimes of treason against the glorious Han nation.

Oh, and I have a question Jing: to be a super Chinese patriot such as yourself, is it a requirement to use racist language in order to denigrate other peoples, or are true Chinese believers just really insecure about themselves?

Anonymous said...

I think Jing touches on a very important point. The Taiwanese and Chinese nationalist experience with the Japanese was so different, they approach a relationship with Japan in different ways. This different experience is part of what makes Taiwanese different from Chinese. The KMT framed their early relationship with Taiwanese from the standpoint of Jiang. "Chinese Patriots" trying to remove the Japanese colonial taint from their new "compatriots", who were portrayed by the KMT as slaves, traitors, corrupted people and "Japs". From Jiang's language it is evident the social cleavage still exists and continues to drive a wedge between the peoples on Taiwan.

Chinese nationalism is ethnocentrist in its DNA and draws heavily from concepts of social darwinism that were popular in at the beginning of the 20th century. Even the term "minzu" was borrowed from the Japanese to fit the new Nationalist concept of nation. It places the "Chinese nation" firmly within the KMT's constructed concepts of race and ethnic group, using selected mythologies and official histories.

The KMT viewed the Taiwanese as having degraded themselves (as Han) by behaving like Japanese and saw it as a flaw in their moral character. This is one of the main reasons Taiwanese were largely denied access to power for several decades.

By using the Taiwanese colonial experience to question of true patriotism, the KMT created the ethnic rift which Jing so aptly demonstrates in his condemnation of Lee and Chen.

Simply,

Ma's Chinese nationalism and the ROC Constitution is incongruous with Taiwan's experience and the diversity of modern Taiwan. It leaves wide sections of the population less represented that others and affords some peoples more access to power than others.

The ROC Constitution needs to be scrapped and so does Ma when his term is up. Relics of movements past.

Anonymous said...

Jing,

Kaminoge's got it about Chinese insecurity. Your racism is less the key point than the self-hatred that underlies your self-righteousness. Why do so many educated Chinese (I'm assuming you're Chinese, but if you're not, the question still stands) fail utterly to even comprehend, let alone reckon with, Dr. Johnson's famous and by-now-cliche "Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel"?

A lack of self-respect is why.

The common sort of Chinese mentality you display is pre-modern, and no amount of material "modernization" will ever change the basic fact that most Chinese are still pre-modern people inclined to shame and embarrass themselves with their attitudes toward others.

Here is a link to a few of the ideas of a couple of Chinese worthy of respect -- writers Ma Jian and Guo Xiaolu -- a couple of Chinese who see nationalism for the sham it usually is. Try not to smash any furniture in closed-minded fury as you read Ma's several comments about China's behavior in Tibet.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/22/AR2008052203449.html?nav=rss_artsandliving/books

Anonymous said...

Wow, some great commentary on this thread.

If anyone is interested, I've been following the comments on this article for about a week: Pomfret's China - the earthquakes Chinese meaning. A person named American Observer has made several very interesting comments semi-related to what has been said here. Of course the PRC nationalists are all bent out of shape on his remarks.

Anonymous said...

Taiwan's news reported that Hiranuma's words, "If you are reelected in four years, I hope you'll clearly mention Japan in your next inaugural speech," were mistranslated in the meeting:
http://news.yam.com/tvbs/politics/200805/20080525566994.html

Anonymous said...

Taiwan's news reported that Hiranuma's words, "If you are reelected in four years, I hope you'll clearly mention Japan in your next inaugural speech,'' were mistranslated in the meeting:

http://news.yam.com/tvbs/politics/200805/20080525566994.html

Anonymous said...

Is Ma so blinded by his focus on the mainland that he is neglecting other interests important to Taiwan's future?

I would say that ever since his taken over Bian's seat, economy rise for 3 days and have been falling and still falling right now.

Maybe Michael you should blog about how he wants to change cars, feed on lunchbox and wear polo t shirts instead of suits to prove his " clean government "