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| CREATING LEGACY︰The appointment of two close Ma aides to head
  China and US relations may be a prelude to his plan to negotiate a peace
  treaty with BeijingBy
  Mo Yan-chih 
  /  Staff reporter Fri,
  Sep 21, 2012 - Page 3 President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九)
  latest appointment of close aides to head cross-strait affairs, foreign
  affairs and national security sectors demonstrates his ambitions to implement
  his cross-strait and US policies efficiently, while the list reveals the lack
  of talent in the government, especially among Ma’s
  small clique of aides, analysts said. In the latest personnel reshuffle in
  the Ma administration, unveiled on Wednesday, Ma’s
  top aide, former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) secretary-general King Pu-tsung (金溥聰) takes over as the
  nation’s representative to the US despite being an
  outsider to the foreign service system. Another close aide, National
  Security Council adviser Wang Yu-chi (王郁琦), will take over as
  Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) chairman. KMT Secretary-General Lin Join-sane
  (林中森), who also has little experience handling cross-strait
  relations, was also announced as the replacement for Straits Exchange
  Foundation (SEF) Chairman Chiang Pin-kung (江丙坤), who stepped down on
  Wednesday after tendering his resignation in May. The appointment of his top aides to
  lead cross-strait and foreign affairs reflects Ma’s
  intention to exercise full control in these two areas and implement his
  policies efficiently via trusted aides during his second term, said Tamkang University political science professor Alexander
  Huang (黃介正), who served as a council deputy
  chairman in the former Democratic Progressive Party administration. “Ma wants to strengthen bilateral
  relations with the US and maintain cross-strait stability during his second
  and final term, and he wants people who can deliver his messages precisely
  and be granted full authority to execute his policies. Previous experience in
  those fields is not his main concern,” Huang said. The personnel reshuffle in foreign
  affairs, cross-strait affairs and national security began in May after Chiang
  tendered his resignation to Ma, insisting that he should retire from the
  position after completing eight rounds of cross-strait negotiations and
  signing the cross-strait Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA).
  Minister of Foreign Affairs Timothy Yang (楊進添) and National Security
  Council Secretary-General Hu Wei-chen (胡為真)
  have also offered to resign on several occasions. King dismissed concerns about his
  lack of experience in foreign affairs, saying said he would “precisely
  implement President Ma’s US policies and communicate with the US at top
  levels without any interference.” Wang, who also seems to be inexperienced
  compared with his Chinese counterpart, Taiwan Affairs Office Minister Wang Yi
  (王毅), also said his goal was to implement Ma’s cross-strait policies precisely. Huang said both the US and China
  should have no problem with the Ma administration’s selection of King and Wang
  Yu-chi as top officials in handling US and China affairs, as the government
  has laid plans for US-Taiwan relations and cross-strait developments,
  including trade negotiations with the US under the Trade Investment Framework
  Agreement (TIFA) and follow-up cross-strait talks to the ECFA. “I don’t think the appointment will
  have a great impact on current cross-strait development or US-Taiwan
  relations. Whoever takes over the positions will not change the challenges
  the government faces in these fields, and its goal
  of deepening relations with the US and China remains the same,” he said. Soochow University political
  scientist Hsu Yung-ming (徐永明)
  said rather than political implications, the appointments reflect more on Ma’s strategic placement of his clique of trusted aides in
  major positions to continue his influence after completing his second term. “The reshuffle came as a surprise
  because it is beyond imagination that those inexperienced appointees would take
  over such important positions. On the other hand, such an arrangement is no
  surprise, as it is an old habit of Ma’s to only use his an extremely small
  circle of aides,” he said. Hsu said the appointment of Wang
  Yu-chi and Lin, both inexperienced and little known in cross-strait circles,
  also suggests that Ma will place more importance on US-Taiwan -relations in
  the second term. National Tung Hwa University political analyst Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒) said the
  appointment of King aims to build more trust with the US, while the
  government could be preparing for political negotiations with China as Ma’s pro-China stance will not change. “Without the pressure of
  seeking another term, Ma is seeking to establish his personal reputation in
  history. The list explains that he will speed up implementation of his
  policies regardless of criticism,” he said. * 《Taipei Times》2012/09/21。 
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