WordType Designs
Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 25-05-2000 ]
Category
[ International Relations ]
sub-Categoy
[ U.S ]

      [http://news.nationalpost.com/news/world/it- may- have- looked- like- a- diplomatic- gaffe- but- taiwans- call- to- trump- was- six- months- in- the- making

      It may have looked like a diplomatic gaffe, but Taiwan’s call to Trump was six months in the making
      Julie Hirschfeld Davis And Eric Lipton, The New York Times | December 7, 2016 3:39 PM ET

      WASHINGTON - Former Sen. Bob Dole, acting as a foreign agent for the government of Taiwan, worked behind the scenes over the past six months to establish high- level contact between Taiwanese officials and President- elect Donald Trump’s staff, an outreach effort that culminated last week in an unorthodox telephone call between Trump and Taiwan’s president.

      Dole, a lobbyist with the Washington law firm Alston & Bird, coordinated with Trump’s campaign and the transition team to set up a series of meetings between Trump’s advisers and officials in Taiwan, according to disclosure documents filed last week with the Justice Department. Dole also assisted in successful efforts by Taiwan to include language favourable to it in the Republican Party platform, according to the documents.

      Dole’s firm received $140,000 from May to October for the work, the forms said.

      The disclosures suggest that Trump’s decision to take a call from the president of Taiwan, Tsai Ing- wen, was less a ham- handed diplomatic gaffe and more the result of a well- orchestrated plan by Taiwan to use the election of a new president to deepen its relationship with the United States - with an assist from a seasoned lobbyist well- versed in the machinery of Washington.

      “They’re very optimistic,” Dole said of the Taiwanese in an interview Tuesday. “They see a new president, a Republican, and they’d like to develop a closer relationship.”

      The United States’ One China policy is nearly four decades old, Dole said, referring to the policy established in 1979 that denies Taiwan official diplomatic recognition but maintains close contacts, promoting Taiwan’s democracy and selling it advanced military equipment.

      The phone call between Trump and Tsai was a striking break from nearly four decades of diplomatic practice and threatened to precipitate a major rift with China, which admonished Trump in a front- page editorial in the overseas edition of People’s Daily.

      The disclosure documents were submitted before the call took place and made no mention of it. But Dole, 93, a former Senate majority leader from Kansas, said he had worked with transition officials to facilitate the conversation.

      “It’s fair to say that we had some influence,” he said. “When you represent a client and they make requests, you’re supposed to respond.”

      Officials on Trump’s transition team did not respond to requests for comment.

      The documents suggest that Dole helped the government of Taiwan establish early access to Trump’s inner circle during the campaign, when Dole worked to involve Trump’s aides in a U.S. delegation to Taiwan and to facilitate a Taiwanese delegation to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July.

      The effort has continued in the weeks since the election, with Dole on Tuesday saying he was trying to fulfill a request from a special envoy from Taiwan who was visiting Washington to see Reince Priebus, tapped by Trump to be White House chief of staff, and Newt Gingrich, who is close to the president- elect. (The Priebus meeting, Dole said, would most likely have to wait until Trump is inaugurated.)

      Dole, the only former Republican presidential nominee to endorse Trump, arranged a meeting between Sen. Jeff Sessions, R- Ala., whom Trump has chosen to be his attorney general, and Stanley Kao, Taiwan’s envoy to the United States, and convened a meeting between Taiwanese officials and Trump’s transition team, the documents say.

      Dole, who said he first took an interest in Taiwan as a senator when Congress was considering the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act that established the current policy, has lobbied for the Taiwanese government for nearly two decades. In a letter in January, Dole laid out the terms of his agreement to represent the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States, Taiwan’s unofficial embassy, including a $25,000 monthly retainer.

      That letter and the document detailing Dole’s work for the Taiwanese were filed at the Justice Department, which requires foreign agents to register and detail their efforts at influencing the U.S. government.

      Among his duties, the letter said, were helping Taiwan achieve its “military goals” and obtain membership in the Trans- Pacific Partnership, the 12- nation trade deal that Trump has promised to withdraw from. Dole was also to arrange for Taiwanese officials to meet with members of Congress from both parties and arrange access to Republican presidential contenders and to the party’s national convention.

      The government of Taiwan has retained a powerful bipartisan constellation of former members of Congress to promote its interests in Washington. Richard A. Gephardt, D- Mo., a former House majority leader, also signed a $25,000- a- month contract to represent the Taipei office this year, as did Thomas A. Daschle, D- S.D., a former Senate majority leader, in 2015.

      Trump’s transition team has sent mixed messages about the call with Tsai, whether it was meant as a mere gesture of goodwill or a provocation aimed at drawing Taiwan closer to the United States as a way of challenging China, which considers Taiwan a breakaway province.

      Vice President- elect Mike Pence suggested in the days after the call that Trump had merely been affording a courtesy to another “democratically elected leader.” But in a series of Twitter posts Sunday, Trump suggested a more confrontational motive, criticizing China for unfair trade practices and aggressive military moves.

      “Did China ask us if it was OK” to take such actions?, Trump asked rhetorically, appearing to counter suggestions that the United States must ask Beijing’s permission to communicate with Taiwan.

      Several senior advisers to Trump have long advocated stronger U.S. support for Taiwan, arguing that it would help to counterbalance Beijing’s influence. Alexander Grey and Peter Navarro, Trump transition advisers, wrote an article last month in Foreign Policy branding the Obama administration’s treatment of Taiwan “egregious.”

      Over the weekend, Taiwan’s official Central News Agency said that Edward J. Feulner, a member of Trump’s transition team and the former president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank that supports stronger ties with Taiwan, had played a crucial role in bringing about the call with Trump. Feulner met with Tsai in Taiwan in October.

      Even before the phone call, Taiwan had succeeded in accomplishing important goals with Trump’s team. At their convention in Cleveland in July, Republicans adopted a platform that for the first time enshrined the “six assurances” to Taiwan made by President Ronald Reagan in 1982, including that the United States would not set a date for ending arms sales to the Taiwanese.

      © 2016 National Post, a division of Postmedia Network Inc. All rights reserved. Unauthorized distribution, transmission or republication strictly prohibited.


      World Fact Book (CIA)]


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