Culture and Communications Committee, Kuomintang
September 16, 2021
Push for UN Admission Nothing but Empty Words, Concealing Diplomatic Predicament with Grand Internal Propaganda
The 76th United Nations (UN) General Assembly convened on September 14th. Regarding the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government’s appeals and propaganda on this matter, the Kuomintang (KMT) believes that our nation’s multilateral diplomacy has clearly degenerated in the past few years; the DPP government has no substantive way to participate in UN specialized agencies, yet claims to have pushed resolutions at the UN without actually proposing any, and instead employs traditional and social media tactics to make grand propaganda in an attempt to conceal the grave diplomatic predicament our nation is currently confronted with.
The
KMT points out that ever since President Tsai Ing-wen assumed office, seven
former allies have already broken diplomatic ties with the Republic of China. This
downward trend in number of diplomatic allies who speak up for our nation at
the UN General Debate is unequivocal; last year, at the 75th UN
General Assembly, the ROC had a total of 14 diplomatic allies (not counting the
Vatican) who, before the convening of the assembly, either individually or
jointly delivered letters to the UN secretary-general conveying the need for
the UN to address our nation’s rights and interests. The Ministry of Foreign
Affairs (MOFA) declared this a “home run,” but when the UN General Debate
officially convened, two of our diplomatic allies, when making statements,
neglected to mention either the Republic of China or Taiwan. MOFA then
deliberately failed to mention this neglect, arousing a great deal of
suspicion.
The
KMT calls attention to the fact that in early January of this year, President
Tsai Ing-wen mentioned that she would “Persistently push for UN admission, as
well as admission to its affiliated conferences and events.” However, in
reality, from her May 2016 inauguration until the present, MOFA has failed to push
forward passage of any resolutions at the UN General Assembly by means of
diplomatic allies. As such, the phrase “persistently push for UN admission” is
clearly just a load of empty words.
The KMT points out that during the Ma Ying-jeou administration, our nation’s push for UN participation focused on meaningful participation in UN specialized agencies, with successful implementation in agency after agency, such as in the World Health Organization (WHO), the International Civil Aviation Organization, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, and many others. On the other hand, the DPP government’s relevant resolution proposals have been repeatedly obstructed, with only one favorable outcome in the form of observer status attendance at the WHO in May 2016 under the name “Chinese Taipei.” The DPP furthermore failed to ask our diplomatic allies this year to propose other resolutions at the UN General Assembly to promote the participation of our nation. As a result, all walks of life from our society should strictly oversee these types of DPP government failures to proactively promote foreign policy advocating the Republic of China’s sovereign rights and people’s welfare.
The KMT states that achieving international space by having diplomatic allies speaking up or proposing resolutions within the UN system is merely the most fundamental task of diplomacy. The DPP government should strive to make announcements to the international community instead of forcefully propagandizing domestically. Cross-Strait relations are rapidly worsening with a lack of mutual trust and the number of our nation’s diplomatic allies continues to atrophy under President Tsai’s period in office; these are the truly important issues. The KMT emphasizes that, based on the experiences of the past thirty years, when cross-Strait relations are bad, Taiwan’s foreign relations are also bad. On the other hand, when cross-Strait relations are good, the pressure on Taiwan’s foreign relations is lessened.
As of
now, the Chinese Communist authorities have further compressed our nation’s
international space for action. The KMT stands for defending Republic of China
sovereignty and cross-Strait relations, and firmly opposes the relevant modus
operandi of the Chinese Communist authorities. At the same time, the KMT
requests that President Tsai Ing-wen clearly explain, during this period of
persistent bottoming out of cross-Strait relations, why her relevant strategies
and methods for cross-Strait peace and stability, in addition to our nation’s
concrete, feasible international participation, result only in multilateral
diplomatic failures and misleading the Taiwan people
into supporting the DPP's string of antagonistic cross-Strait policies.
(This is an abridged English translation of an official
Kuomintang Chinese-language press release.)