Senior officials from the presidential office yesterday said that the visit to Taiwan by former South Korean president Kim Young-sam was a purely diplomatic activity conducted by an ex-head of state and that it was incorrect to interpret the visit as having a particular political purpose.
"To define Kim's visit as a mission to `discuss the resumption of air links between Taiwan and South Korea' or to `establish a strategic alliance with South Korea's opposition' is over-exaggerating," a presidential aide with responsibility for foreign affairs told the Taipei Times yesterday.
Nothing unusual
The aide stressed that the government had welcomed Kim's visit, and that the nature of his reception in Taiwan had been no different from those of other former heads of state, including those with which former president, Lee Teng-hui (
"Taiwan criticized Japan for rejecting Lee's visit to Japan. Could we then prohibit Kim from coming to Taiwan?" the aide asked.
According to the aide, President Chen Shui-bian (
"But it was not until Chen's national policy advisor, Lee Tsai-fang (
The aide also told the Taipei Times that earlier this year the president also dined in the Presidential Office with a key South Korean Cabinet member in the current Kim Dae-jung government, who was on a secret trip to Taiwan.
Moreover, the aide said, President Chen has had much closer ties with Kim Dae-jung than with Kim Young-sam (since both were opposition politicians).
"In our national security system's analysis of the situation in northeast Asia, there is no suggestion to the effect that [the president] should strengthen interactions with South Korea's opposition parties so as to counterbalance Kim Dae-jung's pro-China stance."
The topics of the two meetings held between Chen and Kim yesterday and Thursday were democratic values, economic development, and substantive economic and trade relations between the two countries.
"Chen also took the opportunity of Kim's visit to announce publicly Taiwan's three conditions for the resumption of air links," a senior member of the National Security Council pointed out.
The purpose was to raise the level of talks and to avoid any misunderstanding that we intend to establish some sort of alliance with South Korea's opposition, the official said.
South Korea still wants links
The South Korean government does hope that Taiwan's new government will reverse the KMT government's decision to sever air links, the official continued. But if President Chen wants to discuss this issue, he will talk to South Korea's ruling party, he said.
"President Chen is taking the opportunity of Kim's visit to declare our position on safeguarding national dignity," the official said.
When asked about the Ministry of Foreign Affairs' rumored disquiet about being informed of Kim's visit and itinerary by the Presidential Office only at the last minute, the official said that this was normal procedure since Kim's visit had been arranged by Lee Tsai-fang, approved by the Presidential Office and handed to the foreign ministry for execution.
"A number of people in the foreign ministry may still have grudges against South Korea for switching diplomatic ties to Beijing, so they are just using the occasion to show their discontent," the presidential official said.
As to the negative commentary from local media and some politicians, who questioned why Kim had been invited, the presidential aide stressed that President Chen respects and understands such criticisms, but also hopes that Kim's visit can be viewed as a normal diplomatic event.
The aide also noted that the visit earlier this year of a head of state from an African ally, whom the UN had banned from making overseas visits (for subsidizing civil wars in neighboring countries), had not drawn criticism from the press.
"Kim was once a prime figure in the region and he still has considerable influence in South Korea. At this difficult moment in Taiwan's foreign relations, Kim's visit carries a certain positive significance," said the aide.
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