The "'Consensus of 1992'" (
Chinese:九二共識; literally, "92 Consensus") describes an alleged agreement that both
Mainland China and
Taiwan belong to
one China with both sides having different interpretations over the meaning of that term. In 2006, former
Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) official
Su Chi admitted that he created this term in 2000 to replace the term "one china with different interpretation".
[1]
The
People's Republic of China has stated that any group in Taiwan that it has formal talks with must support the 1992 Consensus. In
Taiwan, the 1992 Consensus is supported by the parties that make up the
pan-Blue coalition (the
Kuomintang and
People's First Party), and it was the basis by which the leaders of those parties travelled to mainland China in 2005 for discussions with the
Communist Party of China. The
pan-Green coalition and the ROC government officials reject the very existence of 1992 Consensus and argue that the name is misleading because no consensus was reached over the issue of
one China in meetings between PRC and ROC representatives in 1992. Further, President Chen ordered a search of all government records for evidence supporting the alleged consensus and having not found any, he concluded that there never was such a consensus.
Usage surrounding the Wang-Koo talks
The "1992 Consensus" resulted from a November 1992 meeting in
Hong Kong between the mainland-based
Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait (ARATS) and the Taiwan-based
Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF). These semi-official bodies were authorized by their respective governments to negotiate solutions to practical problems that had arisen from growing cross-
strait commerce. The conclusion they reached was intended as a means of side-stepping the conflict over the
political status of Taiwan. At the time of the meeting, Hong Kong was under British rule and therefore considered neutral territory by both sides.
As a result of the 1992 meeting, ARATS Chairman
Wang Daohan and SEF Chairman
Koo Chen-fu met in
Singapore on
April 27,
1993 in what became known as the "Wang-Koo talks." They concluded agreements on document authentication, postal transfers, and a schedule for future ARATS-SEF meetings.
Talks were delayed as tensions rose in the
Third Taiwan Strait Crisis, but in October 1998 a second round of "Wang-Koo talks" were held in
Shanghai. Wang and Koo agreed to meet again in Taiwan in the autumn of 1999, but the meeting was called off by the mainland side when
President Lee Teng-hui proposed his "
two-states theory" whereby each side would treat the other as separate state. PRC officials have indicated that this position is unacceptable.
In a speech on October 10, 2004
[2], President
Chen Shui-bian expressed his willingness in initiate dialogue with PRC leaders on "the basis of the 1992 meeting in Hong Kong". This formulation however presumes that no agreement on
one China was made in the 1992 meeting, and Chen's speech was widely seen as an effort to establish a basis for negotiations with the PRC without accepting the
one China principle.
The 1992 Consensus was invoked again the following year, when
Lien Chan and
Song Chu-Yu made separate trips to Mainland China to begin party-to-party dialogue between the CCP and KMT and between the CCP and PFP. Both leaders explicitly endorsed the 1992 Consensus as defined by the CCP.
Dispute over the "1992 Consensus"
Supporters of the
pan-Green coalition have argued that the meetings in 1992 did not come to any agreement over the
one China principle. In support of this view, they point out that both
Hsu Huei-yu and
Koo Chen-fu, who participated in the 1992 meeting as SEF delegates, have publicly affirmed that the meeting did not result in any consensus on the "one China" issue. Instead, they claim, both sides agreed to proceed with future meetings on the basis of equality and mutual respect. Koo stated in his biography that, "Both sides across the strait have different interpretations of the 1992 Hong Kong meeting. Rather than using 'consensus,' the term of art should be 'understanding' or 'accord' to better reflect the fact, thus avoiding untruthful application."
The Chief of the ROC
Mainland Affairs Council also indicated that no consensus was reached as a result of the 1992 meeting and that the term "Consensus of 1992" was only introduced by the mass media in 1995. Some
Taiwan independence supporters, such as former President Lee Teng-hui, point to a lack of documentation to argue that the consensus never existed.
[3] However, it is also the case that as of 1992, the government of the ROC still formally adhered to a "one China" position, one which it only moved away from in the late-1990's.
According to
Raymond Burghardt, the chair of the
American Institute in Taiwan, the US's de facto embassy in Taiwan:
:"[There was] some language [in the faxes] that overlapped and some language that differed." Then Taiwan and China agreed to conduct dialogue based on their statements written in those faxes. "That's what happened. Nothing more or nothing less," Burghardt said, adding that the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) called this the "1992 consensus," which was to some extent "confusing and misleading. To me, I'm not sure why you could call that a consensus."
[4]
Burghardt is thought to be the only US official to have expressed a position on the existence of the so-called 1992 consensus.
In a televised debate between Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian and KMT chairman Ma Ying-jeou on April 2006, Ma urged Chen to accept the 1992 Consensus as the basis to beginning peace talks. Chen criticized Ma as being delusional, stating that the Chinese position has always been that the One China defines as Taiwan being part of the PRC regime in Beijing. Chen added that Ma should ask honorary chairman Lien Chan in his visit to the mainland to inquire Chinese president Hu Jintao about Ma's view on the 1992 Consensus. The KMT refused Chen's request, citing that a pro-independent advocate does not deserve his message to be transmitted through the pro-unification channels.
References
1. Su Chi admits the `1992 consensus' was made up
2. Chen's speech of 10/10/04
3. "Lee denies existence of '1992 consensus,'" ''The China Post'', November 8, 2001
4. Central News Agency - Washington desk, "AIT pans `1992 consensus'", ''Taipei Times'', Feb 28, 2006
External links
★
Su, Chi: "I created the 1992 Consesus" (Chinese)
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People's Daily Backgrounder
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No 1992 consensus, MAC chief says
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Lu: Taiwan can't accept `one China'
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Lee denies existence of '1992 consensus'
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"SEF urges resumption of cross-strait talks"
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Debate over 1992 'one China' consensus rages on
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Chen's 10/10/04 speech