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20140208 King to be security affairs chief: source
Taiwan Impression -
作者 Taipei Times   
2014-02-08

King to be security affairs chief: source

FOR THE RECORD: The DPP said that King Pu-tsung lacked the experience to head a key government agency that deals with cross-strait and national defense matters

Staff writer, with CNA


An undated photo shows Representative to the US King Pu-tsung. A source at the Presidential said yesterday that King would be taking over as head of the National Security Council.
Photo:CNA


 

Representative to the US King Pu-tsung (金溥聰) is to be appointed President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) chief adviser on national security affairs, a Presidential Office source said yesterday.

King is to take over the post of secretary-general of the National Security Council from Jason Yuan (袁健生), who is to be named a senior adviser to the president, the source said on condition of anonymity.

A “senior diplomat” will be appointed to fill the post of the nation’s representative to Washington, the source said, without giving a name.

The new appointments are part of the government’s efforts to promote regional peace and prosperity, and cope with new challenges in trade and economic relations with the US, cross-strait developments and changes in the national defense system, the source said.

In his new position, King will help the government improve its security cooperation with the US and push for Taiwan’s bid to join regional trade blocs, mainly the US-backed Trans-Pacific Partnership and ASEAN’s Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, the source said.

The connections that King has built in Washington during his posting will be very helpful to these efforts, the source said.

King replaced Yuan as head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the US in December 2012.

King’s good political judgement and deep understanding of Taiwan’s situation can contribute to the government’s efforts to promote cross-strait ties, which have entered a new phase since the two sides began engaging in government-to-government exchanges, the source added.

Commenting on King’s new appointment, Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) spokesperson Chang Tun-han (張惇涵) yesterday said the Ma administration places little value on maintaining good Taiwan-US relations.

King lacks experience in handling cross-strait and national defense matters, and his transfer is not in the best interests of the nation, Chang said.

DPP Policy Research Committee executive director Joseph Wu (吳釗燮) said that King lacks the personal and professional experience to become the head of the National Security Council, a vital government unit tasked with overseeing cross-strait matters and foreign diplomacy.

Wu also questioned the timing of his transfer, with many suspecting it to be a ploy to manipulate the local elections in November.

The 57-year-old King, widely considered to be Ma’s closest aide, served as Taipei deputy mayor from 2004 to 2006, when Ma was mayor.

A year after he was elected president in 2008, Ma, who doubles as the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) chairman, appointed King as party secretary-general.

During the 2012 presidential election, King helped Ma with his re-election bid, serving as executive director of the president’s campaign office.

With a doctorate in journalism from the University of Texas in Austin, King has also taught at Taiwan’s National Chengchi University and at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

In other news, the Executive Yuan yesterday said that Premier Jiang Yi-huah (江宜樺) had approved the resignation of Cabinet spokeswoman Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文) and appointed Sun Lih-chyun (孫立群), vice chairman of the Fair Trade Commission (FTC), to take her place.

At the FTC, Sun succeeded in establishing a sound communication system between the administrative arm of the government and the media, the Cabinet said.

Additional reporting by Lee Hsin-fang

source: Taipei Times


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