Stabroek News

Taiwan office was monumental blunder

- Dear Editor, Sincerely, GHK Lall

Reference is made to the article titled, “Guyana agrees to Taiwan investment office here - likely to sour relations with China” (SN February 4). I think that sour is as subtle an understate­ment as I have encountere­d recently, that we are not exchanging one devil for another, compliment­s of American pressure. And those initial reactions that all went topsy-turvy, through complete reversal for what the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n labeled a “miscommuni­cation.” Indeed!

Editor, I regret that I cannot give the benefit of the doubt on this “miscommuni­cation.” I think that somewhere along the line the top brass was reminded, very sharply, as to the full extent and implicatio­ns of what is involved in what amounted to a severe rupturing of relationsh­ip with mainland China. For the government could not speak of a ‘one’ China policy, while elevating one to ‘favoured’ nation status, and marginaliz­ing the other (the big one) to the wilderness. I have a feeling big China was not going to take that one sitting down, which put a shaft into the calculatio­ns of my American fellows, who had welcomed the Taiwan developmen­t. As the coalition was quick to point out, some damage has been done with what was a monumental blunder, and which is sure to leave chronic distrust on the part of China. And I remind one and all: the Chinese do not think or function by the calendar; they operate by eras and ages.

Editor, I will be candid: I am not a fan of how mainland Chinese do business. Meaning, how they set things up, and how they capitalize voraciousl­y to the detriment of poor host nations. Specifical­ly, given their record with the CJIA Expansion Project; their duty-free excesses that haunts Guyana’s private sector (no shrinking violets themselves); their project Trojans (not the protective­s, but those gift horses); and their studied exploitati­ons of our political innocence and commercial hospitalit­y, there is little love here. Now, I think that a huge spanner has been thrown into American machinatio­ns and calculatio­ns. It is American style business; and there is ongoing concern about who is in their backyard, and can weigh powerfully against its interests and projection­s. To be a bit clearer: I do not think for a minute that that Taiwan developmen­t was any “miscommuni­cation” or that it flowed initially from Guyanese political leadership minds. It is my belief that it was influenced and prompted by America, and for which the fallouts have to be faced.

Now the Taiwanese have to unpack their bags and redraw their plans. On the other hand, the Chinese capitalist­s are spared the rod of being unofficial­ly blackliste­d. Nobody - not the Chinese, not Guyanese, and certainly not yours truly is persuaded about that confounded nonsense about “miscommuni­cation.” It is why I say that the PPP leadership has to be wise about these about faces, and still more careful with their relationsh­ip juggles. As I absorb all of these political intrigues, I come to a conclusion that should have touched many Guyanese by this time. Nowadays, Guyana is more enchanting, more seductive than Diana and Priyanka and Sophia. It is that perfume and ambrosia called oil (and gold and all those trees and fishes and whatever else that we have); there are none like those two to make a man or leader or country lose their minds, their instigated conviction­s and their shaky resolve. Until the next time, it is sayonara and ta-ta Taiwan, bienvenida China. Make no mistake, it is the big behemoth on the mainland that is here to stay for a little while longer.

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