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Following repeated pledges by President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九I guess this is a bit of an open secret.

In a cable dated Jan. 6 last year from the US embassy in Beijing, Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) Vice Secretary-General Ma Xiaoguang (馬曉光

Ma Xiaoguang said Beijing would like to start political negotiations with the Ma Ying-jeou administration at an early stage, but that it would not promote talks against his will, as he had been forced to push less actively for political talks with Beijing since his inauguration.
Beijing wants to engage Taiwan in political discussions, but will respect President Mas unwillingness to do so at the current time. Nonetheless, deepening economic discussions will inevitably lead to political exchanges, the cable quoted him as saying.
The comments by the ARATS official confirmed Beijings attempt to engage in political dialogue with the Ma administration as the Democratic Progressive Party has warned.
The president and the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) have brushed aside such concerns, stressing the economic pact signed with Beijing last year and cross-strait talks focused on economic exchanges, saying the president would not start a political dialogue with Beijing during his first term in office.
In the cable, Ma Xiaoguang said China realized that even the rapid growth of economic ties will not lead to unification naturally, but added that China would work to strengthen the basis for political negotiations under the so-called 1992 consensus.
He also criticized Ma Ying-jeou for not doing a good job of handling the economy and attributed opposition to the ECFA in Taiwan to the presidents inability to handle economic issues.
In another cable dated June 1, 2007, Ma Ying-jeou, who was then the KMT presidential nominee, discussed the partys stance on unification with then-American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) director Stephen Young. He said the KMTs move to revise its charter did not mean it intended to abandon its goal of unification.
In the meeting with Young, Ma Ying-jeou, accompanied by his top adviser, then-KMT legislator Su Chi (蘇起

The revision is aimed at broadening the appeal of the KMT to those who identify themselves as Taiwanese, he said.
Discussing his experience in handling cross-strait affairs with Beijing, Ma Ying-jeou described the Chinese government as one of arrogance and inflexibility, telling Young that he did not expect special treatment from Beijing if he was elected president.
WIKILEAKS: China using ECFA to push unification - Taipei Times