Congress's China Challenge

REES, MATTHEW

Congress’s China Challenge by Matthew Rees SENATOR RICHARD LUGAR is one of the few congressional Republicans who have supported the president on issues of foreign affairs and national security....

...And, given the past performance of Congress, the administration may expect the inquiries and accusations will fade away and no coherent assault on the administration’s policy will be sustained...
...Porter Goss, the mild-mannered chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, and hardly an outspoken Clinton critic, responded that such comments “display how this administration is more concerned with their party’s progress than with the well-being of the country...
...How can you trust this administration,” he asks, “to investigate something of this magnitude...
...Indeed, GOP distrust of the Clinton foreignpolicy operation has become deep and widespread...
...In a March 9 interview with CNN, Gore twice said the breach occurred during “the previous administration...
...John McCain wants the appointment of something akin to the Tower Commission, which investigated Iran-contra, to investigate the Clinton hijinks...
...Lott, usually an outspoken advocate for unfettered trade with China, wants to block China’s entry into the World Trade Organization...
...And why, as even Katie Couric asked last week during an interview with Bill Richardson, was the alleged spy fired from his lab job only after the story broke in the national media...
...In separate conversations, two respected congressional Republicans told me they thought White House officials leaked the espionage story to the Times and the Wall Street Journal in hopes of putting their best spin on an embarrassment they knew would become public...
...Richardson took the same tack, telling CNBC’s Chris Matthews, “We don’t think this issue should be politicized,” but then quickly adding that “this started in the ’80s and so there is plenty of blame to share...
...technology to China...
...Lugar is hardly alone in being outraged...
...There is no more sophisticated secret that we have,” one Republican senator told me...
...trade with China...
...Late last year, the ninemember bipartisan committee, headed by representative Chris Cox of California, unanimously approved its top-secret report...
...Vice President Al Gore and energy secretary Bill Richardson angered Republicans further by trying to shift blame for the episode to . . . Republicans...
...Will this time be different...
...He is lending his support to an amendment by Republican senator Tim Hutchinson requiring congressional approval before Beijing can enter the international body...
...His doing so sent a crystalclear signal that White House policy toward China is in for a stiff challenge from the Republican Congress...
...The Times article quoted former CIA counterintelligence chief, Paul Redmond, saying the breach “was far more damaging to the national security than Aldrich Ames...
...Similarly, if the Pentagon doesn’t scrap its plan for a yearlong exchange program with senior officials from China’s People’s Liberation Army, Capitol Hill aides say Congress will scrap it for them...
...More contentious are the findings of a congressional committee that investigated the transfer of U.S...
...With Zhu Rongji, China’s prime minister, scheduled to visit Washington next month, Republicans are eager to highlight their differences with Clinton’s soft-on-China policy...
...Richard Lugar urged in his Washington Post piece that “the administration not yield to its impulses to place damage control above all else...
...What provoked Lugar’s wrath was the revelation that the administration had withheld information from Congress concerning China’s theft of U.S...
...Buchanan said the espionage was “the worst breach of national security since the Rosenbergs...
...Since then, the committee has been wrangling with the administration over precisely which material, and how much of it, can be made public...
...It will have to earn it...
...The story was reported in the March 6 New York Times in a 4,000-word article littered with instances of top administration officials, including Sandy Berger, the national security adviser, trying to prevent Congress from learning about the espionage...
...In the meantime, the Senate’s Intelligence and Armed Services committees are slated to begin holding hearings on the espionage and the administration’s laggard response...
...Nevertheless, the story of the espionage, the administration’s delayed reaction, and its attempt to keep Congress unaware, broke at a sensitive moment for Clinton’s foreign policy...
...Elsewhere, congressional Republicans are predicting passage of sweeping new restrictions on who can visit America’s nuclear labs and where lab personnel will be permitted to travel on official business (the rules in both cases are notoriously lax...
...Cox and the committee’s top Democrat, Norm Dicks, jointly requested a meeting with Clinton last month...
...nuclear secrets...
...He knows better...
...For in this case, he wrote, “it will not be good enough for the administration to ask for congressional understanding...
...The Indiana Republican strongly backed the president on NATO expansion, the chemical weapons treaty, and the nomination of William Weld for ambassador to Mexico...
...They’ve received no response, and may move to release the report soon...
...Was the administration afraid that publicizing the espionage would undermine U.S...
...Cox says the White House is asking the committee “to suppress significant findings, to eliminate examples that buttress our conclusions, and to change our conclusions from statements of fact to mere possibilities...
...And if the White House chooses not to cooperate, will congressional Democrats back it up (as they have so often in the past...
...A reasonable request—though, given the Clinton record, few Republicans expect it to be met...
...Matthew Rees is a staff writer at THE WEEKLY STANDARD...
...He singled out Gore for criticism: “I expect more from the vice president...
...A number of top congressional Republicans are asking pointed questions, as are many GOP presidential candidates...
...Members of both committees told me there are countless questions they want answered...
...So it was something of a watershed moment when Lugar took to the pages of the Washington Post last week to denounce the Clinton administration’s China policy...
...Goss’s anger is typical of Republicans on the Hill...
...Why did the administration continue to push for liberalized export controls on supercomputers, and why did it want the Commerce Department to have jurisdiction over export licenses...
...Why was the senior federal government employee who first learned about the espionage ordered not to share the information with Congress...
...And the chances that missile-defense legislation will be passed in the Senate have improved...
...Why was this employee demoted after blowing the whistle...
...The center of gravity has undertaken a dramatic shift toward containment,” says Randy Scheunemann, a former foreign-policy aide to Trent Lott, the Senate majority leader...
...The pilfered secrets relating to the miniaturization of nuclear warheads significantly improve China’s nuclear-missile capability...
...Lamar Alexander, Gary Bauer, Pat Buchanan, and Steve Forbes all called on Berger to resign last week, while Bob Smith said Berger should just be sacked...
...The wild card for Republicans is whether the administration will cooperate with any congressional inquiries...

Vol. 4 • March 1999 • No. 26


 
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