CALL OFF THE ENGAGEMENT

CALL OFF THE ENGAGEMENT The conventional wisdom these days is that China is going to be a big issue in the 2000 campaign. We wonder. Sure, Republicans will kick up a fuss about nuclear espionage...

...The dreams alone are enough to keep this trade-happy administration on the path of appeasement...
...And where's the big surprise in that...
...The big American corporations, which create jobs in Republican congressmen's districts and contribute to Republican campaign coffers, love Clinton's engagement policy...
...And guess what...
...And well they should...
...Sometime between now and June 4, Clinton will notify Congress of his intention to extend China's most-favored-nation status another year...
...Later this year, the Clinton administration will probably strike a deal with Beijing on China's entry into the World Trade Organization...
...The Republican candidate in 2000 should make this his model...
...They have deployed missiles across the straits from Taiwan...
...Will they advance a real alternative to Clinton's policy of "engagement...
...The Republican party's inability to make an issue out of China is likely to be demonstrated in the coming months...
...Reagan challenged the premises of U.S.-Soviet policy over the previous decade and offered a bold alternative that advanced American interests and principles...
...What Republicans need to do in 2000 is take on frontally the premises and practice of a failed policy of engagement that has heretofore had support, unfortunately, from the mainstream of both parties...
...And this is the GOP's Achilles' heel when it comes to criticizing the Clinton-Gore administration's handling of China...
...And within a few more years, they led to the fall of Soviet communism...
...That will take more than putting better locks on the doors at Los Alamos...
...All we can see are burned American flags, imprisoned democrats, an intimidated Taiwan, and a vastly more dangerous Chinese nuclear arsenal aimed at the United States and our East Asian allies...
...But will Republicans propose a fundamental reassessment of U.S...
...So can Republicans afford not to love it...
...And many Republicans are likely to support Clinton on that, too, despite the fact that China's entry into the WTO will be perceived, rightly, as a major victory for Clinton's policy of engaging China...
...Reagan defeated Carter in 1980 not by explaining that Henry Kissinger's version of detente was more skillful and mature than Cyrus Vance's...
...government to express appropriate indignation when our ambassador is held hostage, the failure to stand up for Taiwan, the failure to do anything about increasing Chinese oppression at home—all these failures are the inevitable consequence of an engagement policy which blindly seeks to treat as a friend a government that thinks and behaves like an adversary...
...Within a few years, Reagan's policies led to better relations with the Soviet Union...
...China is still weak enough to be contained, and the United States is still strong enough to lead its allies in a policy to hem in Chinese ambitions...
...They have sponsored violent anti-American protests...
...policy toward China...
...But they also have a national duty to mount it...
...The United States and China are on a course of confrontation, and no happy talk about the magic of trade and of a "strategic partnership" can change that...
...Republicans, you see, like big business at least as much as Clinton and Al Gore do...
...That's not all...
...But at the end of the day, the Republican policy toward China could well look a lot like Clinton's...
...In fact, they're opposed to any American action that creates tensions in the U.S.China relationship, because they know China will punish American businesses in retaliation for any American policies Beijing perceives as contrary to its interests—whether they're related to human rights or non-proliferation or Taiwan...
...After all, Clinton's policy looks an awful lot like George Bush's...
...It will take an acknowledgment of what no one seems willing to acknowledge— not the Clinton administration, not its Republican critics, and not the foreign policy establishment: that the failure to safeguard American nuclear secrets, the failure to keep missile-launch technologies from being transferred by American corporations, the failure to punish China for proliferating weapons of mass destruction, the failure of the U.S...
...They'll call for some minor tinkering around the edges of Clinton's policy—tightening security at Los Alamos, changing the administrative procedures for approving U.S...
...Not likely...
...For it turns out that not only is big business opposed to any effort to limit China's trading privileges in the United States...
...That will trigger a vote in Congress on granting China permanent most-favored-nation status, in compliance with WTO rules...
...Those who stood up in Congress last year—and the year before that, and the year before that—to claim great benefits from renewing MFN should now be forced to explain exactly what those benefits have been...
...William Kristol and Robert Kagan, for the Editors...
...Sure, Republicans will kick up a fuss about nuclear espionage and Johnny Chung...
...Never mind that few American businesses are actually making any money in China, that the dreams of huge profits in a potential market of 1.2 billion people seem never to materialize...
...And to keep Republicans from proposing a serious alternative...
...This pending confrontation need not be a cause for alarm...
...And never mind that the most popular argument of the China engagers—that trade will make China more democratic and a more responsible international partner—has by now been discredited...
...Many Republicans who are now screaming about Chinese spying and campaign finagling will vote once again to approve China's trade status—the cornerstone of Clinton's engagement strategy...
...American corporations are also opposed to any effort to limit the transfer of military-related technologies...
...A real and dangerous confrontation between the United States and China can in fact be avoided, but only if the United States begins now to take seriously the threat China poses to vital American interests and principles...
...Since last year's MFN vote, the Chinese have been caught stealing nuclear secrets...
...They'll talk about a more "mature" and "tough-minded" view of U.S.-China relations...
...satellite launches on Chinese rockets, a few nice words about Taiwan...
...Republicans should have a political interest in mounting a broad critique of Clinton's appeasement of China...
...Since last year's vote to approve MFN for China, Beijing has carried out the most systematic crackdown against dissidents and democracy activists since Tiananmen Square...
...Congress will then have a chance to overturn the president's decision...

Vol. 4 • May 1999 • No. 34


 
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