Why the Rush to Favor China?
EDITORIAL Why the Rush to Favor China? President Clinton was right when he said last Wednesday that the decision to grant China permanent most-favored-nation trading status will have a historic...
...At the very least, the Senate should pass the Taiwan legislation before it even considers voting on permanent MFN for China...
...In any trade deal, the devil is in the details...
...We won't know the terms of implementation until China reaches an agreement with the WTO much later this year...
...Threaten war against an American ally and a democracy, and the first thing Washington does is lavish gifts upon you...
...Therefore, it makes no practical difference whether Congress votes this year or next...
...In short, it is almost inconceivable that China could join the WTO much before the end of the year...
...In fact, they don't much like China, period...
...It would be better for Congress to wait and give the Europeans maximum leverage to extract concessions from Beijing...
...The president's demand for a hasty decision is purely about politics...
...With the primaries out of the way, Clinton now wants Congress to rush approval through before the general election campaign goes into full swing, calculating that election-year politics will dim chances of passage...
...After all, China can't even become a WTO member until it cuts its deals with the Europeans and completes negotiations with the WTO authorities on the terms of implementation...
...If we want to avoid tempting Beijing into future aggressive actions against Taiwan, the United States must convince the Beijing government now that belligerence carries a real price...
...Meanwhile, some Republican senators are considering linking any vote on permanent MFN to passage of the Taiwan Security Enhancement Act...
...Polls show that a large majority of Americans oppose China's entry into the World Trade Organization and oppose granting China permanent trade relations...
...Clinton held off making his pitch for permanent MFN until Al Gore had sewn up the Democratic party's nomination, thereby minimizing the pressure that could be brought to bear on the vice president by his big labor allies...
...The United States is still trying to get China to abide by the agreement it signed on intellectual property rights almost a decade ago...
...The truth is, Congress can just as easily vote on China's permanent trade status next year...
...The administration argues that there's no reason to wait and see if the Europeans get a better deal than our own negotiators, since American businesses will benefit anyway...
...The big corporations want to use their big money to frighten members of Congress into supporting permanent MFN before those members have a chance to hear from their constituents...
...It is not in our national security interest," Murtha declared, "to condone and reward grossly irresponsible conduct...
...President Clinton seems to believe that America's very first official response to a Chinese threat of war should be to give Beijing the largest economic gift we have to offer: permanent, low-tariff access to our markets...
...What kind of signal could that possibly send to Jiang Zemin and his military chiefs...
...The House approved the Taiwan measure overwhelmingly...
...Then there is the problem of implementation...
...Of course, there's another reason to rush through a vote in Congress: Bill Clinton's "legacy...
...There aren't any...
...To put it another way, the White House and the Republican leadership in both houses want to get this thing done before the American electorate gets a chance to look at it...
...Keeping the public in the dark was also the hallmark of Henry Kissinger's and Jimmy Carter's China diplomacy in the 1970s...
...Many members don't even know what's in the trade deal the United States struck with China last November...
...There are a whole host of good reasons to slow things down...
...And what are the good reasons to rush through a vote...
...reunification...
...Incidentally, guess what two words never appear in last Friday's Wall Street Journal editorial supporting President Clinton's rush to favor China: Taiwan and democracy...
...Meanwhile, the Europeans are negotiating their own agreement with China and probably won't complete negotiations for several months...
...What the administration doesn't point out is that rapid passage of permanent trade status by Congress will strengthen the Chinese hand and weaken the European negotiating position...
...By far the most important reason to delay any vote, however, concerns China's recent threats to attack Taiwan if that government does not move more rapidly toward President Clinton seems to believe that our first official response to a Chinese threat of war should be to give Beijing a large economic gift...
...This is especially true in China's case, because Beijing has a miserable record of implementing the deals it strikes...
...That's one reason the administration has kept secret the terms of the WTO deal it reached with China last November...
...Robert Kagan, for the Editors...
...President Clinton was right when he said last Wednesday that the decision to grant China permanent most-favored-nation trading status will have a historic significance equal to Richard Nixon's opening to China and Jimmy Carter's normalization of relations...
...Why do Republicans...
...Extreme belligerence, they would have to conclude, is good for business...
...Some responsible Democrats see what a disaster it would be to approve China's trade status so soon after Chinese threats against Taiwan...
...Except to Bill Clinton, who wants to leave a trade deal with China as one of his presidential legacies...
...American businesses will not lose out if the vote is delayed...
...We can understand why some Democratic leaders in Congress would find this a compelling reason to vote quickly...
...Congressman Jack Murtha, an influential centrist Democrat, has informed his colleagues that, in light of Beijing's recent behavior, he will not support permanent MFN for China this year, even though he consistently supported annual renewal of MFN in the past...
...But if that's true, why is the president rushing Congress to make a hasty decision, with almost no time to consider the merits and consequences of this momentous step...
...The White House wants to make sure that this overwhelming public opinion does not influence congressional deliberations...
Vol. 5 • March 2000 • No. 26