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- <text id=91TT2600>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: China:Comes the Evolution
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 58
- CHINA
- Comes the Evolution
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Beijing's gerontocrats want Western trade and investment but are
- determined to save their system
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN -- Reported by Jaime A. FlorCruz/Beijing and
- J.F.O. McAllister with Baker
- </p>
- <p> A specter is haunting China -- the specter of capitalism.
- But the octogenarian leaders in Beijing don't come right out
- and say that. They call their bugaboo "peaceful evolution," an
- innocuous-sounding code phrase for what they think is an
- onslaught led by the U.S. to overturn their socialist system.
- </p>
- <p> The Chinese hard-liners, like those in Stalinist North
- Korea and anachronistic Vietnam, are determined not to share the
- fate of their communist counterparts in Eastern Europe and the
- Soviet Union. China's internal watchdogs are visibly busier now
- than they were before the August coup attempt in Moscow. Police
- squads patrol city streets at night and keep close watch on the
- families and friends of jailed dissidents. Party offices are
- conducting more ideology classes than usual.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, George Bush almost pleads guilty to the Chinese
- charge of subversive activities. "China is important," he said
- in a speech to the Asia Society in New York City last week. "It
- is our policy to remain engaged. We believe this is the way to
- effect positive change in the world's most populous nation."
- Bush does in fact hope for peaceful evolution in China, but
- American diplomatic, cultural and commercial efforts in that
- direction are well publicized and hardly conspiratorial -- and
- so far, not noticeably effective.
- </p>
- <p> With such sharply conflicting political concerns, the U.S.
- and China might have taken the view that this is not a good
- time to try to sort out the many issues that divide them. An
- internal Chinese Communist Party document warned in September:
- "The West will now step up its pressure on China, and a small
- number of bourgeois liberal elements in China could try to take
- advantage of the situation."
- </p>
- <p> Beijing is skittish enough these days to consider any
- concession to the West as a step onto a slippery slope. For his
- part, Bush is fighting efforts in Congress to eliminate China's
- most favored nation trading status because of its human rights
- abuses. To fend it off, he needs evidence that the Chinese are
- ready to improve their behavior at home and abroad.
- </p>
- <p> Both countries put their stakes on Secretary of State
- James Baker's visit to Beijing last week. He is the highest
- ranking American official to arrive since the government forces
- massacred pro-democracy demonstrators at Tiananmen Square in
- June 1989. He tried to deflect the inevitable criticism with a
- message similar to Bush's: "You cannot work out or solve
- problems if you are not willing to sit down and talk to people."
- </p>
- <p> The points of conflict are, as he put it, "real," and
- human rights are one of the most inflamed. Some 800 participants
- in the democracy movement remain in prison, many of them in
- deplorable conditions. The Chinese gulag is still crowded, and
- its inmates turned out some of the goods that helped build
- China's $10.4 billion trade surplus with the U.S. last year.
- Both the prison labor and the trade surplus are sore points in
- Washington.
- </p>
- <p> So is Beijing's seeming willingness to sell weaponry and
- nuclear equipment to almost any state with the cash to pay for
- it. China has delivered missiles to Pakistan, contracted to sell
- missiles to Syria and is cooperating on nuclear technology with
- Iran and Algeria. Though China says it is supplying items for
- peaceful nuclear programs, the recipients can use them for any
- purpose they choose, and their likely intention is to build atom
- bombs. The U.S. demands a halt.
- </p>
- <p> The Chinese, of course, would like to ignore American
- protests. But that is not so easy now that the Soviet Union is
- out of the superpower business and the trade and investment
- China needs so badly are available mostly from capitalist
- nations. "China knows full well that its future depends on
- relations with developed countries," says Gaston Sigur, a former
- Assistant Secretary of State for Asia.
- </p>
- <p> Accordingly, Beijing has had to rein in its truculence a
- bit. China has said it is willing to sign the nuclear
- nonproliferation treaty, and in September Beijing agreed to talk
- about ways to guarantee Washington that prison-made goods would
- not be sold to the U.S. China has indicated it will consider
- adhering to the guidelines of the 18-nation Missile Technology
- Control Regime. It also helped establish the U.N.-administered
- peace settlement that returned Prince Norodom Sihanouk to
- Cambodia last week.
- </p>
- <p> By the time Baker arrived in Beijing on Friday, his
- meetings in other Asian capitals had turned North Korea's
- nuclear weapons program into the most prominent topic on his
- agenda. Experts say Pyongyang is probably producing plutonium
- and might have enough for a bomb within two to five years.
- American officials said they hoped to enlist China, Japan and
- the Soviet Union in a joint effort to push North Korea out of
- the nuclear field.
- </p>
- <p> This, it happens, is a matter on which the U.S. and China
- might possibly find common ground, even though the Chinese feel
- protective about the remaining Marxist states in Asia. ``There
- should be no nuclear weapons on the Korean peninsula," said
- Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen. Neither did he want to
- encourage U.S. influence, so Qian added that "consultation" and
- "dialogue" were the way to proceed because "we do not wish to
- see any international pressure."
- </p>
- <p> Baker responded that an international call for North Korea
- to halt its weapons program "does not necessarily involve
- pressure." He hoped to handle the problem "politically and
- diplomatically," he said. Beijing seemed to be preparing to tell
- Baker that China, not the U.S., should take the lead on this.
- The Chinese want to keep Pyongyang from getting the bomb, but
- they also want Korea to remain divided so they will not have to
- compete with a vibrant new economy on their border. Most of all,
- they want to prevent the U.S. from dominating Asian regional
- affairs.
- </p>
- <p> Baker held marathon talks with Qian, President Yang
- Shangkun, Premier Li and party chief Jiang Zemin, ticking off
- U.S. concerns about political repression, arms sales, the trade
- imbalance, North Korea. A senior State Department official,
- recalling Baker's eight months of shuttle diplomacy that led to
- the Middle East peace talks in Madrid, called the discussions
- in Beijing "every bit as tough and difficult, if not tougher."
- At one point President Yang told the secretary that some
- problems "cannot be solved for the time being, and the two sides
- may well leave them aside." On the eve of his departure Sunday,
- the Chinese had given Baker nothing. American officials were
- still hoping for an 11th-hour concession. But even if they got
- one, Chinese pledges of better behavior have not proved durable
- in the past.
- </p>
- <p> "On one hand," says Hunter College professor Donald
- Zagoria, "they're going to try to meet some American concerns.
- On the other, they're going to show they have alternatives."
- Among those are China's increasing cooperation with countries
- like Vietnam and Iran, nations that share a deep resentment of
- U.S. influence.
- </p>
- <p> Long-term improvement in Sino-U.S. relations will have to
- wait until a new generation takes over in Beijing. The old men
- in charge there now, like those in Vietnam and North Korea, are
- veterans of the revolutions that put Marxism in power. They
- intend to hold sway until they die. President Yang, 84,
- reportedly told his colleagues that the Soviet Union fell apart
- because it had no "old revolutionaries" left.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. and other democratic nations must maintain some
- contact with China if only to provide incentives against its
- taking even more objectionable steps and to help educate a
- younger generation of leaders in dealing with the West. But the
- transition could be lengthy, and the gerontocrats will do their
- best to fight off the "spiritual pollution" of liberal ideas and
- the haunting conspiracy of peaceful evolution.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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