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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>