China trade bill

Guest Article Analyzes U.S. Policy Confusion Toward China
suppression

What's In Store for U.S. Policy and China

by Mike Jendrzejczyk

Crafting a multilateral approach is essential to help prevent Beijing from playing off one country against another, as it has done so effectively in the past, or dismissing U.S. protests as part of an American campaign of superpower domination.

Regardless of who wins the November election, the incoming administration will inherit some complex foreign policy dilemmas. China's emergence as a great power is one such challenge. How Al Gore or George W. Bush deals with China will help define their respective foreign policy priorities.

How would each of them balance competing pressures for confrontation vs. dialogue to promote stable U.S.-China relations and long-term political change? Will human rights be an integral component, or merely a rhetorical commitment that takes a back seat to other interests?

Since the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown, debate over China policy has split both the Republican and Democratic parties, driven by highly polarized images. Beijing is seen either as a ruthless Communist dictatorship that must be contained or as an authoritarian system in transition that can be a strategic partner with the United States.

The Senate is to vote on permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) for China later this week. But it will be left to the new White House to forge a consensus on how best to encourage China's evolution as a responsible member of the international community.

The current "engagement" approach is heavily dependent on trade and investment as a catalyst in the hope that economic reform will eventually lead to political reform. It's based on the assumption that a generational change under way in China will gradually erode the Communist Party's monopoly on power. Over time, connections to the Internet -- eagerly sought by the country's young people -- may become more useful for social advancement than contacts in the party.

These assumptions may be correct. But the Clinton administration has failed to carry out a credible policy that uses both carrots and sticks to further China's political and economic development, while also supporting those taking risks and working for political change from within.

China's prospective entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) will certainly increase demands for greater transparency in matters of trade and investment. But WTO membership won't in itself lead to a more open, accountable form of governance. Consistent outside pressure is also needed.

Jiang Zemin, China's president, has been heralded for his role as an economic reformer. Struggling to cope with rising unemployment, rampant corruption and widespread protests by unpaid workers and disgruntled farmers, he has pegged his survival on the ability to deliver continued economic growth.

But Mr. Jiang has been equally determined to stamp out potential challenges to the party's rule. "Any political behavior that is aimed at damaging the stability and unity of our country runs counter to the will and the fundamental interests of the Chinese people," he proclaimed. The government should "have a clear-cut stand in increasingly opposing them and firmly nipping them in bud."

Thus, pro-democracy activists, religious believers outside the official churches, ethnic Tibetans, members of Falun Gong, and those trying to use the Internet to expose abuses, have all been suppressed. Some have been given heavy prison sentences or have been sent to "re-education through labor" camps.

The next U.S. president will need a vigorous bilateral policy, combined with serious attempts to reach out to China's other chief trading partners, including Japan, Canada, Australia and the European Union. Crafting a multilateral approach is essential to help prevent Beijing from playing off one country against another, as it has done so effectively in the past, or dismissing U.S. protests as part of an American campaign of superpower domination. Here are some elements of China policy an incoming administration can embrace:

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Mr. Jendrzejczyk is the Washington Director for Human Rights Watch's Asia division.


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