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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (138489)4/14/2001 10:28:07 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Dear Amer, lots of puff spin. But this make My MAN THE PRES. look good, I mean really good, I mean really really goooooddddd.!!!!!

Spy plane crew was tortured by China, says pilot
By David Wastell in Washington and Damien McElroy in Beijing.

THE pilot of the American spyplane that crash-landed in
China revealed yesterday that he and his crew were
subjected to sleep deprivation and other torture
methods.

Speaking publicly for the first time
about the collision that forced down
his EP-3 spyplane, Lt Shane Osborn
gave a dramatic account of their
11-day ordeal and told of how he
thought they were going to die. "My
first thought was this guy has just
killed us," he said as he spoke of the
mid-air collision with a Chinese
fighter aircraft over the South China
Sea. "I remember looking up and
seeing water. I also saw another
plane smoking toward the earth with
flames coming out of it."

Lt Osborn also recounted how the aircrew's Chinese
captors had used sleep deprivation techniques as part of
the "unpleasant" interrogation process after they had
landed. He said: "The only unpleasant part was the
interrogations and the lack of sleep."

His first interrogation was for four-and-a-half hours,
starting in the middle of the night. "I hadn't been to bed
in about 30 hours at that point. From then on, it was lack
of sleep, different wake-up calls at all times. I had to try
to steal some sleep when I could."

Speaking at a press conference at a naval base in Hawaii
before being flown, with his 23 colleagues, to be
reunited with family members at their home base in
Washington state, Lt Osborn confirmed much of the
account of the collision already provided by the
Pentagon.

He said: "I'm here to tell you we did it right. No apology
is necessary on our part." However, Pentagon officials
admitted yesterday that the crew had failed to destroy all
the secrets on board before being overrun by troops of
the People's Liberation Army.

The crew completed only the "major portion" of its
lengthy destruction checklist, according to Donald
Rumsfeld, the Defence Secretary. This suggests that
some sensitive intelligence material from the downed
EP-3 may now be in Chinese hands. Mr Rumsfeld's
disclosure, which came after extensive debriefing of the
crew, has raised the stakes for President George W.
Bush in the next stage of the diplomatic confrontation
with China over the aircraft, the return of which is being
urgently sought by Washington.

American intelligence officers now need to examine the
secret equipment remaining on the aircraft to complete
their assessment of the information lost to China, officials
said. Beijing angrily rejected American accounts blaming
a Chinese fighter pilot for the collision. Zhang Qiyue, the
foreign ministry spokesman, said Washington had
"ignored the facts and called black, white". She said:
"Responsibility is completely on the American side."
China called off the search for the missing pilot
yesterday.

Mr Bush has instructed members of a Pentagon-led
delegation visiting Beijing on Wednesday to take a tough
line over the return of the plane and over America's
demand that Chinese pilots keep a safer distance in
future. Flights are expected to resume within the next
few days.

Mr Bush is now under sharp pressure from conservative
Republicans to show that the carefully couched "very
sorry" letter last week does not mean that he can be
pushed around by Beijing. Despite relief at the safe
return of the aircrew and plaudits for Mr Bush's handling
of the affair, some conservatives fear that Mr Bush may
have sent the wrong signals to Beijing.

Peggy Noonan, a former Reagan speechwriter, wrote in
the Wall Street Journal: "One wonders what the world
will conclude from his prudence. Some may conclude
that he is patient and cool-tempered. Some may
conclude that he can be rolled." In Beijing, there was
equal uncertainty over the way in which the incident has
been handled, with many interpreting the return of the
aircrew as yet another occasion when the West exerted
its muscle and China toed the line.

Yang Dazhou, a researcher at the United States Institute
of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing,
said: "I don't think the letter that the Chinese government
accepted is an apology. This is the sort of thing you say
if you spill some water on someone's skirt. It cannot be
an apology for an air crash that knocks a Chinese fighter
out of the sky." For his part, President Bush now faces
pressure from Congress, and from some within his
administration, to approve the sale of a significant
package of weapons to Taiwan, a decision that he is due
to take by the end of next week.

telegraph.co.uk

tom watson tosiwmee