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Politics : Did Slick Boink Monica? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: cody andre who wrote (16357)6/22/1998 11:11:00 AM
From: Zoltan!  Respond to of 20981
 
June 22, 1998

ESSAY

Compromised Visitor



By WILLIAM SAFIRE

WASHINGTON -- Never has a U.S. President traveled to Beijing at
such a disadvantage: Bill Clinton has reason to suspect that the
Chinese leaders possess information about "the China connection" to his
campaigns, but he does not know what it is.

He knows that they know much more than anyone about the penetration of
the White House by Asian fronts for Chinese intelligence. They have all the
details about Indonesia's Riady family's long-term investment in his career, and
probably of instructions to influence his post-election change of trade policy.

Clinton must assume it is in China's interest to provide an escape hatch for 50
fleeing witnesses, to deny being the source of millions in campaign
contributions and to keep secret Democratic money laundering done by Hong
Kong and Macao banks. China will want to conceal from the Justice
Department and Congress the illegal donations to, and policy penetration of,
the White House and D.N.C.

In obstructing any investigation, the interests of China run parallel to those of
this compromised U.S. President. Both Clinton and the Chinese want nothing
further to come out.

Accept, if you wish, the protestations of Clinton defenders that his campaign
organization was duped by John Huang, Charlie Trie and Maria Hsia, and
was ignorant of the source of the Asian funds solicited from Johnny Chung.
Buy, if you like, the notion that the payments had nothing to do with flip-flops
on trade and the technology-transfer triumph over the Pentagon by
anything-goes Commerce.

But even if China's quid was not "solely" responsible for Clinton's quo, the
fact remains that secret Chinese money passed and U.S. policy changed. The
unspoken truth haunting this summit is that China's leaders have something on
this President.

Would they use this illicit leverage to gain a concession? Of course not;
Chinese diplomacy can be exquisitely subtle. No winks of understanding will
be needed.

In this charade, Clinton will formally ask the Chinese to cooperate with the
Congress and the Department of Justice, and China's Jiang will formally
promise to help. Perhaps an expendable non-official middleman will be
designated to take a gentle fall, helping Janet Reno to avoid having to seek
independent counsel. And the relieved Clinton will owe Jiang a big one.

In light of his personal negotiating difficulty, and recognizing the need for the
U.S. to exchange summit visits with a major power, what can we reasonably
ask our President to do?

1. Before leaving for Beijing, stop claiming that all critics seek only to "isolate"
a billion people. Clinton's tired straw-man argument insults both human-rights
activists and hard-line strategists. I wrote that for Nixon, and the grapes of
wrath don't take a second squeezing.

2. On arrival, don't waste your mandatory human-rights message on the
accompanying press corps. Instead, insist on making it a major theme of your
live broadcast-telecast to the Chinese people, and be sure the interpreter is
our man. Meet and be photographed with authentic dissidents and offer to
host a White House meeting between Jiang and the Dalai Lama.

3. In negotiations, deal with verification of promises to curtail the spread of
nukes and missiles; don't try to con the world with a phony p.r. stunt of
"re-targeting" missiles. We all know they can be aimed again at U.S. cities
within 10 minutes -- and now much more accurately, thanks to the victory of
Clinton Commerce and the big donors over the Pentagon.

4. Surface the concern in our intelligence community with experiments in
China to gain the ability to combat our "critical infrastructure." A brigade of
official hackers with the mission of destroying our computer communications
and satellites is even more worrisome than a beachhead in Long Beach, Calif.

5. Try financial jujitsu. When China threatened to devalue its yuan unless the
U.S. and Japan bolstered the yen, the U.S. jumped to do Beijing's bidding.
Now Clinton should heap praise on Chinese "economic stability" -- making it
harder for China to devalue when the pressure in Japan builds again.

Finally, let Jiang know that the next U.S. President might not be so vulnerable
to revelations of Chinese manipulation, and will not forget any advantage
taken of this one.
nytimes.com