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To: Clarksterh who wrote (31652)6/3/1999 4:38:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 152472
 
The President>

RE: China NTR Status . . .
by: morfn
21796 of 21797
STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
June 3, 1999

STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT

I have decided to renew Normal Trade Relations (NTR) status with China, so that we will continue to extend
to China the same trade treatment we provide to virtually every other country on Earth. Maintaining NTR with
China, as every U.S. President has done since 1980, will promote America's economic and security interests,
and I urge Congress to support this decision.

NTR with China is good for Americans. Our exports to China have quadrupled over the past decade. Exports
to China and Hong Kong support some 400,000 American jobs. Revoking NTR would derail ongoing
negotiations to increase our access to China's market and to promote economic reforms there.

Trade also remains a force for social change in China, spreading the tools, contacts and ideas that promote
freedom. A decade ago at Tiananmen, when Chinese citizens courageously demonstrated for democracy, they
were met by violence from a regime fearful of change. We continue to speak and work strongly for human
rights in China. A continued policy of principled, purposeful engagement reinforces these efforts to move China
toward greater
openness and broader freedom. This is the path to lasting stability and prosperity for China, to a future that will
benefit the Chinese people -- and the American people.

We pursue engagement with our eyes wide open, without illusions. We continue to speak frankly about our
differences and to firmly protect our national interests. A policy of disengagement and confrontation would only
strengthen those in China who oppose greater openness and freedom.

Therefore, I am committed to bringing China into global structures, to promote China's adherence to global
norms on human rights, weapons of mass destruction, crime and drugs, immigration, the environment, and on
trade. I am determined to pursue an agreement for China to join the World Trade organization on viable
commercial terms. This is not a favor to China but a means of opening and reforming China's markets and
holding China to the rules of the global trading system -- developments that will benefit America. Accordingly, I
am prepared to work closely with Congress to secure permanent NTR status for China in the context of a
commercially strong WTO agreement.

Posted: 06/03/1999 04:34 pm EDT as a reply to: Msg 21792 by Titimation


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To: Clarksterh who wrote (31652)6/3/1999 4:55:00 PM
From: Boplicity  Respond to of 152472
 
Thanks Clark,

Greg