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- GRAPEVINE, Page 9
-
-
- By JANICE CASTRO
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- Put Up or Else
-
- Blunt talk on trade marked a private meeting between Dan
- Quayle and Kiichi Miyazawa during the Japanese Prime Minister's
- visit to Washington last week. The Vice President brought up the
- troubled U.S.-JAPAN BUSINESS COUNCIL, which has been holding
- talks aimed at lowering trade barriers. Prospects looked good
- after President Bush visited Japan in January. But progress
- stalled last month when Japanese members abruptly denied that
- problems exist. Snapped a Japanese CEO to his U.S. counterparts:
- "You just aren't competitive." The seething Americans threatened
- to quit the council. After Quayle complained at length over
- breakfast with Miyazawa last Thursday, the Japanese Prime
- Minister told an aide, "I want this solved." American executives
- say unless they see some progress in the next round of talks,
- which start this weekend in Tokyo, they will call for
- retaliatory action against Japan.
-
- Read My Lips: No Test Ban
-
- Now that the Soviet Union has collapsed, many Americans
- believe it is time for the U.S. to join its former enemy in a
- NUCLEAR TESTING moratorium. The Administration opposes a ban.
- Bill Clinton has made it an election issue, but the fight is
- only beginning. The House and more than half the Senate support
- the one-year test ban written into the 1993 defense
- authorization bill. President Bush may veto the bill to kill the
- ban. Four more nuclear tests are planned this year, and six
- next. The Administration insists that testing is needed to
- ensure the safety and reliability of the U.S. arsenal. But at
- least three upcoming blasts are designed primarily to test the
- effects on Star Wars equipment that would be powered by nuclear
- explosions.
-
- Never Put It in Writing
-
- Just what was in those notes that got CAP WEINBERGER
- indicted last month for committing perjury and obstructing the
- congressional investigation of Iran-contra? Since Weinberger's
- handwriting is virtually unreadable, the Iran-contra committee
- had to persuade his former secretary, Kay Leisz, to translate.
- One note supposedly read, "McFarlane called re price of HAWKS
- for Israel." Said another: "McFarlane called re HAWKS and TOWS
- for Israel." Both could refer to illegal arms transfers to Iran
- in 1985. Said a source who has reviewed some of the notes:
- "Jeez, it sure looks bad." But he adds optimistically, "There
- is substantial ambiguity."
-
- This Sale Is a Mirage
-
- The Bush Administration's reluctance to offend Beijing may
- cost General Dynamics a bundle. Taiwan has been trying for 10
- years to buy F-16 fighter-bombers, but the U.S. has refused, in
- order to avoid stirring up Beijing. Washington did compromise
- by allowing enough technology transfers and help from General
- Dynamics so that Taiwan could build an indigenous defense
- fighter (IDF) based on the F-16. But word out of Taipei is that
- the initials really stand for "It Don't Fly." Now that Beijing
- is buying Soviet-built Su-27 fighters, Taiwan is running out of
- patience. Diplomatic sources say Taipei has decided to buy about
- 60 MIRAGE 2000 fighters from France. Paris, it seems, is not so
- worried as Washington about Beijing's feelings.
-
- THEY'RE NOT LIBERALS
-
- Gay Republicans want respect. The Log Cabin Federation, a
- national gay Republican organization with 5,000 members, will
- hold its convention in Houston next month. Says Rich Tafel,
- president of the group: "We're conservative, promilitary -- and
- in the military. But George Bush has turned his back on us."
-
- THE YO-YO HAS LANDED
-
- Space-shuttle duty is tough. On next month's mission, one
- astronaut will practice Rock the Cradle, Skin the Cat and Around
- the World in zero gravity. nasa hopes that a videotape of stunts
- with the SB-2 -- a $75 high-tech yo-yo -- will interest kids in
- space. If that's the point, maybe the space agency should show
- the astronauts watching television.
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