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1994-05-02
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<text>
<title>
U.S. Senate Debate on MFN Status for China
</title>
<article>
<hdr>
Foreign Policy Bulletin, July/August 1991
Renewal of Most-Favored-Nation Trade Status for China. Senate
Debate on Legislation
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Senate Debate on Legislation Attaching Conditions to Renewal of
China's MFN Status (Excerpts)
</p>
<p>Senator George J. Mitchell, July 22, 1991
</p>
<p> In every respect, our policy toward China should receive a
careful evaluation as to its success. If it is not working, and
I believe it is not, we ought to know that and change it. This
bill provides a framework for examining serious questions about
our policy toward China. This bill says that we cannot condition
the extension of most-favored-nation status on the broad
generalities that have been used in the past. It is time to
examine the specifics, to measure each of them against the
national interest at stake, to balance the importance of our
national objectives against the costs and benefits of that
policy.
</p>
<p> This bill is not a restriction on the President or any
intrusion into his conduct of foreign policy. It reflects the
fact that any policy must be judged critically and methodically
against the national interest it is meant to serve.
</p>
<p> The bill gives the President one year in which to work with
the Chinese leaders he knows so well to produce change in those
human rights, trade, and weapons policy which now strain our
bilateral relations. All that requires of the President is that
next June, a year from now, if he should again conclude that the
policy of granting favorable trade status to China is sound,
that he report on the specific elements of that policy in terms
of the results it has produced.
</p>
<p> Such a report would include answers to several specific
questions: has the Chinese Government accounted for those
citizens detained, accused, or sentenced because of the
nonviolent expression of their political beliefs? Has the
Chinese Government released citizens imprisoned for such
expression? Has the Chinese Government stopped exporting
products to the United States made by force labor?
</p>
<p> Has the Chinese Government ceased the supplying of arms and
military assistance to the Khmer Rouge? Has the Chinese
Government made significant progress in adhering to the joint
declaration on Hong Kong, in preventing violations of
internationally recognized human rights and correcting unfair
trade practices? Has it adopted a national policy which adheres
to the limits and controls on nuclear, chemical, and biological
arms production?
</p>
<p> The answers to each of these questions reflect elements of
the national interest which this policy, like all our policies,
is designed to pursue. When we have all these answers, we will
all be in a better position to judge if the policy is
succeeding.
</p>
<p> The bill contains one additional, crucial provision designed
to directly and promptly respond to the proliferation of missile
technology. Missile technology is extremely destabilizing when
it is in the hands of non-democratic governments whose
relations with their neighbors are in a constant state of
tension.
</p>
<p> The national interest in a stable world is self-evident. We
should not run the risk that another Persian Gulf-type crisis
could erupt, where civilian populations can be held hostage and
the world community must respond to aggression.
</p>
<p> The possibility of Chinese sales of certain ballistic
missiles or launchers to Syria, Pakistan, and Iraq is not
conducive to global stability. Indeed, it is a clear and direct
threat to regional peace. Yet that possibility is far from
remote. Intelligence reports as well as routine news stories
have made that clear.
</p>
<p> So the bill provides that 15 days after enactment, the
President must certify to Congress that such sales have not
taken place. If, at any time after enactment the President
determines that such sales have occurred, he is required to
notify the Congress and to immediately terminate most-
favored-nation trade treatment for products from the People's
Republic of China.
</p>
<p> The President has repeatedly said that our goal is to seek
a world order based on the rule of law and the fundamental
rights of man. I agree. Such a world order would serve American
interests. It is what our foreign policy is designed to produce.
When a policy produces movement toward a world ruled by law, we
should continue and expand that policy. When a policy does not
produce that result, we ought to reexamine it. When a policy
contributes to the opposite result, we should change it.
</p>
<p> When our nation first changed its policy toward recognizing
the Government of the People's Republic of China twenty years
ago, we made a policy reversal of enormous and difficult
magnitude. With the benefit of hindsight, few would argue that
it was a mistake. It was not a mistake. With all of its
subsequent ups and downs, the greater integration of China into
the world community has had benefits for the people of the
country and for the world community.
</p>
<p> But there is an enormous difference in ending a policy of
isolation which served neither American, Chinese, nor world
interests, and changing a policy which is not producing any good
results.
</p>
<p> We will continue to have a relationship with China. The
question is what should be that relationship. Should it be
one-sided, with Chinese manipulation and cynicism on one side
and American frustration on the other? Or should we aim for a
relationship in which both parties recognize that there are
obligations that go along with the benefits of the relationship?
</p>
<p> All the free governments in the world today recognize that
they have international responsibilities as well as privileges.
It is fair to apply to the Government of China the same
standards we apply to other nations. Ultimately, that is what
this bill seeks to do.
</p>
<p>Senator Max Baucus, July 23, 1991
</p>
<p> By denying MFN for China we would be cutting off the vein of
democracy that runs from this nation to China. We would inhibit
not only the free flow of products between our two nations but
also the free flow of people and ideas.
</p>
<p> In this morning's New York Times, an excellent column
appeared by Li Xianglu, the former assistant to the ousted
Communist Party chief and now a leading reformer. Li Xianglu
wrote:
</p>
<p> "Only economic prosperity and political openness can make
democracy achievable. The extension of most-favored-nation
status without conditions will help promote these fundamental
changes."
</p>
<p> The power is in our hands to help China achieve meaningful
changes and real reform. The power is in our hands to help the
Chinese people see change now, not in 4,000 years.
</p>
<p> Cutting off MFN for China would not only be a misdirected
shot at the Chinese Government, it would be a fatal blow to
thousands of working Americans.
</p>
<p> We have talked about United States exports of $5 billion to
China each year. Five billion dollars. I have been in the Senate
for over twelve years, and that is still a figure that boggles
the mind. But what helps make it more clear in my mind is
realizing that we are talking about not just $5 billion in
trade, we are talking about 100,000 American jobs; 100,000
Americans would be put out of work if trade is cut off to China.
</p>
<p> And we are not talking about wealthy jobs--lawyers and
bankers and corporate executives would not lose their jobs if
MFN with China is cut off. We are talking about the backbone of
America. We are talking about farmers across the Farm Belt; we
are talking about machinists at Boeing in Seattle or McDonnell
Douglas in St. Louis; we are talking about America's miners; we
are talking about timber workers in the Northwest.
</p>
<p> The supporters of the resolution believe that cutting off MFN
is sending a message to China. To those 100,000 American
workers, cutting off MFN means that they no longer