>From wsws.org

WSWS : News & Analysis : North America : Clinton Impeachment

China spy scare: a new stage in the political warfare in Washington

By Martin McLaughlin
10 March 1999

Congressional Republicans have seized on reports of Chinese espionage
against US nuclear weapons facilities to launch a new round of political
attacks on the Clinton administration. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott
announced that the Senate Intelligence Committee would begin holding
hearings next week on the charges, which surfaced in a March 6 front-page
report in the New York Times.

Energy Secretary Bill Richardson declared that the information on
miniaturization of atomic warheads, allegedly leaked from the Los Alamos
National Laboratory in New Mexico in 1985, represented a serious breach of
national security. But he said the long-term implications of the espionage
were still being studied, and he pointed out that the leak took place
during the Reagan administration, although it was only discovered in 1995.

The Times account was clearly aimed at providing the basis for a major spy
scare and inflicting political damage on the White House. The Times accused
the Clinton administration of impeding the investigation into suspected
Chinese espionage at Los Alamos, suggesting it did so out of concern that
the probe would cut across its China policy and fuel Republican allegations
of illicit contributions from Chinese government sources to the 1996
Democratic election campaign.

Particularly ominous was a passage in the Times article quoting a former
CIA counterintelligence chief, who declared, "This is going to be just as
bad as the Rosenbergs." The implication is that the Chinese-American
scientist, Wen Ho Lee, who is the target of the press and FBI campaign,
could face the same fate as Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were sent to
the electric chair in 1953.

It is certainly possible that there was Chinese intelligence penetration of
the US nuclear weapons program. All the major capitalist states conduct
intelligence operations against one another, whether they are nominally
allies or not, and facilities such as Los Alamos are prime targets.

However, the alleged Chinese spying must be considered within the context
of the crisis-ridden state of American politics--all the more so given the
sensationalistic way in which the story has been broached in the press, and
the obvious coordination between the media and anti-Clinton sources in the
FBI and Republican Congress.

The allegations have the earmarks of a further provocation by right-wing
elements against the Clinton administration, opening up a new line of
attack after the failure of impeachment. At the same time, they reflect the
intensifying conflict within US ruling circles over strategic and economic
policy towards China. The two issues overlap, since congressional
Republicans have made the administration's China policy one of their
principal targets.

Last spring both House and Senate Republicans raised an uproar over the US
policy of permitting American satellite companies to have their satellites
put into orbit on Chinese rockets, claiming that this practice had allowed
the Chinese military to improve the accuracy of missiles which would target
US cities. There were dark suggestions that Clinton was guilty of virtual
treason, for allegedly trading missile launching permits for campaign
contributions, but ultimately the Republicans dropped the issue in favor of
the Starr sex witchhunt.

Now the same language reappears in the columns of the Times and the Wall
Street Journal, the two newspapers which have done the most to promote the
right-wing destabilization campaign against the White House. Times
columnist William Safire--who as a Nixon speechwriter had nothing but
praise for closer US-China ties--proclaimed the alleged Chinese nuclear
spying an "American Defeat." Safire implied a direct connection between
Chinese campaign contributions to the Democratic campaign in 1996 and the
Clinton White House's alleged decision to go slow in investigating Chinese
nuclear espionage.

Wall Street Journal columnist George Melloan wrote that it was "too
horrible a thought to imagine a president committing what amounts to
treason," but ended up urging a renewed drive to impeach Clinton:
"Countering national security threats is an American president's most
important job. A failure here dwarfs in importance even the lying about
Monica, and perhaps Congress should give it at least equally serious
attention."

The timing of the Times article, which touched off the Washington furor,
was itself extraordinary. It came the day after the FBI's first
interrogation of Wen Ho Lee, and was clearly coordinated with the federal
investigators, who were quoted extensively in the article. The article gave
a lengthy account of the alleged espionage conspiracy before any arrests
had been made, before anyone had been indicted, and while Lee himself was
still working at Los Alamos--he was only fired Monday after the Department
of Energy demanded that the University of California, his actual employer,
dismiss him.

One of the two writers bylined on the March 6 article was Jeff Gerth, the
reporter who penned the original Times report on Whitewater in March 1992.
Gerth played a major role in distorting the facts and promoting allegations
of cover-up and conspiracy over what was nothing more than a failed real
estate investment by the Clintons and their then-friends, James and Susan
McDougal.

The account of alleged espionage is a collection of unrelated incidents,
jumbled together to fan suspicion. These include such innocuous events as
the well-publicized 1996 official visit of China's Defense Minister, Gen.
Chi Haotian, to Sandia National Laboratory, another US nuclear weapons
facility. Other than the fact that the general, like the scientist, is of
Chinese ancestry and that Sandia, like Los Alamos, is in New Mexico, no
other connection between these events is even asserted, let alone
demonstrated.

The Times article admits that FBI investigators--the principal source of
the report--did not even have enough evidence to obtain a court-ordered
wiretap on Wen Ho Lee, let alone bring criminal charges against him.
Although Lee supposedly transferred critical military information to China
in 1985, he continued to work at Los Alamos for another fourteen years.
Even now government spokesmen admit they lack sufficient evidence to charge
Wen Ho Lee with any criminal activity.

Other aspects of the alleged Chinese spy scandal raise questions. Lee is
described as a computer scientist--i.e., not a physicist or engineer--and
therefore less likely to be able to contribute information on the
miniaturization of atomic warheads, which is essentially a question of
engineering technique. Much of what he allegedly passed on to Chinese
associates, according to a report on NBC News, is routinely discussed at
international symposia with scientists from many countries. Other reports
say that much of this supposedly sensitive information can be downloaded
from the Internet.

US-China tensions


The spy allegations come in the midst of growing conflict between the US
and China. Relations between Washington and Beijing have undergone a
profound transformation in recent years. For two decades after the
Nixon-Kissinger rapprochement with China, American imperialism maintained a
strategic alliance with the Beijing Stalinist regime, directed against the
Soviet Union and, more broadly, against any revolutionary developments in
the former colonial countries.

The Pentagon had close relations with its Chinese counterparts, and the CIA
worked with China in arming and training counterrevolutionary movements in
Angola and elsewhere in Africa. The alleged 1985 transfer of weapons
technology to China, if it occurred, would have been assistance to an
American ally which was targeting its nuclear weapons against the Soviet
Union.

With the collapse of Stalinist political rule in the Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe, and then the breakup of the USSR in 1991, American-Chinese
relations began to change, as Washington came to view China increasingly as
a major, if not the most important, potential challenger to US hegemony,
both in Asia and globally.

Added to this are the growing economic conflicts with China, a country with
the second largest export surplus in its bilateral trade with the United
States, over $58 billion in 1998. US exporters complain bitterly that much
of the Chinese market is closed to them. At the same time, the vast size of
the Chinese market means that the limited opening to US penetration has
given American big business a huge stake in US-Chinese relations.

The Clinton administration has been torn by conflicts, both internally,
within the executive branch, and between the White House and Congress, over
how to handle economic and political-military disputes with China. Clinton
campaigned against Bush in 1992 with demagogic attacks on Bush's support to
the Beijing rulers who staged the Tiananmen Square massacre, but once in
office, he dropped any linkage between US-China trade and Chinese human
rights abuses.

The issue of US satellite launches on Chinese rockets led to an open split
within the administration between the Commerce Department and White House,
on one side, seeking to promote US business interests in China, and the
Pentagon and State Department, on the other, viewing China primarily as a
military and strategic threat.

The economic crisis which erupted in Asia in the summer of 1997 has
exacerbated tensions between Washington and Beijing. The Chinese government
has supported the US-imposed bailouts of Thailand, Indonesia and South
Korea, and propped up the Hong Kong dollar, the only currency in the region
which has not plunged against the US dollar.

At the same time China has sought to insulate itself from the spreading
currency and financial collapse, maintaining the Chinese yuan as an
inconvertible currency and curtailing the liberalization of financial
markets. Most important, Beijing has slowed the dismantling of state-owned
industries, for fear that displaced workers will not be absorbed into the
private sector, which is no longer growing so rapidly, and that social
unrest will become uncontrollable.

A series of incidents has taken place in the last month, sharpening the
tensions between the US and China:

February 22 -- The Clinton administration barred the latest satellite deal,
in which Hughes Space & Communications was to sell a $450 million satellite
to a Singapore-based company, to be launched on a Chinese rocket, to supply
mobile telephone services for eastern Asia.

February 23 -- US Deputy Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers visited
Beijing for talks on the Asian financial crisis, after Chinese authorities
allowed several major provincial financial institutions to collapse and
default on their debts to overseas creditors.

February 26 -- The US State Department issued its annual report on human
rights, focusing on the Chinese government's jailing of political
dissidents.

February 26 -- The US Senate passed a resolution, 99-0, calling on the
Clinton administration to introduce a resolution condemning China's human
rights record at an upcoming Geneva conference.

March 1 -- US Secretary of State Madeline Albright, during a visit to
Beijing, clashed with her Chinese counterpart Tiang Jianxuan over issues
ranging from the satellite permit to a proposed US anti-missile defense
system for Japan and Taiwan.

March 3-4 -- US Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky met with Chinese
trade officials in Beijing, to discuss a Chinese bid to enter the World
Trade Organization. She told them they would have to make extensive trade
concessions to win approval from the administration and the US Congress.

The proposed missile defense system for Taiwan is a particularly flagrant
US provocation. Both Beijing and Washington acknowledge Taiwan as part of
China. From the standpoint of international law, US missiles on Taiwan
would have the same legal standing as Chinese missiles stationed in Hawaii
or Puerto Rico.

The American press treats China's outrage at missiles on Taiwan as
irrational, or as proof of Chinese plans to launch a nuclear strike on the
island. But in 1962 the Kennedy administration went to the brink of nuclear
war to force removal of the missiles from Cuba, an island 90 miles away
from US soil--i.e., as close as Taiwan is to China.

The spy scare is certain to exacerbate tensions between the United States
and China, at the same time as it provides raw material for the internecine
struggle within the ruling circles in Washington.



Top of page


Readers: The WSWS invites your comments. Please send e-mail.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 1998-99
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved





~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R

The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Every great advance in natural knowledge has involved
the absolute rejection of authority. -Thomas Huxley
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Forwarded as information only; no endorsement to be presumed
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.



Reply via email to