CHINESE MILITARY GETS A LESSON IN U.S. STRATEGIC THINKING

Bill Gertz
THE WASHINGTON TIMES


Twenty-five senior Chinese military officers are in Boston to
learn details about U.S. decision-making that critics say will
help China fight the United States in a conflict over Taiwan.

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) officers arrived Saturday.
They include 24 senior colonels and one navy captain who will
spend two weeks at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of
Government, according to Clinton Administration officials close
to the program.

The officers are there to hear lectures by current and former
U.S. national security officials who have discussed how the
United States would respond to a crisis over Taiwan.

"Most of the officers are intelligence collectors or technology
collectors,"  said one knowledgeable official.

Other visiting officers are from components of the Chinese
military involved in directing unconventional warfare against the
United States, a key element of China's emerging war-fighting
strategy.

"The Chinese plan to use this information to manipulate the U.S.
decision-making process and paralyze us during a crisis," said
one official.  "And many of these visiting officers are involved
in just that type of activity."

The group includes colonels from the Central Military Commission,
the top Communist Party organ that controls the military; the PLA
general staff department, and various regional military command
headquarters units.

It is the third group of colonels to attend Harvard as part of
its "China Initiative," which was set up in 1997 with a $1
million grant from Nina Kung, a Hong Kong businesswomen who heads
Chinachem, a chemical manufacturer with extensive ties to
mainland China.

In the past three groups, the Chinese have questioned their
lecturers on U.S. decision-making in a crisis, the officials
said.

Another Chinese objective for what Harvard calls its executive
program for Chinese security affairs is to conduct "political
influence operations"—spreading propaganda aimed at influential
academics and U.S.  policy-makers that China's military buildup
poses no threat to the United States.

A second propaganda theme of the colonels' is to discredit any
U.S.  officials or Americans who view China as a potential enemy.

Officials said China does not allow similar two-week exchange
programs for U.S. military officers at a major Chinese
university. Visits to China by U.S. military officers are
severely restricted, the officials said.

The colonels' visit coincides with a disputed military exchange
program underway that involves Pentagon-sponsored visits by
Chinese officers to sensitive U.S. military facilities.

A group of Chinese officers, including three generals, was
briefed last week on U.S. joint war-fighting training and
simulation, an area the Chinese military is seeking to improve.
They also are scheduled to visit the U.S.  Pacific Command, which
would be in charge of all U.S. forces in the Pacific.

That visit drew protests from Senator Robert C. Smith, New
Hampshire Republican, and Representative Tom DeLay, Texas
Republican, who questioned whether the visit violated a U.S. law
passed last year that prohibits helping China develop its
war-fighting expertise.

Officials said colonels who arrived at Harvard on Saturday are
part of a "loophole" in the legislation that set up the
Smith-DeLay guidelines for U.S. military exchanges. The Harvard
program is not sponsored or funded by the Pentagon.

It was set up in 1997 by Joseph Nye, a former Clinton
Administration assistant defense secretary who is dean of the
Kennedy School. Mr. Nye was the official viewed as the author of
the Pentagon's soft-line policy toward China. He once stated that
if China is treated like an enemy, it will become an enemy.

Since the accidental bombing of the China Embassy in Belgrade,
Yugoslavia, last year, China in official writings has stated that
the United States is its main enemy.

Former Bush Administration arms control official Robert
Blackwill, who at one time directed the China military program at
Harvard, could not be reached for comment. Mr. Blackwill was in
charge of drafting the Republican Party's platform during the
presidential convention earlier this month.

Other Harvard officials involved in the program did not return
telephone calls seeking comment on the colonels program.

After the Smith-DeLay guidelines became law, Pentagon lawyers
rejected the arguments of critics who questioned the legality of
the Harvard program, the officials said. The lawyers said
allowing Pentagon and other U.S. officials to take part in the
program would not violate the legal guidelines.

Last year, a senior Pentagon intelligence officer, Army
Lieutenant Colonel Lonnie Henley, sat in on the entire two-week
program. During an earlier session, the Pentagon's top China
policy-maker, Kurt Campbell, lectured the colonels.

Officials said the colonels this year are expected to seek
answers on how U.S. policy toward Taiwan will be affected if
Republican George W. Bush is elected president.

The Texas governor supports the Taiwan Security Enhancement Act
that passed the House by a wide margin and is pending before the
Senate. The act would bolster U.S. defense ties to Taiwan.

Mr. Bush's key campaign national security adviser, Condoleeza
Rice, has said she does not regard China as a threat.

Marshall Goldman, associate director of Harvard's Davis Center
for Russia Studies, has said he supports a similar Harvard
exchange program with Russian officers. But he questioned the
Chinese military program. "Almost all the Chinese are
intelligence people," he told the Boston Globe.

According to U.S. intelligence sources, in order to win Chinese
government cooperation, Harvard provided assurances to the
Chinese military that U.S.  intelligence agencies, namely the CIA
and FBI, would not seek to recruit any of the visiting PLA
officers as spies.

The agreement also calls for restricting access to the Harvard
campus by FBI counterintelligence agents engaged in surveillance
of intelligence activities carried out by the colonels.


This article was mailed from The Washington Times

For more great articles, visit us at
http://www.washtimes.com

Copyright (c) 2000 News World Communications, Inc. All rights
reserved.


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