-Caveat Lector-

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/1/27/91039.shtml

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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

U.S. Helps China Destroy Ourselves, Dissident Wu Says
Wes Vernon, NewsMax.com
Monday, Jan. 28, 2002
Editor’s note: This is the conclusion of NewsMax’s exclusive interview with
Chinese dissident Harry Wu. See part one: China a Terrorist Threat to U.S.,
Wu Warns
U.S. cash has directly and indirectly gone into Chinese weapons aimed at the
U.S., dissident Harry Wu told NewsMax.com.

As an example, he cited the Chinese purchase of Russian missile destroyers.
Russia, which was financially unable to maintain the weaponry, was only too
happy to accept the offer of $2 billion for it. Originally designed by the
old Soviet Union for the express purpose of using it against U.S. aircraft,
the missile destroyers are now the property of the "People’s Liberation
Army’s" navy and are facing the U.S. Pacific Fleet.

"Now, the question is why does one former communist country [Russia] not have
the cash, and [China] the other communist country [does] have the cash,” Wu
says.

Not from their socialist state-owned enterprises, he assured us.

"No, it comes from our trade. From our investment. We are buying the rope.”

The former prisoner of the brutal Red Chinese regime seems to believe his
foundation is like a David going up against a Goliath of U.S. and
international enterprises that are "funding all these think-tanks and
scholars from universities [spreading propaganda] that our business in China
is the best way to change China.”

And the slave-made merchandise from China flooding department stores all over
America?

That issue hits home with the Laogai Foundation chief. If he were still there
doing the slave labor that he used to do, he might very well be making some
of those charming bargain items you can pick up at your nearest department
store.

"I'd like to say the [U.S.] government doesn’t like to see that happen [and
that] it really bothers them.”

Why It's Cheap

But he laments an apparent popular attitude of "Why should I care [if] the
product is made by cheap labor, forced labor, by torture. I don’t mind. If
the product’s cheap, it’s good for the United States. Right?” Wrong, as Wu
sees it.

In many cases, there is the perception that Chinese imports have "no
competition in the United States,” thus fostering the notion of "Why should I
care?”

Which raises the question of how much of what used to be U.S. competition has
now been eliminated by cheap Chinese slave labor that has undercut our own
American businesses and the livelihood of American workers.

That supports Wu’s belief that Western nations are shooting themselves in the
foot, economically and strategically.

Who benefits from China’s new membership in the World Trade Organization? The
multinational corporations, says Wu.

In a speech last May before the U.S.-China Security Review Commission, he
warned, "In China, Western companies can take advantage of a cheap,
hard-working but oppressed labor force because they do not have to worry
about giving workers benefits or dealing with strikes.”

And the following comments of the freedom fighter should be framed for those
who wonder why there is so much passivity in official circles when it comes
to dealing with China:

"It is actually good for Western business to have a strong Communist Party as
a partner in China because the entire government structure operates to serve
the party’s interests. So it follows that Western corporations will benefit
from allying with the powers-that-be in China.”

Aiding North Korea

Take the "hot spot” of North Korea, a bitter Stalinist regime seething with
hatred for the West. While the U.S. supports South Korea, whose approach to
governing has given it a thriving, free, capitalist society, China backs
North Korea’s dangerous weapons build-up. China is right there supporting
this regime that lets its people starve while it puts its resources into
developing more weapons of destruction.

"So China’s on the other side over there, and we want to make good relations
with them. How come?” the puzzled victim of communist tyranny wants to know.

Wu dishes out a minimum of direct criticism of the U.S. government or its
leading politicians, but U.S. government officials have pursued policies he
severely criticizes. In fact, one of the dirty little secrets in Washington,
as NewsMax has noted before, is that there are so many bipartisan skeletons
in the China closet that, with notable exceptions, there is a parallel
bipartisan reluctance to shine the spotlight on the dangers and damage that
freedom fighters such as Wu have pointed out.

Quite a contrast to the alarm bells in the halls of Congress during the
1950s, when the rallying cry was "Who lost China?”

Nonetheless, NewsMax's interview with the respected dissident served as a
reminder of the Clinton administration’s eight long years of total disregard
for the security of the United States and the people who entrusted Bill
Clinton with the highest office in the land.

U.S. Makes China a Superpower

Wu recalled that one of the last comments of Warren Christopher, Clinton’s
first secretary of state, was that "we have to deal with China because China
is a superpower.”

"Sir,” Wu asked rhetorically, "now [that] the Soviet Union is gone, how come
we have a new superpower? A new superpower? Who made that?”

His answer was that policy-makers did it through a "kowtow” policy toward
China. The industrialists, again bidding to supply the rope for their own
ultimate demise, finance propaganda saying that "our business in China is the
best way to change China. Oh, my God!”

Wu experienced firsthand how technology from the West had advanced Chinese
capabilities.

When he re-entered China after attaining U.S. citizenship in the mid-1990s,
"from the computer, they were aware” that he was the same Harry Wu they had
imprisoned for his defiance of the communist regime from 1960 to 1979.

That was when he was a Chinese national. This time, he had what he may have
assumed to be the protection of American citizenship. But they nabbed him in
1995 when he tried to re-enter and threw him back into the Chinese prison
system.

Unlike his previous imprisonment, when he was one of millions of Chinese
citizens who had been victimized, that citizenship badge was enough to
galvanize "my neighbors, my government, my State Department and the Congress”
to "make a big noise,” and he was out in 66 days. But anyone who has had that
experience knows that’s 66 days too many, he said.

19 Years

His first incarceration lasted 19 years, from 1960 to 1979. He was 23 when he
went in, 42 when he was allowed out. Nineteen of his most productive years
were wasted, spent doing hard labor in dungeons.

By the time the Chinese government let him out of prison, a new generation
(known after 1989 as the Tiananmen Square generation) was coming up. Many of
the dissidents of Wu’s generation had "passed away or had not enough energy
and were released and given a kind of rehabilitation [and that] would be good
for the authorities.” Releasing "old political criminals” was considered
good public relations.

"They let some of the fish go back to the pond, stay in the pond. But I, one
of the fish, went to the ocean,” and came to the United States, says Wu.

He told his former captors he would go the U.S. just to study. "I had to lie
to them,” saying he would come back and resume life as a permanent Chinese
citizen. But after all he had been through, there was no way he intended to
do that.

Now, Dr. Harry Wu’s life in the United States focuses on an expose of his
former tormentor’s designs on our civilization.

The book "Seeds of Fire” is adding ammunition to his efforts to get the truth
out to a complacent public and a business community that he believes is
intent on supplying the rope for its own hanging.




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