Extracts.


Sino-US Relations: Feeble but Tenacious
A sign of relaxation appeared in the extremely tense Sino-US relations
caused by the recent plane collision incident, US arms sales to Taiwan and
the United States' NMD program. First, the Chinese President Jiang Zemin,
taking advantage of the occasion of attending the Fortune Global Forum in
Hong Kong, had a one-hour "happy exchange" with former US President Clinton
and, in his talks with Gerald Levin, boss of US On-line Era Group, a big
head of US media, Jiang pointed out, "We pay high attention to the
development of Sino-US relations, advocating treating Sino-US relations from
the strategic height and a long-term angle and properly handling
differences." 
Coincidentally, this happened when on the other shore of the Pacific, US
President George W. Bush slightly changed his consistent hostile tone used
when commenting on China, he pointed out at the US Electronic Industry
Association that China is a great burgeoning country, and he vigorously
supports trade with China. His remark implies he also attaches importance to
developing relations with China, at least it is so in economic and trade
fields. 
That's enough. It is asked that in this world what else can more closely
link up countries than can economic and trade ties? The Sino-US relations
contain both the possibility of confrontation and even conflict, and
extensive room for compromise and cooperation.

20 Years of Zigzag Waves
This form of zigzag waves in Sino-US relations has become a kind of
development mode at least in the previous 20 years.
At the end of 1978, the Carter Administration completed the process of the
normalization of Sino-US relations spread from the Nixon era, the United
States severed relations with the Taiwan authorities and established
diplomatic relations with China, this was to the satisfaction of both sides.
However, this was followed by the US Congress' adoption of the Taiwan
Relations Act which has so far affected and will, in the foreseeable future,
obstruct the healthy development of the Sino-US relations; around the time
of his assumption of office in 1982, Ronald Reagan, a conservative of the
Republican, threatened to restore diplomatic ties with Taiwan and strengthen
arms sales to Taiwan. For a time, dark clouds hung over the Sino-US
relationship in its infancy. For this, the two sides conducted 10-month
arduous negotiations, and reached the third joint communique, i.e., the
August 17 Communique, following the 1972 Sino-US Shnghai Communique, and the
communique on the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1979. It was
within the framework of this communique that Sino-US relations no longer
sustained any major damage due to the Taiwan issue. Until 1992 when the then
elder Bush, in a bid to campaign for re-election, decided to sell 150 F-16
fighter planes to Taiwan.
Sino-US relationship was in a slump in 1989. Elder Bush in July and November
twice sent Brent Scrowcroft, Advisor to the President for National Security
Affairs, as his special envoy to visit China, during which time he met with
Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping. When Chinese public opinion was lashing out at
the United States for its interference in China's internal affairs, all the
time China still cautiously avoided criticisms of President Bush himself.
Former US President Nixon then visiting China keenly felt this, He warned
the White House, saying that President Bush himself has become the US
greatest credit asset in China.
In the early 90s, during his campaign for presidential election, Democrat
Clinton not only attacked the then Bush Administration's "appeasement"
toward Beijing, but also, after his assumption of office, clearly expressed
that the granting of MFN status to China should be linked with the country's
effort to improve human rights. For a while, the only and most important
bond that linked the Sino-US relations after 1989-the Sino-US economic and
trade ties-was in deadly danger. However, one year later, due to China's
resolute boycott and under the pressure of the US industrial and commercial
interest groups, Clinton was compelled to go back on his own words,
declaring that the human rights issue should be disconnected with the MFN
issue. 
In 1996, when a crisis was triggered by Lee Teng-hui pursuit of an
"independent Taiwan", Chinese mainland conducted military exercises on the
Taiwan Straits. The US government sent out two aeroplane carrier fighters
for surveillance, thus triggering off confrontation between both sides.
However, it was this dangerous prospect stemmed from the military
confrontation of China and the United States that compelled leaders of the
two sides to sit down again to seek ways for improving Sino-US relations,
thus realizing the first exchange of visits between the top leaders of China
and the United States over the past 10-odd years in 1997 and 1998, and there
even emerged the saying that both sides would be "devoted to establishing a
constructive strategic partnership", thus leading Sino-US relations to the
best situation formed since 1989.

Feebleness but Unbreakable Tenacity
Following the bombing of Chinese Embassy in Yugoslavia in 1999, there
emerged a strong anti-US wave in China, signifying the death of the
"constructive strategic partnership". In terms of the atmosphere of domestic
public opinion, the Sino-US relations were plunged into an unprecedented
slump, which for a time affected the final-stage negotiations conducted
between China and the United States on China's accession to the WTO, the
14-year unremitting efforts made by China and the United States faced the
threat of coming to naught. However, leaders of China and the United States
made the choice after judging the hour and sizing up the situation, they not
only swiftly resumed the once suspended negotiations, but finally reached an
agreement, thus turning danger into safety in regard to Sino-US relations,
avoiding lasting damage to Sino-US relations caused by the incident of
bombing of Chinese Embassy. In the following year, Clinton unhesitatingly
used all his political resources and spared no efforts to persuade the
Congress to pass the bill of granting China PNTR status, recognizing the
earlier reached Sino-US agreement.
Among the many factors affecting the sound development of Sino-US relations,
there were both the hardly changeable structural factors, including the
Taiwan issue and political party struggle during US general election, and
the hardly controllable contingencies such as the "bombing of embassy" and
the "plane collision" incident. Precisely because the Sino-US relations are
affected by so many unfavorable factors, Harry Harding, the famous US expert
on Chinese affairs, appropriately summed up this relationship as "a kind of
feeble relationship".
On the other hand, however, In a series of global questions, (such as
�<eth>�����������硡the proliferation of large-scale WMD, and
attacking international criminal
activities)��r�������졡�������󡡣������衡���the Korean
Peninsula, peace and strategic balance in South Asia., the stability and
prosperity of Southeast Asia�� as well as bilateral relations between China
and the United States, there exist complicated interdependent relations and
overlapping of extensive interests, given this situation, sensible statesmen
are fully able to pursue the benefit while avoiding detriment, striving to
ensure that Sino-US relations, though feeble, are unbreakable, so as to form
a relationship "with tenacity" as summed up by Lampton, another famous US
expert on Chinese affairs.
Feebleness and tenacity constitute the basic characteristics of Sino-US
relations. Under this precondition, it is very unrealistic to attempt to
establish a kind of mature and stable relationship between the two big
countries of China and the United States which have opposite ideologies,
conflicting political systems, divergent social structures and different
cultural traditions, the important thing is how to, under the conditin of
acknowledging and respecting the difference and divergence of both sides,
seek common grounds while setting aside differences, pursuing benefit and
avoiding detriment, it is necessary both to form the lowest consensus
featuring mutual understanding of the structural issue and expressive and
implicit rules for handling this type of problems, and to establish a
mechanism for handling contingencies, so as to avoid the occurrence of such
incidents as plane collision and prevent excessive damage to the relations
between the two countries caused by this type of incidents, thereby making
the feeble Sino-US relations more tenacious. This will possibly be the issue
which leaders of China and the United States will face squarely and pay
attention to in the 21st century.


****


Air-raid Siren Sounded to Commemorate Victims of Japanese Bombing
An air-raid siren was sounded at 10:00 Tuesday to commemorate the victims of
the Japanese bombing 60 years ago of Chongqing municipality in southwest
China. 
On June 5, 1941, Japanese air force flew more than 20 sorties, bombing the
city for three hours.
About 2,500 residents, who hid in a tunnel in downtown Chongqing, were
suffocated to death in the bombing.
"Sixty years have passed, but I can never forgot the painful moans of those
victims," said Xiang Zhixian, now 76, an eyewitness to the tragedy.
With flowers and elegiac couplets, Xiang and thousands of local people went
to the site of the tunnel early Tuesday morning to mourn for the victims.
Chongqing made the decision to sound an air-raid siren every June 5 since
1999. 
A museum has been set up near the tunnel in commemoration of the victims.

****

US Scientists Urge Bush to Reduce Nuclear Arsenal
Sixteen American scientists and security experts called on US President
George W. Bush Tuesday to sharply reduce the US nuclear arsenal to a total
of 1,000 warheads. 
The scientists made the call as Bush prepares for summit talks with Russian
President Vladimir Putin.
The proposal, in a report released Tuesday, would amount to a cut of more
than 90 percent of the some 10,500 nuclear warheads in the American arsenal
for potential use against Russia and other countries.
The cutback, urged by the Federation of American Scientists, the Natural
Resources Defense Council and the Union of Concerned Scientists, would
include the elimination of 1,670 tactical nuclear warheads that remained
after former President George H.W. Bush deactivated almost all the weapons
in the category in 1991.
The tactical nuclear warheads that remain are kept at Air Force bases in New
Mexico and Nevada, on cruise missiles at Navy bases in Washington and
Georgia, and in a few NATO countries.
Bush, who will meet Putin in Slovenia on June 16, has said that he is
prepared to sharply reduce U.S. nuclear weapons while making plans for an
anti-missile defense.
Meanwhile, the scientists and security experts are skeptical of Bush's plan
for an anti-missile shield.
Deployment of a national missile defense would undermine Russia 's
confidence that it could retaliate quickly if the United States attacked,
the report said. 

****

Moscow State University Celebration Held in Beijing University
Russia's biggest institute of higher learning, Lomonosov Moscow State
University, Tuesday opened a celebration of its 250th anniversary at China's
elite Beijing University.
Dr. Victor Sadovnichy, rector of the Russian university, said at the opening
ceremony that this is the first time for the university to celebrate its
anniversary outside Russia.
During the four-day celebration, the Moscow delegation headed by the rector
will hold a photo exhibition of the achievements of Lomonosov Moscow State
University in the library of Beijing University.
Dr. Sadovnichy, an academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, is
scheduled to deliver a speech on "Human Beings and the Cosmos: Problems of
Life and Work in the Earth's Orbit."
Meanwhile, other delegation members, who are directors of university
departments, will also speak on their fields of study, including
mathematics, physics, psychology, journalism, economics and history for
students at Beijing University.
Moscow State University established an "information center" at Beijing
University last year, to promote exchanges and cooperation between the two
universities. 
Beijing University is planning to set up a similar center at its Moscow
counterpart later this year.


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