China's
Russia on July 15, 2004 Watch
for China's split with Russia By
Paul Lin US National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice recently visited Japan, China and South Korea. The tour
was probably related to US President George W. Bush's preparations for the
presidential election campaign. The US has invited Chinese President Hu Jintao to the US, partly to find
out where China draws the line on the Taiwan issue, and partly to show voters
the importance the administration attaches to the US-China relationship. Of the two US presidential candidates, China clearly prefers the
presumptive Democratic candidate, Senator John Kerry, who has said that he wants
to solve the Taiwan issue using the "one country, two systems" model
to Bush, who is militarily aggressive and quite friendly towards Taiwan. China
will therefore raise the price for accepting Bush's invitation, since it doesn't
want to improve Bush's chances during the election campaign. Rice's visit to
China was therefore a difficult task. If Hu visits the US next month, it will
attract a lot of attention. Apart from affecting the China-US relationship, such
a visit will also have an effect on Beijing's internal power struggles. There is also an aspect to this interaction between China and the US that
is positive to the US. Changes negative to China have occurred in the
international strategic situation. Namely, China's relationships with
neighboring states have become strained. Although not too obvious as yet, it can
be said with near-certainty that these tensions will intensify in the future.
They are thus important changes, and most important among them are the changes
in China's relationships with Russia and Japan. There are two aspects to the changes in the China-Russia relationship. The
first aspect was embodied by the three-week-long military exercise held in
Russia's far east last month. It was the nation's biggest military exercise in
the 15 years since the collapse of the Soviet Union, and it was held in the
vicinity of Dongning, Heilongjiang Province, and Chunhua, Jilin Province. These
two cities are situated close to Vladivostok, the largest port in Russia's far
east, and Nakhodka, which will be the end point on the pipeline that will be
built to transport Russian oil to Japan. There is also another oil-related change: the official Russian announcement
that it has reversed course on the construction of the pipeline from Angarsk in
Russia to Daqing in China, which Russia originally had agreed to. Although the
Angarsk-Nakhodka pipeline suggested by Japan will not be built, there will be a
pipeline from Taishet to Nakhodka, still clearly biased towards Japan. Observers
are now trying to assess what retributive measures China will adopt towards
Russia. Over the past dozen years or so, Russia has sold large quantities of
advanced weapons to China, and former president Jiang Zemin has confirmed
treaties signed in the19th century and in which China ceded a total of 3 million
km2 of its territory to Russia, but without succeeding in winning back the
friendship of "Big Brother" Russia. Russia has both ambitions and worries, thinking that once China grows
strong, it may demand the return of the land included in those treaties.
Furthermore, a few million Chinese people have already moved into these sparsely
populated areas, and could in the future demand self determination. Maybe this
is how the Washington Times, in a recent report, came to the conclusion that
Russia and the US are cooperating to build the submarines to be sold to Taiwan.
Some observers also think that Russia may use a possible Chinese attack on
Taiwan as an opportunity to attack China from behind. The old slogan of the Chinese Communist Party that "the Russian
revisionists are still trying to destroy us" anticipated the fact that the
Soviet Union's tanks could roll directly into the Chinese capital through
Mongolia. This was also the reason that Mao Zedong changed his policy of
"overthrowing US imperialism" into a policy of friendship with the US.
Japan has also tried hard to destroy China in the past, but the greatest
threat has instead been Russia, which also is the nation to which China has
ceded the largest part of its territory. After Jiang came to power, he changed
Mao and Deng Xiaoping's policies in favor of anti-American nationalism, ignoring
the Russian threat. In order to cover up the cracks in the China-Russia relationship, the vice
chairman of the Central Military Commission, Guo Boxiong, recently visited
Moscow. On July 6, he met with Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov.
Unexpectedly, the two sides signed a memorandum on holding joint military
exercises, something which will only make the problems more obvious. Russia
specialist Rice will have her own way of widening these cracks. Paul
Lin is a commentator based in New York. China
dissatisfied after Rice's visit By
Charles Snyder China expressed
unhappiness with the results of last week's visit by US National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice to Beijing, demanding the US stop selling advanced arms
to Taiwan, and telling Washington that "it's time to honor its
commitments" to a "one China" policy. The press spokesman of the Chinese embassy in Washington, Sun Weide, made
the comments in a rare press conference on Tuesday in response to the Rice
meeting. In the press conference, which was open to both the Taiwanese and
international press corps, Sun insisted that any resumption of cross-strait
dialogue should be based on Beijing's "one China" principle, and
warned that any increase in tensions over Taiwan between China and the US could
set back bilateral relations. He also indicated that China would not look favorably on any efforts by
Washington to play a greater role in bringing Beijing and Taipei together for
resumed cross-strait dialogue. "Taiwan is part of China," he said, "so the Chinese can
solve their problems by themselves," Sun said. During her talks with former Chinese president Jiang Zemin in Beijing, Rice
suggested that China open a dialogue with President Chen Shui-bian without
insisting on a "one China" principle as a precondition, according to a
report in The New York Times. Sun clearly rejected that idea. "The `one China' principle is very important," he said. "If
Taiwan accepts the `one China' principle, there will be great prospects for
cross-strait relations." Sun indicated that while Rice's visit was aimed at advancing
Beijing-Washington relations, in terms of the Taiwan issue, the trip did not
accomplish that goal. "We are gravely concerned over the recent US moves on the Taiwan
questions," Sun said in an opening statement. Repeating the so-called "three stops" that Foreign Minister Li
Zhaoxing communicated to Rice, Sun said, "We strongly urge the US side to
stop selling advanced arms to Taiwan and cut the military links between the US
and Taiwan, stop any official exchanges with Taiwan authorities, stop supporting
Taiwan to join the international organizations where statehood is
required." "Only in this way can the stable development of the China-US relations
as well as the peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait be guaranteed,"
Sun said. During the talks between Rice and Chinese leaders, the Chinese
"emphasized the importance of the Taiwan issue in US-China relations,"
Sun said. "This cannot be overemphasized." Sun stressed that the issue of Taiwan dominated the discussion. "During the talks, we said again and again that the Taiwan issue bears
on China's national sovereignty and territorial integrity, and it is always the
most important and sensitive issue in China-US relations," Sun said.
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