May 5, 2000

China Shepherds US Ties After Bomb

By The Associated Press

BEIJING (AP) -- China and the United States are wrangling anew over Taiwan, 
trade and a host of human rights complaints. A year after U.S. bombs 
shattered China's embassy in Yugoslavia, bitterly strained relations have 
retained the edginess that has marked ties for more than a decade.

Still, the bombing has shifted Chinese views of the United States. Gone are 
the communist leadership's rosy prospects for a partnership with 
Washington. Supporters of closer U.S. ties are on the defensive, and groups 
long wary of American intentions have grown more leery -- and vocal.

``I never had good feelings about the United States, so the bombing 
incident just confirmed my suspicions,'' said Bao Limin, a 22-year-old 
master's candidate at Tsinghua University, one of China's elite schools.

Bao and her classmates have no plans to protest on the anniversary of the 
May 7, 1999, bombing -- which falls on Sunday Belgrade time and Monday in 
Beijing. Academics said universities were ordered to keep campuses quiet. 
Chinese leaders don't want trouble in the weeks before the U.S. Congress 
votes on China's permanent access to the American market.

Even as they have moved to shore up U.S. ties to keep needed foreign 
investment flowing, Chinese leaders have had to accommodate anti-American 
sentiment among communist conservatives, the military and the public.

``The Chinese people will carry this incident in their hearts for a long 
time, so this has naturally influenced China-U.S. relations,'' said Liu 
Jinghua, an international affairs scholar with the Chinese Academy of 
Social Sciences. ``Of course it brought nationalism into play.''

The tensions are evident in the tightly controlled state media. Newspapers 
herald China's expected entry to the World Trade Organization, and 
acknowledge U.S. help in that goal. Shrill TV documentaries catalogue 
American racism and police brutality -- a counter to U.S. human rights 
criticisms. Leaders loudly accuse Washington of impeding China's cherished 
unification with Taiwan.

President Jiang Zemin has spoken out against creeping Westernization, 
accusing foreign forces of trying to change China's socialist government. 
To vie with the West, he launched a campaign to spur technological 
development, citing China's homemade nuclear weapons program for inspiration.

China was stridently opposed to NATO's war with Yugoslavia over Kosovo when 
five satellite-guided bombs slammed into the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade. 
The attack killed three Chinese journalists in the embassy and ignited 
furious protests in 20 cities across China.

Protesters, inflamed by state media, saw the bombing as a deliberate attack 
on China's sovereignty. They set the U.S. Consulate in Chengdu alight and 
hurled stones, garbage and even feces at the embassy in Beijing, trapping 
the U.S. ambassador inside for more than four days.

``In one instance, the United States' so-called democracy and freedom had 
no market among ordinary Chinese,'' Wei Ming, pen name for an unidentified 
scholar, said in an essay posted on a Web site that favors conservative, 
nationalistic views.

Many Chinese still feel anger toward the U.S. government over the bombing, 
refusing to accept Washington's explanation that the attack was an 
accident, due to faulty targeting.

``It's just like our parents always told us: the U.S. rules by force,'' 
said Wang Xiaoxia, a Tsinghua student.

China is much better off and better informed about the United States than 
during the democracy demonstrations in 1989, when students erected a Statue 
of Liberty-like figure on Tiananmen Square.

Television has made American celebrities familiar to Chinese, and trade has 
brought them U.S. goods. Many Chinese have visited the United States. One 
recent book, selling well at highbrow Beijing book stores, tells of a 
Chinese lawyer who clerked for a U.S. federal court judge and renders a 
sensitive portrait of the American legal system.

The free-flowing exchange has inspired mixed feelings.

``Most ordinary Chinese hate the United States for the bombing,'' said 
Zheng Zhenqi, a truck driver in Beijing. But Zheng praises U.S. democracy, 
pointing to President Clinton's impeachment trial over his relationship 
with a White House intern -- something he says could never happen in China.

Bao and her classmates like American movies and music. They carry pagers, 
have access to computers and know how to access foreign Web sites 
government censors have blocked, although they admit their access to 
information is limited.

For them, the bombing was just another in a series of acts they maintain 
the West has used to keep China down: from Britain's Opium War to China's 
losing bid to play host to the 2000 Olympics to constant U.S. hectoring 
over human rights, Tibet and Taiwan.

``I always felt these things were none of your business,'' said Chen Hong, 
one of Bao's classmates.

``The United States always wants to be No. 1 and its not about to let 
another country rise to that level so there's bound to be conflict,'' Chen 
said.


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