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THE
WHITE HOUSE
Office
of the Press Secretary (New York, New York)
September
8, 2000
BACKGROUND
BRIEFING BY A SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL ON PRESIDENT
CLINTON'S BILATERAL WITH PRESIDENT JIANG ZEMIN OF CHINA
Waldorf-Astoria
New York,
New York
12:39
P.M. EDT
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: On the Clinton-Jiang meeting, they
met for about an hour and a half this morning, a very good
meeting in that these two have met with each other many times
over eight years, they know each other well, they are able
to speak in a frank and friendly fashion. Both terms are important.
They say what's on their minds.
The President
may say to Jiang, I know I'm never going to convince you of
this; I've tried for years and I won't convince you, but I've
got to tell you, I really believe the following, and this
is the way to go. And Jiang will say, well, I listened the
last time; I actually went back and I read some materials
on this and we made a decision, but then such and such screwed
it. You know, they'll have that kind of conversation back
and forth.
It's important
to understand that because the real value of this meeting
is that it took up all the really key issues in our relationship,
and it wasn't designed to reach specific decisions, it was
designed to get these two men on the same wavelength a little
more and to get -- all the top officials who deal with foreign
affairs were in the room, and it's to get everyone listening
to them and how they handle the issue and the directions in
which they want things to move. I think on that level this
meeting served exactly the purpose that we sought.
What are
the key issues that they took up? This is not in order, but
it covers them all. Cross-strait relations between the mainland
and Taiwan; missile proliferation; PNTR and China's entry
into the WTO; Tibet, and separately, but related, obviously,
the issue of religious restrictions in China; Korea, North-South
summit, the missiles for launch proposal that President Putin
reported from his trip to North Korea; and a review of U.S.-China
relations and what they've learned about their relationship
in eight years of dealing with each other.
So it
was a substantial agenda, and on each of those I think it's
fair to say, quite substantive. Let me stop there and take
whatever questions.
Q Do you
want to just go through some of these, like what did they
talk about on cross-strait relations? Did Jiang give any assurances
that China wouldn't move on Taiwan?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I think our basic objective was to
encourage a cross-strait dialogue. It is clear that by now
the cross-strait relationship has kind of sought its own level.
The Chinese are in a wait-and-see attitude. On his side, Chen
Shui-bian has made a number of moves to take the edge off
of the fact that he is from the democratic progressive party,
which has traditionally been a pro-independence party. Our
feeling is that we would like this relationship, though, not
to kind of remain where each side is warily watching the other,
but rather we'd like to see a dialogue begin to move the relationship
forward. And the discussion focused on that.
Q Forward
to what end?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Forward to a peaceful resolution
of the cross-strait issue, which we have long advocated.
Q I take
it Jiang was not prepared to go any further in the dialogue
with Taiwan.
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I think this was, again, more an
explanation of how each side sees the issue at this point.
We are not now, and never seeking to negotiate a solution
to this issue. So it is more -- our role is more facilitate
and encouraging, and that's very much the spirit of this conversation
today.
Q Was
there anything that the President was particularly frank on?
You were describing in a kind of hypothetical way his being
blunt. Was he particularly blunt on any of these points when
it comes to, say, missile proliferation?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I think he was frank, but not in
-- I know that's usually used when you describe a conversation
to say that they just went at it tooth and tong and disagreed,
and that is not the way I'm using it. I want to be very clear
about that. But he was very straightforward I think on each
of these issues. On PNTR, for example, that we should get
this and he's working hard on it, he thinks we will get it.
But in the wake of PNTR, he's got to be able to say to the
Congress -- honestly, he's got to certify that the deal that
China has going into the WTO meets in every substantive fashion
the deal that we did bilaterally with the Chinese. And he
pointed out some issues that they have to really be mindful
of, to make sure that that occurs. He looks him right in the
eye and says, now, you've got to do that. It's that kind of
-- it was in that spirit on each of these issues. I don't
want to get into the details of what specific examples he
used, but there was -- again, they know each other well enough
to kind of do this back and forth, and stress that they're
good friends and smile at the end. So the tone was good, but
this was not a lot of kind of fluff. This was really quite
substantive all the way through.
Q Was
there anything that President Jiang refused to do? I mean
when he said, you've got to do that, is there anything he
said, uh-uh?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: No, there's nothing he said no to.
He would give his perspective on issues, and then we have
to -- the way these things work is each of us gives a perspective
and then at the next level down or two levels down, you start
working to, starting from there, getting it together more
concretely. So I do not want to suggest that he sat there
and simply said, gee, you've just articulated my thoughts
completely or persuaded me completely -- no. But he would
try to -- he picked up every issue the President raised and
said, this is the way I think about this, or this is what
we've been doing on this, or this is where we want to go on
this. And then, for many of them, the President came back
at him. I mean, it was a real -- this was not each man sitting
there reading talking points, this was a real back-and-forth.
Q Did
missile defense come up?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Only briefly. The President mentioned
that it was -- explained very briefly the reasons for his
decision. Jiang followed the issue, not surprisingly. The
President stressed that the issue of a missile threat, and
not only from established nuclear powers, a threat like that
in the future is real. And he said he'll encourage his successor
to engage in serious dialogue with the Chinese and others
so as to try to get a clearer, common understanding of the
threat and how we can all end up more secure by what we do
about it. He said, I don't know whether we're going to end
up convincing people and reaching a common understanding,
but I will sure encourage my successor, whoever it is, to
engage in that effort very seriously. And he said, Jiang,
I hope that you will engage in that effort equally seriously,
that you'll think about this and you'll be ready to engage
on it. Jiang said --
Q What
did Jiang -- how did he respond?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Again, I, frankly, don't remember
his exact wording, but basically he said, yes, that's a good
idea and we take this as a very serious issue. Don't quote
that because that's not exactly what he said, but that's the
spirit of it.
Q What
did President Clinton raise in the human rights arena? Did
he talk about the Falun Gong at all?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: He focused on restrictions on religion
in China, on the human rights -- you know, we have a wide-ranging
human rights agenda with them, and you can't go through the
whole agenda at each meeting. Here he focused both on Tibet
and repression of religion in Tibet, among other things; and
more broadly, on restrictions on religion in China and his
belief that religious freedom is good for China. And Jiang,
it's fair to say, does not regard China as very much repressing
religion. That isn't his way of framing the issue. But he
went into an historical review of when different religions
came to China and noted that Christianity came really with
foreign incursions into China over the last couple hundred
years, as versus Buddhism and Islam that have very different
histories. They actually got into a back-and-forth -- Jiang
wanted to know whether America is primarily Protestant, and
the President went into the social bases, kind of historical
bases of Catholicism in the U.S. Some of this is really just
kind of get to know the other country better type discussion.
Q So he
felt Christianity was a passing fancy? (Laughter.)
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: No, I wasn't suggesting that. What
I interpreted him as trying to convey, although he did not
say it, is that you've got to understand, Christianity among
China's religions has a certain baggage among the Chinese
because it's very much associated with Western humiliation
of China over the last couple hundred years. He didn't state
that, but he put the pieces in place for the President to
understand that.
Q Did
their conversation about human rights, was it tied to the
PNTR debate at all?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: No, not really, because they have
a very longstanding dialogue on human rights. I mean, they
have discussed this every time they have gotten together that
I've been in the room, and that's -- I've been every time
for a few years now, and I know it predates that. the President
has said publicly that he has felt the Chinese are on the
wrong side of history on how they handle these issues. So
this is not a new topic or one where they pull a lot of punches.
There was a substantial PNTR discussion, but we weren't saying,
do better on human rights to get PNTR. We were saying, do
better on human rights because it's in the interest of you
and of the Chinese people that you do better on human rights,
and we really think this is what the future requires. So both
were discussed, but, no, it wasn't, do this in order to get
PNTR. Hell, they're going to get PNTR we believe within a
couple of weeks. We want the human rights agenda to remain
long afterwards. And also, yes, the President did make the
case -- he reminds me -- that part of the discussion of PNTR
-- there was actually a question during the pool -- you were
all there -- and the President said, look, it's in our interest
that China get PNTR. It's good for the U.S., it's good for
the Chinese. It works for both sides.
Q What
about the Korean missile -- the offer by Kim Jong-Il?
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Here, the issue, as you know, he
made this comment through President Putin -- President Putin
subsequently went to China and talked with Jiang Zemin, and
among other things they talked about that issue. President
Putin told Jiang what he has told others, which is to say
that his view was this was a serious subject. There was a
subsequent report in the South Korean media that Kim Jong-Il
said that this was said in a joking fashion. That wasn't Putin's
impression. But Jiang recognizes the sensitivity of the issue
and so did not want to intrude into that -- he didn't respond
to Putin, let me get involved in this. They certainly want
stability on the Korean Peninsula, he made that very clear.
Let me make one final comment on that. It wasn't part of the
conversation this morning, but it's relevant. We've gone back
and looked at the Korean language version of what Kim Jong-Il
actually said and our -- I don't speak Korean -- our interpreters
say that in that context, clearly it didn't mean joking. It
said it as, part of our discussion -- it was a positive discussion,
not that it was a joke. So there is a sense of a real mistranslation
in the English language media out of South Korea.
Q Did
Clinton take it directly up with Kim Jong-Il? I mean, why
go through three other countries to --
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Well, Clinton and Kim Jong-Il do
not regularly talk to each other.
Q But
they could on this.
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Let me say, we are prepared to take
that subject up very seriously. If they are prepared to move
forward, we will look for a realistic basis to do that, and
we'll follow up. In broad terms, that is an idea worth pursuing.
So that's the serious answer to your question.
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: We have missile talks scheduled --
or not scheduled yet, but we hope to have those in the next
few weeks.
SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I want to check to be exact, but
we will have missile talks again, yes.
Q Could
you just say something about the status of U.S.-China relations
in the wake of this meeting? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Oh, I think -- actually, President Clinton referred,
somewhat jokingly, when they first sat down to something that,
in fact, is serious. No, actually, I guess this is during
the pre-brief. When asked kind of how he would sum up the
relationship after eight years, he said, I thought Jiang's
interview on 60 Minutes -- he said, he described our relationship
as like the weather, generally good, but occasional storms.
He said, that's about right.
And I
think that is his view of the relationship. It is a relationship
that is now a wide-ranging, complex, very much in the interest
of both countries to handle well, but we do bump into some
problems that can be very tough. We've gotten to the point
we can discuss those problems frankly without the whole relationship
going off a cliff. That's been one of the real accomplishments
over recent years.
THE PRESS:
Thank you.
END 12:53
P.M. EDT
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