The
Chinese Re-Connection with the Clintons

Since 10-28-07
October 26, 2007
http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=278291149224647
IBD Series:
To China
With Love: The Clinton Legacy
By INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY
National Security: Bill Clinton was the best president
the People's Republic of China ever had. His wife may be
even better. Beijing, hungry for more technology
transfers, is betting on it.
It's no coincidence that Sen. Hillary Clinton's
autobiography, "Living History," is the most popular
foreign political memoir in Chinese history. The
state-owned publisher of the Chinese translation of her
book has printed hundreds of thousands of copies (after
censoring passing references to dissident Harry Wu) and
stocked them in bookstore windows from Beijing to
Shanghai.
It's also no coincidence that Chinese bagmen are lining
up immigrants in Chinatowns from New York to San
Francisco to donate cash to Hillary's campaign. Many
have never voted. Some aren't citizens and couldn't vote
if they wanted to. Most are dishwashers, waiters and
garment workers who don't even have the means to give
the thousands they're giving. And an alarming number say
they've been pressured by shady Chinese "businessmen" to
help fill Hillary's campaign war chest.
Command fundraisers are breaking out all over the
Chinese community. It's plain that Sen. Clinton is
China's candidate. It's time to ask why that is. What is
the attraction? What does Beijing want? What has she
promised?
Is Hillary, as some suspect, a Manchurian candidate
loyal to foreign and unseen donors rather than American
voters? Can she be trusted with U.S. security?
With polls showing Clinton bounding ahead of the
Democratic field, while nosing out even top GOP hopefuls
for the White House, voters must take these questions
seriously. We plan to drill down on them in a series of
editorials.
It's instructive to revisit the special relationship the
Chinese had with the last Clinton administration,
especially in view of how the former president plans to
act as an "international emissary" for his wife.
Bill Clinton called it a "strategic partnership." He
argued that cozying up to — or as he called it,
"engaging" — the communist Chinese was in America's best
interest. But while Clinton was engaging them, an
engagement that included inviting them into our defense
labs and dismantling export controls, Beijing:
• Managed to steal secrets to every nuclear warhead
deployed in the U.S. arsenal.
• Deployed for the first time an entire force of CSS-4
ICBMs that target the continental U.S., from L.A. to New
York and everything in between.
• Declared the U.S. enemy No. 1 in its military
writings.
• Bought Russian destroyers armed with missiles designed
to kill U.S. carriers.
• Built up its missile batteries across the Taiwan
Strait.
• Infiltrated the CIA and FBI with spies.
The Chinese espionage that occurred on Clinton's watch
was unprecedented, and analysts still don't know how
deep Chinese moles penetrated our security complex.
The FBI warned President Clinton that the People's
Republic of China was running a massive intelligence
operation against the U.S. government, which included a
plan to influence the 1996 election.
Clinton looked the other way. In fact, there's evidence
he facilitated it by throttling the prosecution of
Chinese spy cases and covering up probes into Chinese
funny money that poured into his campaign.
As soon as Clinton took office, he implemented a policy
of "denuclearization." That included ending nuclear
testing, kicking open the defense labs to Chinese and
other foreign scientists, and declassifying hundreds of
documents related to our nuclear program.
Clinton also deregulated export of sensitive dual-use
technology such as supercomputers and rocket guidance
systems. And Beijing gleefully took advantage of the
dovish changes, sharpening the reliability of the
missiles it has aimed at the U.S. and Taiwan.
Clinton's open-door "engagement policy" amounted to rank
appeasement of a communist state with hegemonic military
ambitions. Will Hillary carry on the tradition? Will
she, too, hold a high-tech fire sale for the Chinese?
One thing is for sure, Beijing
and its bagmen are betting on it — big time.