Obama welcome to Hu Jintao contrasts with Congressional response to
visit
Michael Richardson
President Barack Obama made sure
Hu Jintao, head of the People’s Republic of China, felt welcome and made sure
the communist nation’s flags were prominently on display on Washington, D.C.
street signs and light poles.
However, protestors led by Tibetans, kept
up efforts to show displeasure at the Chinese leader’s visit to the United
States with three days of demonstrations.
Meanwhile, at the Capitol
building the House Foreign Affairs Committee was meeting and the reception to Hu
Jintao’s tour was decidedly chilly. A hearing titled “Assessing China’s
Behavior and its Impact on U.S. Interests” was timed to coincide with the White
House festivities.
Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
[R-FL] was blunt in her opening remarks:
“Today, as we meet here, the Laogai
Research Foundation estimates that there are close to seven million people
currently in Chinese labor camps. It is as if the entire population of
Switzerland were being held behind barbed wire.”
Ros-Lehtinen continued,
“Chinese authorities’ ruthless campaign against Falun Gong practitioners, a
peaceful organization which promotes truth, compassion and tolerance, has
continued unabated for eleven years.”
“The brutal denial of rights to the
people of Tibet and the Uyghur people, and the forced reparation of North Korean
refugees, continues to draw the attention of concerned citizens throughout the
world.”
The Foreign Affairs Committee Chair asked, “Does a responsible
stakeholder [China] declare the South China Sea as one of its ‘core interests’
in open defiance of the navigational and territorial rights of its Southeast
Asian neighbors?”
One of the witnesses giving testimony on China was
Larry Wortzel, Commissioner of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review
Commission who discussed the 2010 Commission report A Rising China and East
Asian Security: Implications fo the United States.
Included in the
lengthy study was a section on Taiwan that warned about a shift in the strategic
balance of force in the region. “China’s continued military buildup against
Taiwan has resulted in a military balance that favors the mainland, especially
in regard to Taiwan’s air defense capabilities.”
The Commission report
elaborated, “Taiwan’s ability to achieve air superiority over its airspace
continued to decrease over the past year.”
Another witness before the
Foreign Affairs Committee was Yang Jianli who said, “Today, China is the only
country in the world that imprisons a Nobel Peace Prize winner.” Yang
continued, “China is the country with the most prisoners-of-conscience in the
world.”
Hu Jintao, however, never head the Congressional criticism;
instead Hu was being feted at the White House, surrounded by fawning reporters
and obliging government officials.
- Jan 24 Mon 2011 11:25
【胡錦涛訪米】熱いホワイトハウスと冷たい国会
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