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ng that China `` continues to commit very serious human rights abuses , '' Clint on said he has come to believe that broader American strategic interests justify the policy reversal . Striking a defensive , almost apologetic posture at a lat e afternoon White House briefing , Clinton acknowledged that his previous approa ch to U.S.-China relations had failed and said he intended to set a new course . `` That linkage has been constructive during the past year , but I believe , ba sed on our aggressive contacts with the Chinese in the past several months , tha t we have reached the end of the usefulness of that policy , and it is time to t ake a new path toward the achievement of our constant objectives , '' Clinton sa id . `` We need to place our relationship into a larger and more productive fram ework . '' Therefore , Clinton said , he will renew China 's most favored nation status , meaning that China can ship its exports to the United States on the sa me tariff terms as most other American trading partners . Last year China export ed about $ 31 billion worth of goods to the United States , running a trade surp lus of $ 23 billion . The United States exported $ 8 billion in goods to China . The only limitation Clinton imposed on the China trade was a ban on U.S. sales of Chinese-made guns and ammunition , which amounted to roughly $ 100 million in sales last year . Clinton dropped the idea of forming a human rights commission to monitor progress in China . The Chinese rejected such a body as an insult to its sovereignty and human rights groups derided it as likely to be ineffective . The president announced his new China policy in the White House briefing room . Unlike previous major presidential announcements , he appeared alone , without Secretary of State Warren Christopher or senior White House aides . Clinton see med prepared to take the inevitable criticism his change in course generated . F rom Capitol Hill to human rights organizations to Chinese dissident groups came immediate expressions of anger and dismay . Human Rights Watch/Asia called the C linton announcement `` one more capitulation on human rights . '' `` Clinton has left his administration looking vacillating and hypocritical , while the Chines e leadership , by contrast , has emerged as hard-nosed , uncompromising and vict orious . We 're deeply disappointed by this decision , '' said Sidney Jones , ex ecutive director of the organization . AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland , in a pa rticularly scathing statement , said Clinton 's decision `` sends a clear messag e to the world : `` No matter what America says about democracy and human rights , in the final analysis profits , not people , matter most. .. . America should be standing with the Chinese people not their oppressors . '' Senate Majority L eader George Mitchell , D-Maine , an important ally of the president 's on healt h care and other major policy initiatives , also quickly criticized Clinton 's n ew China policy . `` I disagree with the decision. .. . The experience of recent years has been that each concession to the Chinese Communist regime encourages its intransigence and I believe this will be the unfortunate result of this deci sion , '' Mitchell said . `` It will confirm for the Chinese Communist regime th e success of its policy of repression on human rights and manipulation on trade . It is likely to produce a result that is the opposite of what the president in tends . '' Mitchell added that when Congress returns from its Memorial Day reces s he will introduce legislation to reverse Clinton 's decision . That legislatio n probably will be similar to bills sponsored by Mitchell and Rep. Nancy Pelosi , D-Calif. , during the Bush administration , attaching conditions to future ren ewals of China 's trade status . ( Optional add end ) Bush repeatedly vetoed suc h legislation , and , in 1992 , Clinton accused him of `` coddling dictators '' in China . During his presidential campaign , Clinton also specifically endorsed the idea of imposing human rights conditions on the renewal of China 's trade b enefits . Sen. John McCain , R-Ariz. , defended the decision on policy grounds b ut accused Clinton of adopting precisely the Bush administration policy that he assailed as cynical during the 1992 campaign . Renewing most favored nation stat us for China `` is a sound , if politically embarrassing , decision , '' McCain said . Clinton said he believed he had reached the right decision and said he wa s prepared to defend it against his critics . `` I want to make it clear to you I do not do this with rose-colored glasses on , '' Clinton said . `` I know ther e will be , no matter which approach we take .. . continuing human rights proble ms . '' CHICAGO The mail here has lately seemed defiant of the laws that govern time an d space . Recent bill payments disappear into the void while bank statements fro m 1988 suddenly show up . Tens of thousands of undelivered letters have been dis covered in the oddest spots : smoldering under a railroad viaduct , rotting in a field , in the trunk of a postal carrier 's truck , stockpiled in a mailman 's suburban condo . Three times last week , people opened collection boxes around t own only to be greeted by smoke streaming from the slots . `` Somebody doesn't w ant the mail to be delivered , '' said Mark Szumny , rolling his eyes heavenward for clues while his daughters , one 6 years old , one 5 , jumped rope on the si dewalk on a waning afternoon . The girls at play reminded him of something . An old friend of his wife 's sent cash when each was born . The money has yet to ar rive . Since the dawn of the U.S. postal system , tales of astounding mishaps an d misroutings have become part of American folklore . But those were isolated in stances . Not so in Chicago . While Chicago may have slipped from Second City to third , it ranks highest on the Mail Misery index . A recent postal survey foun d customers more unhappy with service in this city than anywhere else in the nat ion . The satisfaction rating stands at 69 percent . The next-most troubled city , New York , scored 76 percent . Twenty-seven postal wizards from around the co untry were imported in March to figure out what 's wrong here . Three top manage rs were transferred out this month . Next week , supervisors and window clerks a re scheduled to take training courses , and in coming months , each station is s upposed to recruit a citizens advisory council . The U.S. Postal Service takes t he uproar seriously , said Rufus F. Porter , interim postmaster for Chicago . Ab out 1,500 early retirements in 1992 and this year 's severe winter took their to ll , he said . But mostly , he added , `` it 's a matter of bad work habits on t he part of our employees . It is embedded in the culture .. . and that was a dir ect result of management inattention . '' The locals , some of whom have been co mplaining for nearly a decade , remain pessimistic . `` The post office has not reached out to private consultants . It is still trying to use its own people , '' said Chicago Alderman Mary Ann Smith . `` They 've had shake-ups before but e very time things as we say in this office returned to abnormal . '' Each day , t he postal service is blamed for something else , from the lack of an audience fo r the Bozo TV show hardly anyone got tickets to the decision of a mail-order cos metics firm to move out to the suburbs . Leaders of the sizable Polish community report with fury that their letters to the homeland are ransacked frequently fo r cash . Smith fumes . `` We 're not asking them to cure cancer , '' she said . `` We 're not asking them to build pyramids . We 're asking them to move pieces of paper from one place to another . '' ( Begin optional trim ) The first report from the postal task force , released earlier this month , found the worst prob lems at five northside , lakefront post offices where 40 percent of the mail fac ed delays . Service there is already improving , the troubleshooters said . Thos e zip codes , however , are by no means the only ones that need help . David J. Craven , a 35-year-old attorney in the downtown Loop , specializes in customs an d international trade law , but he also has become a reluctant connoisseur of po stal blunders . He has noticed spotty deliveries since 1991 , but by January and February , the quality of service had deteriorated dramatically . On March 3 , for the first time in its seven-year history , his office received no mail at al l . Craven was waiting for a U.S. . Customs opinion in a $ 5 million case . He c hecked with another law firm on the 20th floor . Also no mail . Craven telephone d the post office . When he got no satisfactory response , he took another tack . He wrote a letter . Four days later , the written complaint was returned to it s sender . The address of the central post office 433 W. Van Buren was scratched out . The envelope was stamped `` NO SUCH ADDRESS . '' ( End optional trim ) In Chicago 's leafy Belmont-Cragin section , the brick bungalows and two-flats are filled with working-class families trading postal horror tales , fueled by the knowledge that 40,000 pieces of their mail turned up last month at their carrier 's house . Firefighters found it when they answered an emergency call . Along t he route , Diane Gaertner had missed two of the paychecks that her employer , an air-conditioning and heating company , sent to her apartment . `` It affects my life when I live from check to check and I 've got a son to raise , '' she said . The carrier , Robert Beverly , is suspected of having sifted through the mail for items he could sell or otherwise turn to profit , Porter said . He has been charged with felony theft . Beverly used his own car , an older Jaguar , on his route , which made hauling the stacks home that much easier . The Chicago distr ict just doesn't have enough vehicles to supply one to every employee . But his replacement , Eddie Ponce , had a regulation truck the other day . `` They told me , ` Keep it clean , ' ' ' she said , when they assigned her to the route . The May ratings sweeps rundown conducted by CBS research boss David Poltrack on e morning each spring usually draws only reporters looking for a late breakfast . Thursday in Manhattan , three days after the Fox-is-snatching-eight-CBS-affili ates bombshell , the annual Poltrack Spinorama was jammed by members of the news media ( `` even Time magazine showed up ! '' exclaimed a CBS spokeswoman ) hopi ng for some nugget from CBS executives . They got a few . CBS/Broadcast Group pr esident Howard Stringer was on hand to staunchly defend broadcasting in general and CBS in particular which after all did cinch the primetime ratings crown for the third year in a row last month and enjoyed what Stringer called `` the most profitable season in history don't knock it . `` Programming , '' said Stringer , `` is what dominates broadcasting and we 've always been the champions . You c an be a telephone company , you can be a cable company , but in the end the qual ity of the original programming is what drives everything , and we have the best . '' He reminded reporters that `` in Louisville ( the people ) who ran the CBS affiliate there some years ago decided in their wisdom to go to ABC .. . they s witched and we switched to UHF . . and we are in first place with that UHF stati on . Because , luckily , our audience has a high school education and they can f ind programs . `` They 're going to find our programming because it 's singular and distinctive and that strategy has worked . '' George Schweitzer , executive vice president of marketing and communications for the Broadcast Group , promise d that `` the network plans aggressive marketing campaigns in those markets affe cted . . . so that people will know where to find their ( CBS ) programs . '' ( Five CBS affiliates in Detroit , Atlanta , Cleveland , Tampa-St. Petersburg and Milwaukee will move to Fox by late fall ) . And each reporter was given a copy o f a letter from CBS Television Network president Peter A . Lund , dispatched to advertisers and agencies , promising that `` CBS will maintain its coverage in e very single market . We expect to maintain our circulation as well . As you may know , many of these ( defecting ) stations were underperforming the network ave rage and frequently pre-empted our schedule . We project these changes will have no impact on our 1994-95 schedule . '' The word on the street in New York is th at initially CBS is targeting ABC and NBC affiliates in Detroit , Atlanta and Da llas ( where another potential New World CBS affiliate will switch to Fox someti me next year ) in its drive to recover from the Fox attack . . MOSCOW In a remarkable letter written in 1973 to a Soviet leadership that was p reparing to arrest and expel him , Alexander Solzhenitsyn concluded with a bold declaration of independence that must have seemed hopelessly quixotic to those w ho received it . `` I long ago grew out of your shell , '' he told the absolute masters of one-sixth of the world 's territory . `` The things I write will be p rinted regardless of your permission . I am ready to lay down my life . '' A few months later , `` The Gulag Archipelago , '' Solzhenitsyn 's devastating compil ation of the horrors of Soviet repression , was circulating throughout the Weste rn world and the author was a stateless exile , stripped of his Soviet citizensh ip and deported to West Germany . Friday that long exile comes to an end as the famous writer and his family arrive in Vladivostok in the Russian Far East after a two-day journey from Cavendish , Vt. , where he spent all but two of his 20 y ears of banishment in the West . Speaking in Anchorage , Alaska , moments before he boarded an Alaska Airlines plane that would fly him back home , the 75-year- old writer praised Cavendish . With his son Stephan , 20 , translating , Solzhen itsyn said : `` This was the most creative period in my life and the most produc tive period in my life . '' He said he hoped to participate in a rebirth of Russ ia comparable to what occurred in Germany after the fall of the Third Reich , wh en a `` spiritual and moral '' recovery helped heal the wartime legacy . `` In t he U.S.S.R. , none of this has happened at all , '' he said . `` The atmosphere remains heavily stained with communism . '' Solzhenitsyn plans to deliver some r emarks in Vladivostok 's town square and spend a few days meeting with members o f the community . Then he intends to set off for Moscow on a train journey acros s the vast breadth of Russia in order to reacquaint himself with his native coun try . He will find that much has changed , and not all of it to his liking . The Marxist system that Solzhenitsyn castigated in his 1973 letter as a `` dark un- Russian whirlwind '' has collapsed , along with the Soviet empire that he descri bed as a liability and a burden for his native land . But they have been replace d by a raw and ragged society of extreme contrasts between rich and poor , incre asingly awash in the Western pop culture that Solzhenitsyn repeatedly condemned during his exile . The writer 's many statements , issued through family members , that he intends to play no official or political role upon his arrival has no t prevented a lively and at times rancorous debate among Russian intellectuals o ver the impact of his return . `` Numerous representatives of the Moscow politic al intelligentsia are tearing at each other 's throats regarding Solzhenitsyn , '' commentator Mikhail Leontiev wrote in Thursday 's issue of the Moscow newspap er Sevodnya . `` It turns out that , irrespective of anyone 's likes or dislikes , Russia needs Solzhenitsyn. .. . It needs a national hero , rather than a poli tical leader . Whether he lives up to this calling or not , time will tell . But there 's no one else in Russia at the moment . '' Leontiev and many others see Solzhenitsyn as an uncorrupted truth-teller who can fill the moral vacuum that h as existed in Russia since the death of human rights activist Andrei Sakharov in 1989 . But others especially the newly ascendent nationalists who lament the lo ss of the Soviet empire dismiss Solzhenitsyn as an irrelevant figure from a bygo ne era . `` Solzhenitsyn is returning to a country which he no longer knows .. . and which no longer knows him , '' said Shamil Sultanov , deputy editor of Zavt ra , a stridently ultranationalist newspaper that has become a rallying point fo r opponents of the current government . `` Solzhenitsyn was a fetish of Western intellectuals and certain political circles. .. . If you go to Ryazan or Smolens k and ask people on the street who Solzhenitsyn is , 80 out of 100 willn't know . '' ( Begin optional trim ) The writer 's impending return has even touched off an outbreak of what might be called Gulag denial syndrome an attempt by some po liticians and intellectuals to assert that the machinery of repression chronicle d by Solzhenitsyn either never existed or was far less severe than he portrayed it . `` When he wrote ` Gulag ' he didn't have a single archival document in his hands , but now they teach Russian history according to Solzhenitsyn , '' said Alexander Nevzorov , a TV journalist turned ultranationalist politician . `` No one would take it into their heads to teach French history according to Dumas , '' he said . `` He is nothing more than a common writer , a storyteller . To me , Solzhenitsyn is no one . '' ( End optional trim ) In Vladivostok Thursday , pr eparations for the exile 's return were decidedly low-key , and an informal samp ling of public opinion in of the city revealed no great interest in Solzhenitsyn and some confusion about his identity . One man had the writer mixed up with Sa kharov , while another was under the impression he was the director of a popular but trivial Soviet-era movie . WASHINGTON Resisting pressure from World Cup organizers , District of Columbia Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly decided Thursday to heed the advice of her police comma nders and install a security fence around the field of Robert F. Kennedy Memoria l Stadium for soccer matches there this summer . Kelly and D.C. . Police Chief F red Thomas informed World Cup officials during an hourlong meeting Thursday that they saw no better alternative than the six-foot-high metal fence to prevent po tentially rowdy soccer fans from charging the field . In recent weeks , the fenc e has become a sharp point of contention between the city and soccer promoters , who have worried that it could tarnish the sport 's image as it is showcased in the United States for the first time . World Cup organizers have tried to convi nce the District that a barrier was unnecessary and could cause more safety prob lems than it solved . The national director of the World Cup organizing committe e , Alan Rothenberg , who only days ago said he was confident there would not be a fence at RFK , attended Thursday 's meeting with Kelly . But the mayor was un swayed . She was not available for comment , but said in a statement that she su pported the fence because `` the safety and security of fans , participants and the public has always been our overriding concern . '' Soccer officials were dis appointed with Kelly 's decision , but said they did not believe it would advers ely affect other World Cup preparations . `` I do disagree on this , '' Rothenbe rg said . `` I think they city ( officials ) are being unduly swayed by looking at the worst examples of soccer violence. . . . There has never been those kind of ugly incidents at World Cup matches . '' The District will be one of only thr ee cities in the country to use a fence for security during World Cup matches , which begin here June 19 . Soccer officials have dissuaded the six other cities that are sites for matches from using a fence . They are still in talks with Dal las about a fence at the Cotton Bowl . The stadium at Stanford University has a permanent fence in place . Security has emerged as one of the leading elements o f the city 's preparation for the World Cup , which is the most watched sporting event on the planet . Thousands of fans from overseas are expected to travel to Washington for the five matches at RFK , and law enforcement officials fear tha t some of them could be troublemakers . District police are planning to deploy m ore than 1,000 officers in various roles for World Cup events . District police , who have traveled overseas to study security measures at soccer matches , say the fence will be the easiest way to contain an unruly crowd . It also will be m uch cheaper than putting scores of extra officers , at overtime pay , on the fie ld during the matches . The fence costs $ 25,000 and will be paid for by a grant from the Department of Defense , police officials said . WASHINGTON President Clinton 's abandonment of the idea of linking trade with C hina on human rights improvements represents a stunning reversal of the policies he espoused both during his 1992 presidential campaign and during his first yea r in office . As recently as the past few weeks , in fact , Clinton administrati on officials were insisting that without some further and meaningful steps in hu man rights by the Beijing regime , there was no way the president could renew Ch ina 's most-favored-nation , or MFN , trade privileges . In the end , Clinton si mply caved in . And , in the process , his MFN debacle gave China a chance to de monstrate the limits of American power and the hollowness of American fantasies of omnipotence . The United States found that it couldn't force China to change its human rights policies , at least not without imposing costs that American bu sinesses were unwilling to bear . `` A great society , so large and with such bu ilt-in habits does not change overnight , '' Clinton acknowledged Thursday , usi Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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