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ns . But on the national TV news here Friday night , the Foreign Ministry 's sta tement came toward the program 's end after a long list of insignificant items i ndicating the Chinese leadership may opt to not trumpet its MFN victory domestic ally , likely because that could provoke questions here about human rights . `` The current situation offers a historical opportunity for the enhancement of Sin o-American relations , '' Foreign Ministry spokesman Wu Jianmin said . But then he called on the United States to soon remove all remaining sanctions against Ch ina including the weapons-import ban saying they held back good relations . A le ading Western human-rights group Friday also had a mixed reaction , calling the president 's weapons ban as good for gun control in the United States but not fo r human rights in China . `` No one can be opposed to a ban on exports of guns a nd ammunition to this country , '' Sidney Jones , executive director of Human Ri ghts Watch/Asia , said in a statement issued from New York . `` But as pressure on China , it 's meaningless . Is a ban on guns going to persuade China to relea se jailed dissidents ? The only big winner from this decision is the Chinese gov ernment . `` President Clinton has effectively removed all pressure on China to improve its human rights practices , '' Jones said . `` Clinton has left his adm inistration looking vacillating and hypocritical , while the Chinese leadership .. . has emerged as hard-nosed , uncompromising and victorious . '' A Beijing di ssident said Friday that U.S. pressure had only gained the release of certain we ll-known dissidents from jail and had not really made much of a difference in th e human-rights picture here . `` It 's no use if only prison stars are released , '' Ding Zilin said . `` What about those who are not famous ? There are still many people imprisoned . '' Ding 's teen-age son was among the hundreds killed i n the military crackdown on the Tiananmen Square protests five years ago . The e lderly professor has boldly carried on a one-woman campaign to compile a list of protesters killed by the Chinese army a campaign that has cost her job and brou ght her almost constant surveillance by security agents . `` I welcome the help from other countries , '' she said . `` But the real help can only be done by ou rselves. .. . I do see a bright future for human rights in China someday , but i t will be very hard and slow . '' ( Optional add end ) U.S. businessman , howeve r , foresee things getting much better for them very quickly . With the annual M FN debate in the United States appearing to be coming to an end with Clinton 's decision to `` delink '' trade and political issues , the U.S. businessmen are e xpecting rapid growth in U.S. investment here and in Sino-American trade . Phili p S. Carmichael , president of the American Chamber of Commerce chapter here , s aid Friday that planning for some large joint ventures had been put on hold this spring until the MFN issue was settled . This , he said , is an example of the way in which the issue put American business at a `` competitive disadvantage '' here . The chamber `` lauds the president 's leadership in looking out for the strategic interest of the United States , '' he said . Carmichael added that the chamber had hoped that the president would not impose any conditions for MFN re newal this year , even the ban on Chinese guns . But he indicated he believes th e impact of the gun ban will be minimal as Chinese weapons sales in the United S tates amount to less than one percent of the more than $ 40 billion in annual tr ade between the two countries . However , the Chinese semi-automatic rifles bein g banned have become a favorite of U.S. criminals because of the weapons ' cheap price . `` Let 's declare victory , '' Carmichael said , `` and move on to the next issue . '' WASHINGTON When Jennifer Merrill faced possible surgery for a gynecological ail ment , her new insurance plan refused to pay if she went to the specialist she h ad been seeing for nine years . He was not a member of the plan . Instead , Merr ill 's insurer wanted her to see a total stranger , an obstetrician-gynecologist who is a participating provider in her health maintenance organization . That m akes the 23-year-old Baltimore woman one of a fast-growing number of Americans w ho , even before enactment of national health care reform , are losing the freed om to choose their own doctors . In Merrill 's case , the story does not end the re . She became so uncomfortable with her new doctor that when the time came for the $ 2,000 surgery , she returned to her own specialist and with a loan from h er grandparents paid the entire bill out of pocket . Merrill 's dilemma arose ou t of one of today 's less-welcome trends in health care : Insurance companies ar e aggressively imposing restricting `` managed care '' systems on their clients . In the name of curtailing soaring health care costs , individuals enrolled in these systems receive maximum coverage only when they visit participating doctor s who agree to abide by price controls negotiated with the insurer . Clients may go outside the network of participating doctors but only if they pay much or , as in Merrill 's case , all of the price . Perhaps no issue has aroused so much emotion as that of whether Americans will be able to select their doctors . `` C hoice is one of the things people most jealously guard against erosion and they are willing to pay for it , '' said Edward F. Howard , head of the nonpartisan A lliance for Health Reform . Critics complain that President Clinton 's health re form plan would not do enough to preserve choice a charge that first lady Hillar y Rodham Clinton has branded as `` one of the great lies '' in the health care d ebate . Clinton has said that the allegation , more than anything else , has `` made me the maddest in the relentless campaign against this plan . '' In fact , Clinton 's prescription for change , more than any other politically viable refo rm proposal , would increase choice of doctors for most patients . `` Clinton 's plan has , if anything , bent over backward to give people the maximum choice , '' said Stanley B . Jones , a Shepherdstown , W.Va. , analyst . But there 's a catch : People would have to pay something extra for that freedom , although har dly the full cost that Merrill and her grandparents had to bear . Managed care s ystems have grown so explosively that there are no reliable figures on how many exist . `` Nobody can say for sure , '' said Phil Caper , a New Hampshire physic ian who sells computer software programs to managed care networks that monitor p atients and doctors . `` All I know is that things have really taken off in the past few years . '' KPMG Peat Marwick , a benefits consulting firm , says the pe rcentage of American workers enrolled by their employers in fee-for-service plan s the traditional plans that reimburse workers for a percentage of their health costs , no matter who the doctor dropped from 71 percent in 1988 to just 49 perc ent by last year . At the same time , the percentage of private employees in man aged care systems grew from 5 percent in 1980 to 55 percent by 1992 , the govern ment 's General Accounting Office reports . That percentage is even higher in la rger firms , which have moved most aggressively in channeling workers into manag ed care networks , says Derek Lifton , associate director of Peat Marwick in Was hington . And according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute , the number of Americans enrolled in HMOs the most tightly run form of managed care rose fro m 9.1 million in 1980 to 37.2 million by 1992 . The regional differences in HMO acceptance are stark : more than one in three Californians belong , compared wit h 7 percent in Texas and less than 1 percent in Alaska , Montana and Wyoming . I n all , as many as 95 percent of Americans with private insurance are subject to some form of utilization review , possibly leading to a denial of coverage eith er before or after a specific treatment , according to Lewin-VHI Inc. , a health care consulting firm . `` Fewer than half of American workers have any choice a t all over their doctors or their health care plan today , '' Clinton has said . Why hasn't there been a huge public outcry over the loss of choice if , as ever yone says , it is such a potent consumer issue ? `` I don't think the public und erstands how pervasive this is becoming , '' said Dr. James Todd , executive vic e president of the American Medical Assocation . Clinton 's plan , like most oth er viable proposals in Congress , contains strong financial incentives to prod c onsumers into managed care systems . A central hallmark in such arrangements is the `` gatekeeper , '' a primary care physician whose permission is needed befor e a patient may consult with a specialist . So it 's hardly surprising that the most vocal critics of the erosion of choice are high-priced specialists . Last m onth , the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons , for example , took out full -page newspaper ads to clamor for `` direct ( public ) access to specialty care . '' `` Those pushing the issue tend to be providers who don't want to be exclud ed , '' said Bill Custer , EBRI 's research director . ( Optional add end ) Step hen M. Shortell , a Northwestern University management professor , called the is sue of choice in the context of health care reform `` a red herring . '' The pre sident 's proposal , which seeks to guarantee a lifetime of comprehensive benefi ts to all Americans , would increase choice by pooling most people into regional insurance-purchasing alliances that negotiate rates with specific groups of pro viders and insurers . As an alliance member , Shortell says , `` you end up havi ng to choose your doctor from a panel . But in most areas , that list will be pr etty long . '' Under Clinton 's proposal , each alliance must offer at least thr ee types of plans including a traditional but costlier fee-for-service plan and an HMO with lower premiums , no deductibles and co-payments of $ 10 or less per visit . Each plan also must offer a `` point-of-service '' option , which allows consumers to see any doctor outside the plan , but for a higher out-of-pocket f ee . Under such arrangements , says Joseph M. Davis , president of Medimetrix , a Cleveland-based consulting firm , consumer choice `` goes up significantly . ' ' Congress is sure to make major changes in Clinton 's plan . But , as currently written , it would require employers to pay at least 80 % of a worker 's premiu ms , with the individual paying the rest . Administration analysts estimate that the average annual premiums ( subject to regional variations ) will be $ 4,200 for a family of four and $ 1,800 for an individual . Twenty percent of that , th e consumer share , would be $ 840 and $ 360 , respectively . For those who opt f or more choice under a fee-for-service plan , premiums , co-payments and annual deductibles will be higher , with a cap on out-of-pocket spending of as much as $ 3,000 per year per family . `` That 's a high hurdle most people can't get ove r , '' warned the AMA 's Todd . True choice , he said , `` will depend on what t hat threshold is . '' The mandatory alliance structure proposed by Clinton also would let consumers rather than their employers pick which health plan to join . As the president boasted last month in a speech : `` We give choice of provider s back to the employees themselves . '' In the fall of 1986 , Oliver North sought to save a convicted felon from servin g his federal prison sentence . The beneficiary of North 's efforts was no commo n criminal . His name was Jose Bueso Rosa ; he was a former Honduran general who had been actively involved in a failed 1984 plot to assassinate the president o f Honduras a plot that was to be funded by a $ 10 million cocaine deal . It soun ded like a lurid `` Miami Vice '' plot to veteran newspaper reporters , but for Oliver North , then the deputy director of political military affairs at the Nat ional Security Council , it was just another day at the office . North insisted to colleagues that Bueso deserved special treatment because he had previously he lped senior U.S. officials conduct covert operations in support of the Contra re bels fighting in Central America . After Bueso was sentenced to a five-year pris on term in connection with the assassination plot , North waged a wide-ranging b ureaucratic campaign in Washington to gain his freedom . The story of North 's e fforts on behalf of Bueso is not just an obscure chapter in the Iran-Contra scan dal . Like shredding documents and misleading Congress in the name of defending American values , the leniency campaign for Bueso illuminates North 's seeming i nability to distinguish between his own political interests and the requirements of the law . North , now a candidate for the Republican senatorial nomination i n Virginia , presents himself as a candidate who is tough on crime , who favors the abolition of parole and who will zealously defend what he calls `` tradition al American values . '' His efforts to free a man who plotted with a convicted c ocaine conspirator to kill a democratically elected head of state suggest a cert ain permissiveness in the way North puts his beliefs into action . In the Bueso case , as in other critical junctures in the Iran-Contra scandal , North did not let concern about the niceties of the law interfere with the pursuit of his goa ls . North declined to answer questions about the Bueso affair for this article . He spelled out his motivation for the leniency campaign on Sept. 17 , 1986 in a White House electronic mail message to his boss , national-security adiser Joh n Poindexter . North expressed his concern that Bueso , if sent to prison , migh t `` break his long-standing silence about the Nic ( araguan ) Resistance and ot her sensitive operations . '' North then called together a host of senior Reagan administration officials to `` cabal quietly , '' as he put it , on Bueso 's be half . His behind-the-scenes pressure did not save Bueso from prison , but it di d succeed in getting him transferred to one of the most comfortable federal corr ectional facilities in the country . And Bueso , whom North feared might `` star t singing songs nobody wants to hear , '' never did speak out publicly about cla ndestine U.S. government operations in Central America . -O- Bueso 's assistance to the U.S. government in the early 1980s was a closely guarded secret . Only t hree U.S. government officials `` were fully aware of all that ( Bueso ) was doi ng on our behalf , '' according to a partially declassified memo written by Nort h and obtained by the National Security Archive , a Washington research organiza tion . What covert operations Bueso and North worked on together is not known . In one of his NSC memos , North said Bueso `` was the man with whom '' he and ot her top officials `` worked out arrangements. .. . ' ' The next three lines of t he memo have been classified as top secret . Bueso 's admitted violations of U.S . law are not a secret . The FBI announced the indictment of Bueso and three oth er men in November 1984 . The court proceedings that resulted in the conviction of all the defendants produced a detailed public record of the U.S. government ' s evidence about their scheme . The affair began in July 1984 . Bueso traveled t o Miami where he joined four men in discussing a plot to kill the president of H onduras and take control of the government . An FBI agent posing as an assassin- for-hire infiltrated the plot and met Bueso at several meetings . The FBI also w iretapped conversations of all of the participants . The plotter 's target was R oberto Suazo , a wealthy conservative rancher who had been elected in 1981 . Sua zo , though generally supportive of U.S. policies in Central America , was regar ded as a virtual communist by several of the plotters because the Honduran gover nment had allegedly reneged on business deals with them . Suazo was also no frie nd of Bueso 's . Four months earlier , in March 1984 , Suazo , under pressure fr om more nationalistic officers , had acquiesced in the purging of pro-American o fficers , including Bueso , from commanding positions in the Honduran armed forc es . North would later lobby for Bueso 's freedom by claiming that the Honduran man was only tangentially involved in the assassination plotting . The evidence available to the U.S. government indicated otherwise . Bueso participated in at least five meetings in the summer and fall of 1984 in which the assassination wa s discussed and planned , according to the affidavit of the lead FBI agent in th e case and the wiretaps . At one meeting , Bueso told the conspirators he did no t want the assassination to be carried out prior to Nov. 15 , 1984 . According t o an FBI affidavit , Bueso explained that a premature `` hit '' might cause the country to fall into the wrong hands . Bueso also knew about the hiring of the a ssassin . In early September 1984 , he was present at a meeting where the conspi rators swore a blood oath to carry out the assassination and the erstwhile hitma n was paid $ 20,000 in cash . The plot , according to an FBI agent 's sworn test imony and wiretaps submitted into the court record , was to be financed by a dru g deal . In early October 1984 , Bueso 's host in Miami , a Honduran businessman named Faiz Sikaffy , was overheard by the undercover FBI agent discussing a dea l involving `` fish . '' The FBI agents following the investigation believed tha t `` fish '' was actually a code word for narcotics . The next day , Sikaffy agr eed to pay the hit man $ 300,000 and 10 kilos of cocaine for carrying out the as sassination , according to an FBI agent 's affidavit . On Oct. 28 , 1984 , the f irst part of the plot was carried out . A Cessna plane , laden with 15 duffel ba gs carrying 760 pounds of cocaine , landed at a remote airfield in central Flori da . FBI agents were waiting . Over the next week all of the plotters were arres ted ; Bueso , who was in Chile at the time , was arrested there . William Webste r , director of the FBI , told the press , `` We don't want international terror ists to establish beachheads or bases for operations in the United States such a s they have enjoyed for years in other parts of the world . '' Facing extraditio n from Chile , Bueso voluntarily returned to Miami in November 1985 . He was cha rged and released on $ 50,000 bail . He was not charged with any narcotics-relat ed offenses , and his lawyer has denied that he knew anything about any drug dea l aspect of the plot . However , one of Bueso 's conversations heard on the FBI wiretaps had piqued the interest of federal investigators . The conversation occ urred eight days before the cocaine arrived in the United States . Bueso called one of his fellow plotters in Miami asking for the whereabouts of Faiz Sikaffy . `` I have some things ready but it is on a timetable , '' Bueso was recorded as saying , . `` If he does not come on Tuesday that thing is ( expletive ) . '' ` ` Uh .. . the fish ? .. . the fish flour ? '' his associate stammered . `` No .. . the fish flour , yes , '' Bueso said . `` The fish flour , I think that they have it , '' the other plotter replied . `` Uh , they are going to obtain a lett er of credit . That 's what he was telling me . '' Then the conversation turned to the planning of the assassination in Honduras . `` Our assessment was that th ere was insufficient evidence to join him ( Bueso ) in the narcotics indictment , '' says one federal prosecutor familiar with the case . `` From our perspectiv e we often have that feeling that a defendant had to have known ( about drug tra fficking ) but in Bueso 's case we couldn't prove it . He was certainly an activ e player in the plans . '' There is no evidence that North knew about the plot w hile it was taking place in 1984 . But it is known that Bueso was actively seeki ng special treatment from Washington officials by the spring of 1986 . That was when Bueso entered into a plea-bargain agreement with federal prosecutors in Mia mi . He pleaded guilty to two felony counts of traveling in furtherance of a con spiracy . His lawyer asked for a delay in sentencing so that he could consult wi th `` several highly placed officials '' in Washington who were working on aid t o the Contras . At his sentencing hearing in July 1986 , Bueso expressed `` my p rofound sorrow for having been involved in this case . At the same time , I woul d like to clarify that the matter was not premeditated . '' Judge Sidney Aronovi tz gave Bueso a lecture on terrorism and ordered him to report to a medium-secur ity federal prison in Tallahassee , Fla. , on Sept. 25 , 1986 , to serve a five- year sentence . -O- That 's when North 's behind-the-scenes campaign to spring B ueso began . North was concerned that Bueso was going to feel betrayed if he act ually had to serve a substantial amount of time . As he told Poindexter in an el ectronic mail message on Sept 17 , 1986 , Bueso was due to report to prison in a week . `` He apparently still believed up until yesterday that he ( would ) be going to the minimum-security facility at Eglin ( Air Force base in Florida ) fo r a short period ( days or weeks ) and then walk free . '' North swung into acti on . He told Poindexter he was going to call a meeting of five top Reagan admini stration officials `` to look at options : pardon , clemency , deportation , red uced sentence . Objective is to keep Bueso from feeling like he was lied to in l egal process . '' The next morning North reported to Poindexter that the meeting had gone well . The plan , he said , was to get retired Gen. Paul Gorman , the former top commander of U.S. forces in Latin America , to testify in closed cour Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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