Title: Text: Report Offers Recommendations on
U.S.-China Relations (U.S.-China Security Review Commission
2002 Annual Report)
Translated Title:
Author:
Source: U.S.-China
Security
Review
Commission
Date: 20020715
Text:
The U.S.-China
Security
Review
Commission released an annual report
July 15 that "proceeds on the premise that far more prudence must be
displayed and far better understanding developed on the part of the
Congress" on the full extent of the
U.S.-China relationship and its impact on
U.S.
interests.
The report issued to Congress, the
Commission's first since its
establishment in October 2000, also noted that "to gain such
comprehension will require the allocation of more resources and the
elevation of China in our foreign and national security
priorities."
The Commission's 220-page report offers
more than 40 recommendations, with the executive summary listing 21 that
the Commission suggests require "immediate
action." Among these 21 highest-priority recommendations are specific
recommendations for Congress and the Department of Defense.
According to the Commission, Congress should:
-- "encourage the Department of Defense to renew efforts to develop
military-to-military confidence building measures" with China
"based strictly on the principles of reciprocity, transparency,
consistency, and mutual benefit";
-- "renew the Super 301 provision of
U.S. trade law and request (that) the
Administration identify and report on other tools that would be most
effective in opening China's market to U.S. exports
if China
fails to comply with its WTO commitments";
-- "authorize and appropriate additional funds to strengthen the
Commerce Department's support for commercial rule of law reform in China,
including intellectual property rights and WTO implementation
assistance, and to strengthen the Department of State's promotion of
capacity-building programs in the rule of law, administrative reform,
judicial reform and related areas";
-- request that the Department of Commerce's annual Trade Promotion
Coordination Committee report "include an assessment of China's
progress in compliance with its WTO commitments, recommendations on
initiatives to facilitate compliance, and a survey of market access
attained by key U.S. industry sectors in China,
including agriculture";
-- "urge the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) to
request WTO consultations on
China's noncompliance with its
obligations under the Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS) Agreement" to deter
China's counterfeiting and piracy of
motion pictures and other video products;
-- consider using Article XXI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade (GATT) "to ensure the survival of the U.S. steel
industry if the Administration's current safeguard measures "prove
ineffective";
-- "encourage the Administration to initiate consultations with other
Asian countries to assess and make recommendations on the impact of the
'hollowing out' phenomenon with respect to
China on regional economies and on U.S. economic
relations with the region."
The Commission suggests that the
Department of Defense should:
-- "continue its substantive military dialogue with Taiwan and
conduct exchanges on issues ranging from threat analysis, doctrine, and
force planning";
-- "prepare a biannual report on critical elements of the U.S. defense
industrial base that are becoming dependent on Chinese imports or
Chinese-owned companies";
-- join with the FBI to assess and report on "China's
targeting of sensitive U.S. weapons-related technologies, the
means employed to gain access to these technologies, and the steps that
have been and should be taken to deny access and acquisition."
In addition, the Commission recommends that the U.S.
Government should:
-- "expand its collection, translation and analysis of open source
Chinese-language materials, and make them available to the larger
community," as well as "increase funding for Chinese language training
and area studies programs";
-- "develop a comprehensive inventory of official
government-to-government and
U.S. Government-funded programs with China";
-- establish a federally mandated corporate reporting system "to
provide a more comprehensive understanding of the U.S. trade
and investment relationship with
China";
-- "make full and active use of various trade tools including special
safeguards provisions in the WTO to gain full compliance by China with
its World Trade Organization (WTO) accession agreement";
-- "improve enforcement against imports of Chinese goods made from
prison labor by shifting the burden of proof to U.S.
importers and by more stringent requirements relating to visits to
Chinese facilities suspected of producing and exporting prison-made
goods to the United States";
-- require foreign entities seeking to raise capital or trade their
securities in U.S. markets
"to disclose information to investors regarding their business
activities in countries subject to
U.S. economic sanctions";
-- "work with the United Nations
Security Council and other appropriate
inter-governmental organizations to formulate a framework for effective
multilateral action to counter proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction and their delivery systems";
-- "continue to prohibit satellite launch cooperation with China until
it puts into place an effective export-control system."
-- assess whether China (or any other country associated
with the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or
ballistic-missile delivery systems) is accessing U.S. capital
markets, and "make this information available to the Securities
Exchange Commission (SEC), state public pension
plans, and U.S. investors."
Finally, the Commission suggests that:
-- The President of the United States "should be provided an
extensive range of options to penalize foreign countries for violating
commitments or agreements on proliferation involving weapons of mass
destruction and technologies and delivery systems relating to them";
--Those provisions in the fiscal years 2001 and 2002 Foreign Operations
Appropriations Acts providing for executive branch briefings to the
Congress on regular discussions between the administration and the
government on Taiwan pertaining to
U.S. arms sales to Taiwan should be made
permanent.
The U.S.-China
Security
Review
Commission is a 12-member bipartisan
commission created by Congress to
"monitor, investigate and report to Congress on the national security
implications of the bilateral trade and economic relationship between
the United States and the People's Republic of China."
The Commission's initial report is
intended to provide a baseline against which to measure and assess
year-to-year changes in the
U.S.-China relationship.
The full text of the
U.S.-China
Security
Review
Commission's 2002 annual report can be
found at http://www.uscc.gov/anrp02.htm
Following is the text of the
U.S.-China
Security
Review
Commission's 2002 annual report's
executive summary:
(begin text)
JULY 2002 - REPORT TO CONGRESS OF THE
U.S. -
CHINA
SECURITY
REVIEW
COMMISSION - THE NATIONAL SECURITY
IMPLICATIONS OF THE ECONOMIC RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND
CHINA
Executive Summary
Relations between the United States and
China during the last half-century
have not always been smooth. The two countries have sharply contrasting
worldviews, competing geo-strategic interests, and opposing political
systems. More recently, bilateral ties have centered on rapidly growing
economic interactions that have muted political differences. For the
moment, these relations have not softened
China's egregious behavior on human
rights nor changed its strategic perceptions that the U.S. is its
principal obstacle to growing regional influence. No one can reliably
predict whether relations between the
U.S. and
China will remain contentious or grow
into a cooperative relationship molded by either converging ideologies
or respect for ideological differences, compatible regional interests,
and a mutually beneficial economic relationship.
However the relationship develops, it will have a profound impact on
the course of the twenty-first century. The policies pursued today by
both China and the United States will
affect future relations. The Congress created the U.S.-China Security Review Commission
to assess "the national
security implications and impact of
the bilateral trade and economic relationship between the United States
and the People's Republic of
China" and to report its conclusions
annually to the Congress. It specifically directed the Commission
to focus on our deepening economic, trade, and financial linkages with
China.
The Congress wanted the
Commission to evaluate whether our
economic policies with China harm or help United States
national security and, based on that
assessment, to make recommendations in those areas that will improve our
nation's interests.
National security has come to include military,
economic and political relationships. At any time, one of these concerns
may dominate. They interact with one another and affect our overall security
and well-being. Neglect of any one element will diminish our overall security as
a nation. The United States must be attentive to the strength and
readiness of our military forces, the health of our economy, and the
vibrancy of our political relationships.
The Congress also asked the
Commission to include in its Report "a
full analysis, along with conclusions and recommendations for
legislative and administrative actions." This is the Commission's first Report. In keeping
with the Congressional mandate, this Report provides a comprehensive
analysis of the Commission's year-long review of
U.S.-China
relations, the principal findings that emerged from that investigation,
and the recommendations or measures the
Commission believes should be
implemented to help safeguard our national
security in the years ahead. This
initial Report provides a baseline against which to measure and assess
year-to-year changes in the relationship.
Main Themes
Our relationship with
China is one of the most important
bilateral relationships for our nation. If it is not handled properly,
it can cause significant economic and
security problems for our country. China is
emerging as a global economic and military power, and the United States
has played, and continues to play a major role in China's
development.
China's foreign trade has skyrocketed
over the past twenty years (from approximately $20 billion in the late
1970s to $475 billion in 2000). Our trade deficit with China has
grown at a sharp rate, from $11.5 billion in 1990 to $85 billion in
2000. Foreign investment -- with America a leading investor -- grew
apace. This trade and investment has helped to strengthen China both
economically and militarily.
America's policy of economic engagement with China rests
on a belief that the transition to a free market economy and the
development of the rule of law in
China's business sector would likely
lead to more political and social openness and even democracy. This
belief, along with the desire to expand American commercial interests,
drove U.S. support for China's
entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO). Many also believe that a
more prosperous China will be a more peaceful country,
especially if it is fully integrated into the Pacific and world
economies.
But these are hypotheses, and many leading experts are convinced that
certain aspects of our policy of engagement have been a mistake. They
argue that the PRC faces enormous economic and social problems, that its
leaders are intractably antidemocratic, that they are hostile to the U.S. and its
prominent role in Asia, and that we are strengthening a country that
could challenge us economically, politically and militarily.
The Commission does not believe that
anyone can confidently forecast the future of China and
the U.S.-China
relationship, and contends that while we may work and hope for the best,
our policymakers should prepare for all contingencies.
Over the past twenty years,
China has created a more market-based
economy and allowed more social and economic freedom. Chinese
participation in international
security and economic regimes has
grown. On the other hand,
China has made little progress toward
granting its citizens political and religious freedom, and protecting
human and labor rights. In fact, the government has notably increased
its repression of some religious practices, including its brutal
campaign against the Falun Gong.
Chinese leaders have repeatedly stressed to their Communist Party
supporters and the Chinese people that they have no desire to repeat in
China
the political and economic collapse that took place in the former Soviet
Union. They seek to maintain and strengthen the Communist Party's
political and social control while permitting freer economic activity.
They consistently limit the freedom of the Chinese people to obtain and
exchange information, practice their religious faith, to publicly
express their convictions, and to join freely organized labor unions.
Chinese leaders frequently use nationalistic themes to rally support for
their actions, including crackdowns on dissenters
China
is thus embarked on a highly questionable effort -- to open its economy
but not its political system -- the outcome of which will influence the
destinies of many countries, including our own. If the economy fails, or
if the Chinese people demand full freedom instead of merely a taste of
it, then the leaders will have to choose between reasserting central
control and granting greater political and social freedom, with a
consequent weakening of their own authority. On the other hand, if China
becomes rich but not free, the United States may face a wealthy,
powerful nation that could be hostile toward our democratic values, to
us, and in direct competition with us for influence in Asia and beyond.
American policymakers must take these scenarios seriously, and to
that end the Commission has established benchmarks
against which to measure future change. There are important areas in
which Chinese policy runs directly counter to U.S. national
security
interests, such as not controlling exports that contribute to the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, its close relations with
terrorist-sponsoring states like Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Sudan and
North Korea, its expanding long-range missile forces, its threatening
policies toward Taiwan, and its pursuit of both asymmetric warfare
capabilities and modern military technology that could menace American
military forces.
China's leaders view the United States
as a partner of convenience, useful for its capital, technology,
know-how and market. They often describe the United States as China's
long-term competitor for regional and global military and economic
influence. Much rhetoric and a considerable volume of official writings
support this hypothesis. The recent empirical study of Chinese
newspapers' coverage of the
U.S., conducted by University of
Maryland scholars for the
Commission, found a divided
perspective: articles in these newspapers, which we believe generally
represent the views of the leadership, are consistently positive on
trade and investment matters and applaud Sino-U.S.
cooperation in these areas. In contrast, their coverage of U.S. foreign
policy is largely negative and frequently depicts the U.S. as
hegemonic and unilateralist.
In time we will learn whether
China is to become a responsible world
power or an aggressive, wealthy dictatorship, and whether the Communist
Party maintains its monopoly of political power or shares it with the
Chinese people. We will also learn whether the Chinese economy
flourishes or stumbles and collapses under the burden of state-owned
industries, a weak banking system, enormous debt, wide-scale corruption,
social dislocation, and the new challenges of international competition
brought about by its WTO entry.
Current U.S. policies and laws fail to
adequately monitor the transfers of economic resources and security-related technologies to China,
considering the substantial uncertainties and challenges to U.S. national
interests in this relationship. This Report attempts to begin to address
these uncertainties, trends, and challenges in a systematic manner. It
proceeds on the premise that far more prudence must be displayed and far
better understanding developed on the part of the Congress on the full
extent of this relationship and its impact on U.S.
interests. In addition, too little attention has been devoted to the
adverse impact of recent Chinese economic strength on our Asian allies
and friends. The Commission believes the U.S. must
develop a better understanding of the vulnerabilities and needs of our
Asian allies and friends, and must carefully construct policies to
protect and nurture those relationships.
Summary of Recommendations
The Commission has identified its key
findings and recommendations with each chapter in this Report. The Commission
developed more than forty recommendations that are listed with each of
the ten chapters. We have prepared a separate classified report
providing additional details and recommendations. Here, we highlight and
summarize those recommendations we believe are the highest priority and
which we recommend for immediate action. A more extended analysis is
contained in each of the Report's ten chapters.
Conflicting National Perspectives
The United States Government is poorly organized to manage our
increasingly complex relationship with
China. We are not adequately informed
about developments within
China and about their leaders'
perceptions of the U.S. and we dedicate insufficient
resources to understand
China. Because Chinese strategic
thinking and analysis of military planning differ markedly from our own,
our incomplete understanding enhances the possibilities for
miscalculation, misunderstanding, and potential conflict.
Recommendation 1: The
U.S. Government should expand its
collection, translation and analysis of open source Chinese-language
materials, and make them available to the larger community. Despite two
studies advocating an improved collection of Chinese materials at the
Library of Congress, its collection is nearly unusable and shameful.
Congress should provide funds to implement recommendations already
submitted by the two previous studies. In addition, the Commission
recommends increased funding for Chinese language training and area
studies programs, similar to the program in the National Defense
Education Act of l958, and incentives for post-secondary graduates to
participate in government service. The relevant executive branch
agencies should report annually to the Congress on steps taken to
rectify this situation.
Recommendation 2: The
U.S. should develop a comprehensive
inventory of official government-to-government and U.S.
Government-funded programs with
China. The President should designate
an executive branch agency to coordinate the compilation of a database
of all such cooperative programs. The database should include a full
description of each program, its achievements to date, and the benefits
to the U.S. and should be prepared annually in
both classified and unclassified forms. The Commission
further recommends that the executive branch prepare a biannual report,
beginning in 2004, on the cooperative Science and Technology (S&T)
programs with China patterned on the report
submitted to Congress in May 2002 at the request of Senator Robert C.
Byrd. The President should establish a working group to set standards
for S&T transfers, monitor the programs, and coordinate with the
intelligence agencies.
Recommendation 3: The
Commission recommends that Congress
encourage the Department of Defense to renew efforts to develop
military-to-military confidence building measures (CBMs) within the
context of a strategic dialogue with
China and based strictly on the
principles of reciprocity, transparency, consistency, and mutual
benefit.
Managing U.S.-China Economic Relations (Trade and
Investment)
The United States has played a major role in China's
rise as an economic power. We are
China's largest export market and a
key investor in its economy. Fueled by
China's virtually inexhaustible supply
of low-cost labor and large inflows of foreign direct investment (FDI),
the U.S. trade
deficit with China has grown at a furious pace -
from $11.5 billion in l990 to $85 billion in 2000. The U.S. trade
deficit with China is not only our largest deficit
in absolute terms but also the most unbalanced trading relationship the
U.S.
maintains. U.S. trade with China is
only 5 percent of total
U.S. trade with the world but our trade
deficit with China is 19 percent of the total U.S. trade
deficit. U.S. exports to China are
only 2 percent of total
U.S. exports to the world, while we
import over 40 percent of
China's exports.
Foreign direct investment has helped
China leapfrog forward both
economically and technologically. These developments have provided China with
large dollar reserves, advanced technologies, and greater R&D
capacity, each of which has helped make
China an important world manufacturing
center and a growing center of R&D, which are contributing to its
military-industrial modernization.
U.S.
companies have difficulty competing with Chinese based companies, in
large part, because the cost of labor in
China is depressed through low wages
and denial of worker rights. Essentially, Chinese workers do not have
the ability to negotiate their wages. Attracted in part by the low wages
in China, a growing number of U.S.
manufacturers are now operating in
China, many of whom are utilizing China as an
"export platform" to compete in
U.S. and global markets.
China's large trade surplus with the
United States, the inflow of
U.S. private investment into China, and
China's
access to U.S. capital markets each contributes,
directly or indirectly, to
China's economic growth and military
modernization.
Recommendation 4: The
Commission recommends the creation of
a federally mandated corporate reporting system that would gather
appropriate data to provide a more comprehensive understanding of the U.S. trade
and investment relationship with
China. The reporting system should
include reports from U.S. companies doing business in China on
their initial investment, any transfers of technology, offset or R&D
cooperation associated with any investment, and the impact on job
relocation and production capacity from the United States or U.S. firms
overseas resulting from any investment in
China.
Recommendation 5: The
Commission recommends that the U.S. make
full and active use of various trade tools including special safeguards
provisions in the WTO to gain full compliance by China with
its World Trade Organization (WTO) accession agreement.
China's WTO Membership: Conflicting
Goals
The U.S. and
China hold differing goals for China's
membership in the WTO. (The Chinese saying for this situation is: "same
bed, different dreams").
China's leadership sought WTO
membership to further the nation's economic reform and growth through
export production and the accumulation of foreign investment, capital,
and technology in order to become a world power. U.S. support
for China's WTO membership was intended to
enhance market access for
U.S. goods and services, and also to
promote internal economic, political and civil reforms, including a more
open society.
China
has instituted legal reforms to supervise foreign direct investment
(FDI), financial markets and private businesses in order to stimulate
trade and investment and fulfill the country's WTO commitments. The
development of a commercial rule of law in
China faces numerous obstacles,
including the lack of an independent judiciary and trained judges, local
protectionism, and widespread corruption. Despite some advances in
commercial legal reforms,
China remains grossly deficient in
granting its citizens civil and political freedoms, and makes widespread
use of prison labor.
Recommendation 6: The
Commission recommends that Congress
renew the Super 301 provision of
U.S. trade law and request the
Administration to identify and report on other tools that would be most
effective in opening China's market to U.S. exports
if China
fails to comply with its WTO commitments. In examining these tools,
priority should be given to those industry sectors where China
expects rapid economic growth in exports to the U.S. market.
Recommendation 7: Congress should authorize and appropriate
additional funds to strengthen the Commerce Department's support for
commercial rule of law reform in
China, including intellectual property
rights and WTO implementation assistance, and to strengthen the
Department of State's promotion of capacity-building programs in the
rule of law, administrative reform, judicial reform and related areas.
Recommendation 8: The
U.S. should improve enforcement against
imports of Chinese goods made from prison labor by shifting the burden
of proof to U.S. importers and by more stringent
requirements relating to visits to Chinese facilities suspected of
producing and exporting prison-made goods to the United States. (Note:
The Commission made recommendations to
Congress on this issue in a May 2002 letter).
Recommendation 9: The
Commission recommends that Congress
request the annual Trade Promotion Coordination Committee (TPCC) report
prepared by the Department of Commerce include an assessment of China's
progress in compliance with its WTO commitments, recommendations on
initiatives to facilitate compliance, and a survey of market access
attained by key U.S. industry sectors in China,
including agriculture. The report should include comparisons of U.S. market
access in those key industry sectors with those gained by the European
Union and Japan.
Recommendation 10: The
Commission recommends that Congress
urge the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) to
request WTO consultations on
China's noncompliance with its
obligations under the Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS) Agreement, particularly its inadequate enforcement, to
deter China's counterfeiting and piracy of
motion pictures and other video products. If China fails
to respond, Congress should encourage the USTR to request a WTO dispute
settlement panel be convened on the matter.
Recommendation 11: Congress mandated the Commission
to evaluate and make recommendations on invoking Article XXI of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), relating to security
exceptions from GATT obligations. The
Commission believes that the steel
industry is a possible candidate for using Article XXI. If the
Administration's current safeguard measures prove ineffective, the Commission
recommends that Congress consider using Article XXI to ensure the
survival of the U.S. steel industry.
Accessing U.S. Capital Markets
Chinese firms raising capital or trading their securities
in U.S. markets
have almost exclusively been large state-owned enterprises, some of
which have ties to China's military and intelligence
services. There is a growing concern that some of these firms may be
assisting in the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or
ballistic missile delivery systems. The
U.S. lacks adequate institutional
mechanisms to monitor national
security concerns raised by certain
Chinese and other foreign entities accessing the U.S. debt and
equity markets. We also lack sufficient disclosure requirements to
inform the investing public of the potential risks associated with
investing in such entities.
Recommendation 12: The
Commission recommends that foreign
entities seeking to raise capital or trade their securities
in U.S. markets
be required to disclose information to investors regarding their
business activities in countries subject to U.S. economic
sanctions.
Recommendation 13: The
Commission recommends that the
Treasury Department, in coordination with other relevant agencies,
assess whether China or any other country associated
with the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or
ballistic-missile delivery systems are accessing U.S. capital
markets and make this information available to the Securities
Exchange Commission (SEC), state public pension
plans, and U.S. investors. Entities sanctioned by
the Department of State for such activities should be denied access to
U.S. markets.
Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction
China
fails to control the export of dual-use items that contribute to the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their delivery systems.
China is
a leading international source of missile-related technologies. Its
proliferation activities with terrorist-sponsoring and other states,
despite commitments to the
U.S. to cease such activities, present
serious problems for U.S. national security
interests, particularly in the Middle East and Asia.
Recommendation 14: The
Commission recommends that the
President be provided an extensive range of options to penalize foreign
countries for violating commitments or agreements on proliferation
involving weapons of mass destruction and technologies and delivery
systems relating to them. All current statutes dealing with
proliferation should be amended to include a separate authorization for
the President to implement economic and other sanctions against
offending countries, including quantitative and qualitative export and
import restrictions, restricting access to
U.S. capital markets, controlling
technology transfers, and limiting
U.S. direct investment.
Recommendation 15: The United States should work with the United
Nations Security Council and other appropriate
inter-governmental organizations to formulate a framework for effective
multilateral action to counter proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction and their delivery systems. Member states found in violation
of the agreed framework should be subject to international sanctions.
Recommendation 16: The United States should continue to prohibit
satellite launch cooperation with
China until it puts into place an
effective export-control system consistent with its November 2000
commitment to the U.S. to restrict proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction and associated technologies to other
countries and entities.
Cross-Strait and Regional Relations
Cross-strait relations are a major potential flashpoint in U.S.-China
relations. Economic and people-to-people interactions between Taiwan and
the Mainland have increased dramatically in recent years, raising
prospects that such interactions could help ameliorate cross-strait
political tensions. At the same time,
China is enhancing its capability to
carry out an attack across the Taiwan Strait with special operations,
air, navy and missile forces. It continues to deploy short- and
intermediate-range missiles opposite Taiwan and although the threat of
an immediate attack appears to be low, this buildup appears designed to
forestall pro-independence political movements in Taiwan and help bring
about an eventual end to the Island's continued separate status.
China's economic integration with its
neighbors in East Asia raises the prospects of an Asian economic area
dominated or significantly influenced by
China. The U.S. has an
interest in China's integration in Asia if it
gives all parties a stake in avoiding hostilities. Nonetheless, U.S.
influence in the area could wane to a degree, particularly on economic
and trade matters.
Recommendation 17: The
Commission recommends that the
Department of Defense continue its substantive military dialogue with
Taiwan and conduct exchanges on issues ranging from threat analysis,
doctrine, and force planning.
Recommendation 18: The
Commission recommends making permanent
those provisions in the fiscal years 2001 and 2002 Foreign Operations
Appropriations Acts providing for executive branch briefings to the
Congress on regular discussions between the administration and the
government on Taiwan pertaining to
U.S. arms sales to Taiwan.
Recommendation 19: The
Commission believes that the Congress
should encourage the Administration to initiate consultations with other
Asian countries to assess and make recommendations on the impact of the
"hollowing out" phenomenon with respect to
China on regional economies and on U.S. economic
relations with the region.
China's Military Economy
China's official defense spending has
expanded by more than one-third in the past two years. The Commission
estimates that China's official defense budget
represents about one-third of its actual spending level. Its ability to
increase defense spending in the face of competing priorities is
supported by its rapid economic growth.
China has the largest standing army in
the world and ranks second in actual aggregate spending. The military's
role in China's economy has been reduced in
recent years, but the military derives extensive financial and
technological benefits from the growth and modernization of the domestic
economy, which is designed to serve it.
Recommendation 20: The
Commission recommends that the
Secretary of Defense prepare a biannual report on critical elements of
the U.S. defense
industrial base that are becoming dependent on Chinese imports or
Chinese-owned companies. The Department of Defense should also update
its acquisition guidelines and develop information from defense
contractors on any dependency for critical parts of essential U.S. weapons
systems.
Technology Transfers and Military Acquisitions
China
has a well-established policy and program to acquire advanced
technologies for its industrial development, military capabilities and
intelligence services. Over the next ten years, China
intends to acquire an industrial capability to build advanced
conventional and strategic weapons systems. Current U.S. policies
do not adequately consider the impact of the transfers of commercial and
security-related technologies to China.
Recommendation 21: The
Commission recommends that the
Department of Defense and the FBI jointly assess China's
targeting of sensitive U.S. weapons-related technologies, the
means employed to gain access to these technologies and the steps that
have been and should be taken to deny access and acquisition. This
assessment should include an annual report on Chinese companies and
Chinese PLA-affiliated companies operating in the United States. Such
reports are mandated by statute but have never been provided to
Congress.
The Commission cannot forecast with
certainty the future course of
U.S.-China relations. Nor can we predict
with any confidence how
China and Chinese society will develop
in the next ten to twenty years. We do know that China now
ranks among our most important and most troubling bilateral
relationships and believe that
China's importance to the United
States will increase in the years ahead. As its economy and military
grow and its influence expands,
China's actions will carry increased
importance for the American people and for our national interests.
For this reason, the
Commission believes that there is a
pressing need to fully understand the increasingly complex economic,
political and military challenges posed by
China's drive toward modernity. To
gain such comprehension will require the allocation of more resources
and the elevation of China in our foreign and national security
priorities. The Commission hopes that U.S.-China
relations will develop in a positive direction but we must urge caution
that this outcome, though preferred, may not happen. The U.S. must,
therefore, be prepared for all possible contingencies.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov) NNNN
Product Name:
WASHINGTON FILE
Document
Type: Text; Policy
Keywords: China-US
Relations; National Security; Congress, US; United
State/Defense and Military-China;
Trade; World Trade Organization (WTO); Weapons; Technology; Intellectual
Property; Taiwan; Competition; Prisons; Reports and Studies; 1D; 1E; 05;
NS/JM
Thematic Code: 1D; 1E; 05
New
Thematic Code:
Language: English
Word Count: 6362
Originating
Team: 02071502.GEA
Accession
Number:
File Indentifier:
Product Code:
Target
Group: