It has become a tradition before every visit by a U.S.
president for Beijing to promise not to censor his remarks. This
latest trip by George W. Bush is no exception. Speaking on Feb. 6,
a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman pledged that Mr. Bush's press
conference today, and his speech at Beijing's prestigious Tsinghua
University tomorrow, will be broadcast live and -- most importantly
-- uncut.
But China's past record suggests this is a promise that is unlikely to be kept. For instance, during former U.S. President Ronald Reagan's visit to Beijing in 1984, White House officials arranged to have his speech to a handpicked audience of communist illuminati at the Great Hall of the People aired on China's nationwide television.
Instead it was taped and comments that Beijing considered
"objectionable" excised prior to transmission. These included his
declaration that the American people "have always drawn tremendous
power from two great forces -- faith and freedom." Also deleted was
Mr. Reagan's attempt to introduce the Chinese people to Abraham
Lincoln's dictum that "no man is good enough to govern another man
without the other's consent." It was hardly tough talk. But it was
apparently tough enough for a senior U.S. State Department official
to lose his temper -- not at the Chinese, but at the White House
speechwriter whose words were "so provocative that they had to be
censored," according to Los Angeles Times columnist Jim Mann's
account in his book "About Face."
When Mr. Reagan tried again the next day, in an interview with
China Central Television (CCTV), the censors went to work once
more. His explanation of how "economic growth and human
progress make their greatest strides when people are secure and
free to think, speak, worship and choose their own ray to reach for
the stars" was never broadcast.
While there was no reports of censorship during a February 1989
visit by then President George Bush -- father of
the present president -- there was a memorable incident in which
Chinese security officials physically prevented a prominent
democracy activist, Dr. Fang Lizhi, from attending a banquet at the
Great Wall Hotel to which he had been invited by the
president.
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton's otherwise warm two-week visit
to China in July 1998 was also marred by efforts to prevent the
Chinese people from hearing his public statements. Then U.S.
National Security Adviser Samuel Berger did manage to persuade
Beijing to agree to live television coverage of both a joint press
conference with Chinese President Jiang Zemin and his speech at
Beijing University. But Beijing made no prior announcement of this
-- so no one knew these events were being broadcast and there was
no audience. Although CCTV did cover the press conference in its
regular news bulletins, it made no reference to Mr. Clinton's
condemnation of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre or his praise of
personal liberties. Nor was there any mention of his Beijing
University speech, or a church visit where he addressed 2,000
parishioners.
The same thing happened again during U.S. Secretary of State Colin
Powell's overnight stay in Beijing in July 2001. As part of the
advance work for the visit, CCTV gave a "clear and explicit
agreement" that an interview with Mr. Powell would be carried in
its entirety. But it wasn't. Even the U.S. State Department had to admit that "they
chose to renege on that agreement" -- a decision it said was made
by the Beijing leadership.
In the censored portions of Mr. Powell's interview -- about a fifth
of the total program -- he called on China to establish a "rule of
law, having standards with respect to international law and trying
to meet those standards that are expected in the international
community with respect to freedom of...religion and various human
rights." Not surprisingly, the Chinese blanked out his frank
comments about the Taiwan Relations Act and its mandate for
continued arms sales to Taiwan. But they even edited out Mr.
Powell's seemingly anodyne observation that "as a black man 40
years ago, it would have been unthinkable for me to dream about
becoming secretary of state. But here I am . . . so we have
changed."
President George W. Bush has already had a taste of Chinese
censorship. During his short stay in Shanghai last October for the
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum leadership summit, the
Chinese heavily edited his comments at a joint press conference
with Mr. Jiang. Chinese viewers saw only a delayed and censored
version of the supposedly "live" news conference on Oct. 19. For
example, CCTV edited out President Bush's warning that "the war on
terrorism should not be used to persecute ethnic minorities" and
intervened to prevent foreign television networks from
transmitting live coverage of the event.
So President Bush should be prepared for the Chinese to censor his comments yet again during this visit. And he should be under no illusions that Beijing's leaders -- despite their promises -- are any more willing now than they have been for the past 20 years to let the Chinese people hear directly from any U.S. president.
John J.
Tkacik, Jr., is a research fellow at the Heritage
Foundation in Washington, D.C. He is a retired foreign service
officer who served in Beijing, Guangzhou, Hong Kong and
Taipei.
Originally appeared in the Asian Wall Street Journal.