Committee
of 100 Issues Commentary In Response to US-China
Security Review Commission Report
Jul
18, 2002
New
York, NY (July 18) The Committee of 100
issued a commentary on the US-China Security
Review Commission (USCC)s annual report
to Congress, released on July 15. It aired today
on National Public Radio as part of the show
Pacific Times examination of the USCC report.
The commentary follows:
The
Congressional report by the US-China Security
Review Commission is another example of conjectures
and worst-case hypotheses resulting in potentially
misleading conclusions in the Commissions
report. It's reminiscent of many similar conclusions
reached in the Cox Report of 1999. Much of it
was later widely repudiated, most notably by
a panel of distinguished scientists from Stanford
University.
The
alleged "threat" of Taiwan's forced
reunification with China reflects more the a
priori judgment of the commission, not reasoned
assessment of facts. The report understates the
impact of the great social and economic integration
underway between Taiwan and China. Taiwanese
investment in China has exceeded 100 billion
US dollars. And close to 1 million Taiwanese
are in China to visit, study, work, even to marry
and retire. The Commission fails to consider
that such integration is a deterrent to military
conflict.
The
report also disturbingly raised questions about
the role that Chinese students, researchers,
and scholars in the US play in the transfer of
American technology to China. Such rhetoric goes
down the slippery slope that cast groundless
suspicion on all Chinese, including Chinese Americans,
of spying for China. We are deeply saddened,
if not outraged, by the questioning of our loyalty
as Americans.
The injustice of jumping to conclusions, without evidence, was dramatically
demonstrated in the shameful case of Wen Ho Lee, who was branded a Chinese
spy without due process. His case came hot on the heels of the Cox Report and
the atmosphere of paranoia about China that was created in the mass media.
We are concerned that this report could similarly pave the way for ethnic profiling,
civil rights abuses, and judicial failures that would harm Chinese Americans.
The
2001 survey the Committee of 100 commissioned
found a disturbing 46% of all Americans believe
that Chinese Americans passing on secret information
to China is a problem. Where do these ideas originate?
Has this bias influenced the Congressional commission
or have the actions of such commissions reinforced
this ethnic stereotype?
We
hope that the Commission in its future studies
will draw its conclusions based on hard-headed,
rational analysis. Because an informed, educated
public is the best assurance to shaping a sound
policy on our relationship with China.
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