U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner have no plans to cancel their trip to China because of the reported U.S. protection of a fugitive Chinese activist, according to a State Department official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Earlier this week, legal activist Chen Guangcheng escaped house arrest in Shandong province, where he had been held since his release from prison in September 2010, Midland, Texas-based ChinaAid, a U.S.-based human rights group, reported on its website.
Chen, who is blind, is now under U.S. protection and talks are taking place between the U.S. and China about his status, ChinaAidâs founder Bob Fu said in an e-mail today, citing people close to the situation that he didnât identify. Earlier the group had said he was in a safe location in Beijing.
Clinton and Geithner are due to arrive in Beijing for annual talks May 3-4. The trip wonât be canceled because of Chen or because of consideration being given by the U.S. to selling Taiwan new Lockheed Martin Corp. (LMT) F-16 fighter jets, the State Department official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issues.
âThis all looks to me like a brewing, perfect storm test for relations,â Chris Johnson, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington and former senior China analyst at the Central Intelligence Agency. âThese strategic and economic dialogue talks, that substantively probably would have been inconsequential, suddenly become the most important test for Sino-U.S. relations for the Obama administration thus far in its tenure.â
Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai, speaking in Beijing today, said he had âno informationâ about Chen.
Strained Relations
Events this year have already strained U.S.-Chinese relations, including âthe Chinese early support for the Assad regime in Syria; North Koreaâs satellite launch and a presumed nuclear test; this guy running to the consulate -- itâs just one thing after another,â Johnson said.
âWhen you layer onto the cake as well that the White House sent a letter to Senator Cornyn of Texas noting that they would take a second look at possible new F-16 fighter aircraft sales to Taiwan in order to get Senator Cornyn to lift his hold on the appointment of Mark Lippert as the new assistant secretary of defense for East Asiaâ the Geithner-Clinton trip becomes âa very tricky situation,â he said.
Lockheed F-16 Sale
A Lockheed F-16 jet sale âwarrants serious consideration given the growing military threat to Taiwan,â Robert Nabors, the White Houseâs director of legislative affairs, said in a letter yesterday to Senator John Cornyn, a Texas Republican.
China, which insists that Taiwan be reunited with the mainland by force if necessary, has cut military contacts with the U.S. in the past over American arms sales to the island.
Johnson said the timing of Chenâs escape alone will encourage âthose who are so inclined in Chinaâ to view the event as part of a âconspiracy to stifle Chinaâs rise, and so the hardliners in the regime are going to see the walls closing in and that this was all planned by the U.S.â
âAnd then of course it was leaked by us to the media,â he said. Public knowledge of Chenâs escape is âa massive embarrassmentâ for the Chinese and means âthey have got to react probably a little more stern.â
A U.S. Embassy spokesman in Beijing said he had no information on Chenâs status when contacted by Bloomberg News today.
Pivotal Moment
âThis is a pivotal moment for U.S. human rights diplomacy,â Fu said in the e-mail. âBecause of Chenâs wide popularity, the Obama administration must stand firmly with him or risk losing credibility as a defender of freedom and the rule of law.â
âDear Premier Wen, Iâve escaped after trying so hard,â a man who claimed to be Chen and resembled him said in a video that was posted on YouTube yesterday, in a reference to Premier Wen Jiabao. âI am free now, but I am still very worried because my beloved wife and son are still under the devilish hands.â
ChinaAid hopes the administration will honor Chenâs wishes, ensure his safety and make sure his family doesnât suffer reprisals, Fu said.
U.S. Alarm
The U.S. has taken up Chenâs case in the past. Clinton mentioned him in a speech in November, saying the U.S. was âalarmedâ by his continued house arrest and calling on China to âembrace a different path.â
ChinaAidâs statement yesterday said Fu has been in touch with Chenâs friends and family and was told that Chen wanted to remain in China. He wants âa normal life as a Chinese citizen with my family,â according to the statement.
Chen was jailed for more than four years after helping villagers resist forced abortions, rights groups including the New York-based Human Rights in China say. After his release in September 2010, he and his wife were confined to their home in the village of Dongshigu.
Chen is a self-taught lawyer who was blinded by a fever in infancy, the Associated Press reported. He Peirong, an activist who has led a campaign to free Chen, picked him up and drove him to a ârelatively safe place,â the AP quoted her as saying.
Human Rights in China, citing a âknowledgeable sourceâ that it didnât identify, has said that Chenâs nephew, Chen Kegui, was taken from his home by more than 30 policemen yesterday. Chen Guangfu, Chen Guangchengâs older brother, was taken away a day earlier, the group said in an e-mailed statement.
Five lawyers went to Dongshigu village to assist the Chen family, the organization said in an e-mailed statement dated yesterday.
Phelim Kine, senior Asia researcher at New York-based Human Rights Watch, said in a statement that Chenâs case âhighlights the yawning divide between the governmentâs lofty rhetoric about rule of law and the far grimmer reality endured by people like Chen who challenge the status quo.â
To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Michael Forsythe in Beijing at mforsythe@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg at phirschberg@bloomberg.net

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