China's
Premier Wen Jiabao, at the start of a four-day visit to the
United States, said Beijing would never allow Taiwan to use
aspirations for democracy as a cover for separatism.
Wen, who
visited U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan in snow-swept New
York before going to Washington, intends to seek assurances
from the Bush administration that it will rein in Taiwan. He
also will face criticism of China's trade and currency
policies while promoting closer economic cooperation.
Tensions have risen
across the Taiwan strait since last month, when the island's
"parliament" passed a law allowing referendums.
Taiwan "President" Chen Shui-bian has backed off
an independence vote but instead planned a referendum in
March asking the mainland to withdraw ballistic missiles
aimed at the island.
Asked about the March referendum, Wen said the
mainland understood "the aspiration of the people in
Taiwan for democracy."
"However, the essence of the problem now is
that the separatist forces within the Taiwan authorities
attempt to use democracy only as a cover to split Taiwan
away from China and this is what we will never
tolerate."
But he
said that as long "as there is still a glimmer of hope,
the Chinese government will not give up its efforts for a
peaceful unification and a peaceful settlement."
In response, Annan
emphasized that the United Nations maintained a one China
policy but that differences needed to be settled without
"any resort to violence."
Wen arrived in a 20-car motorcade,
about half of it made up of U.S. security agents. He spoke
to Annan about Iraq, Korea, U.N. reform, AIDS and
development in Africa, where Wen will visit after his trip
to the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Wen is the highest ranking Chinese
leader to visit the United States since Beijing wrapped up a
sweeping power transition to a younger generation headed by
President Hu Jintao in March.
Taiwan has emerged as a cloud over ties between
the world's most populous nation and its most powerful, one
that risks undermining Chinese support for U.S. efforts like
the war on terror and the Korean peninsula nuclear crisis,
analysts said.
Chinese
military officials have threatened war if Taiwan moved
toward independence -- even at the risk of boycotts of the
2008 Beijing Olympics and economic recession.
Seeking to ease tensions, a U.S. envoy
carried a message to Taipei last week that Washington did
not want to see an independence referendum take place,
administration officials said.
Vice Foreign Minister Zhou Wenzhong has said Wen,
who meets President Bush on Tuesday in Washington, would
seek a more forceful statement that the United States
clearly "opposed" Taiwan steps toward
independence.
That would
mark a nuanced but significant shift from the U.S. line that
it "does not support" independence moves, analysts
said, a position Secretary of State Colin Powell reiterated
on Friday.
"If the
U.S. makes a clear statement opposing Taiwan independence,
then it will help Sino-U.S. relations," said Jia
Qingguo, professor at Peking University of International
Studies.
"But if
the U.S. does not even support China on the core issues ...
China will have a hard time fully cooperating with the
United States in other areas."
(agencies)
www.chinaview.cn
2003-12-08