Jun 15

Past Event

Trade, Tiananmen, and Technology

Summary

President Clinton is making a historic trip to China later this month, the first presidential visit to China since the crackdown in Tiananmen Square. In light of recent questions about technology transfers to Beijing as well as investigations into alleged Chinese campaign contributions, critics are calling for President Clinton to cancel his trip to China. With recent events in South Asia, many charge China has exacerbated tensions in that region and beyond.

On the eve of President Clinton's trip to China, The Brookings Institution will bring together leading scholars for an in-depth discussion to answer these hard questions:

  • Should President Clinton even be going to China at this time?
  • Is China acting as a rogue state or is it acting responsibly in combating the proliferation of weapons and technology?
  • How will the Indian and Pakistani nuclear tests affect the meeting?
  • Should the U.S. renew MFN trade status for China as just proposed by President Clinton?
  • Is it time for China to join the WTO?

Details

June 15, 1998

2:00 PM - 3:00 PM EDT

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Panelists include

    • Bates Gill

      Director and Research Professor, East Asia Nonproliferation Project,
      Monterey Institute of International Studies;
      Author of the forthcoming book Arming East Asia:
      The International Politics of Defense Industrialization in the Pacific Century

      and co-editor of Arms, Transparency and Security in Southeast Asia

    • Nicholas R. Lardy

      Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution;
      Author of the forthcoming book China's Unfinished Economic Revolution

    • Richard N. Haass

      Director of Foreign Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution;
      Former Senior Director for Near East and South Asian Affairs, National Security Council
      Author of The Reluctant Sheriff: The U.S. After the Cold War and
      editor of the forthcoming book Economic Sanctions and American Diplomacy