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China Offers Albright Little but Status Quo

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

In their first talks with a senior Western diplomat since the death of “paramount leader” Deng Xiaoping, the Chinese president, premier and foreign minister on Monday conveyed a message of continuity and underscored their interest in China’s having a broad, positive relationship with the United States.

But in more than four hours of talks with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, the Chinese gave her no hint of immediate breakthroughs on specific issues, including the contentious subject of human rights, a topic she has called “a signature element in our relationship,” U.S. officials said.

“I don’t want to speculate whether I was able to narrow the differences--we’ll have to wait and see,” Albright told reporters after her long session with Foreign Minister Qian Qichen and shorter talks with President Jiang Zemin and Premier Li Peng.

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Albright met the top Chinese officials on the eve of Deng’s state funeral--a moment many analysts are calling a watershed in the history of modern China and a time of potential political change.

“It was very clear to me that they were all in deep mourning,” Albright said of China’s leadership.

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She hand-delivered notes of condolence from President Clinton to Jiang and Deng’s widow during her meeting with the Chinese president.

Although Deng effectively relinquished the reins of power three years ago, his very presence allowed Jiang, his anointed successor and a relative political unknown, the luxury of time to begin the process of consolidating his power, analysts have noted.

A senior U.S. official who accompanied Albright said she left all three meetings convinced that Jiang now is firmly in control of China. “It was clear in the succession of meetings that Jiang, as they [the Chinese] put it, is the ‘core’ of the leadership.”

The Americans described Jiang--who has shown a lighter, jovial side in previous encounters with Western leaders--as being “sober and statesmanlike” in a meeting that ran slightly shorter than the planned 50 minutes. “He was clearly preparing” to deliver the principal eulogy at Deng’s state funeral, one official said.

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As Albright noted: “Jiang was preparing to give his oratory, and I think it is a very important sign of their desire to forward this relationship that the meeting went forward. I frankly expected this trip to be postponed. . . . I’m more encouraged than when I got here.”

That Albright’s sessions with the Chinese leaders were not postponed was widely interpreted here as one more signal of Jiang’s desire to keep a momentum going in high-level Sino-American talks. Vice President Al Gore is scheduled to visit here next month; an exchange of presidential visits is planned before the end of next year. Many China scholars believe that a Jiang state visit to Washington would prove his effectiveness on the world stage and thus help cement his efforts at political consolidation at home.

Albright’s meetings with Chinese leaders were the last stop on her 11-day inaugural world trip as America’s top diplomat.

Despite the high profile Albright gave to the issue of human rights in her meetings, there was no hint of a softening in the Chinese position. “I said I’d tell it like it is, and I told it like it is,” she said.

An Albright aide who was in the meeting with Qian quoted her as telling the Chinese foreign minister, “I’ve come a long way, so I must be frank,” before noting specific concerns about restrictions placed in China on dissidents and religious freedom. The secretary of State also expressed U.S. concerns about allegations of Chinese human rights abuses in Tibet.

The aide said Qian listened, then said simply, “I appreciate your frankness.”

Unlike her predecessor, Warren Christopher, Albright did not present the Chinese with a list of prominent dissidents in China that the United States hoped Beijing would free; before and after her meetings with Chinese leaders, U.S. officials cautioned against expectations of a breakthrough.

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“The assumption that there is some magic fix . . . that we can create that will have a significant effect on the human rights situation in China I regard as folly,” commented one senior U.S. official.

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This official noted that as part of a low-key discussion of human rights launched in July by the United States and the European Union, Beijing was given a list of eight dissidents, seven of whom had been jailed and one placed under house arrest; three of them have since been released.

This approach, the official said, provides a guide for how the West may get the Chinese to make genuine progress on human rights--action in which China would agree to: release dissidents; resume talks on allowing the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit Chinese prisons; sign the U.N. human rights covenants; and enter permanent discussions on human rights.

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