When companies leakIs China's military the biggest winner from the boom in trade
with U.S. technology firms?By Adam Cohen
May 31, 1999
Web posted at: 11:13 a.m. EDT (1513 GMT)
The launch of Loral's Intelsat 708 communications satellite in
Sichuan province in February 1996 was a fiery disaster. The
Chinese-made Long March rocket that was supposed to propel the
American satellite into space crashed into a hillside 22 sec.
after lift-off and exploded, raining flaming rocket fuel and
red-hot shards of the 3-ton satellite on a nearby village. China
initially said six villagers choked or burned to death, and later
upped the number to 56, but U.S. estimates put the fatalities
closer to 100.
Loral's ill-fated launch may also have caused collateral damage
of a different kind. In the wake of the crash, a committee of
Western aerospace experts, headed by a top Loral official, was
tapped to investigate. It drew up a preliminary report on
specific reasons the Long March may have failed--and faxed it over
to the Chinese. This technical feedback, a federal investigation
concluded, may have helped China improve the accuracy of its
rocket and missile programs. The Defense Department found that
Loral and Hughes, another satellite company on the committee, had
engaged in a "serious export-control violation" by performing an
unlicensed defense service. The State Department asked the
Department of Justice to consider criminal prosecution.
Paying to play?
These companies have pushed hard to conduct business in China,
and they strongly favor keeping their access to the country. They
back their pitch with real dollars to both parties.
Donations to candidates and party committees for 1996 and 1998
elections
| COMPANY | DEMOCRATIC | REPUBLICAN |
| Hughes* | $428,675 | $1,265,540 |
| Loral | $1,870,000 | $226,950 |
| McDonnell Douglas** | $461,550 | $744,995 |
| Motorola | $109,473 | $270,041 |
* Includes donations of parent company General Motors
** Includes donations of parent company Boeing
Sources: Common Cause and Center for Responsive Politics
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Loral's exploded satellite--which was going to be used to beam TV
programs into Latin America--shows just how thin the line can be
between harmless commerce and military assistance. Representative
Christopher Cox sternly warned last week that China has been
inducing its U.S. business partners to provide it with
military-related technology, and momentum is growing in Congress
for a crackdown on this kind of seepage. But the tech industry,
and some outside observers, say the risks are being overblown--and
some of the tighter rules being considered would be ineffective
or even counterproductive.
Restrictions on the sale of strategic products to China began
loosening with the end of the cold war, and industry rushed in as
the doors to China's large and largely untapped markets opened.
In the commercial-satellite business alone, China imported $168
million worth of satellites and launch equipment last year, up
from $4 million in 1994. Sales of "dual use" products--nonmilitary
items with military applications--to China have long had security
lapses. In 1994 McDonnell Douglas sold China machine tools for a
civilian machine center in Beijing. The company learned later
that they had been diverted to a military complex nearly 800
miles away. A report by the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms
Control found that from 1988 to 1998 "a large and steady flow of
strategic equipment went to China with the U.S. Commerce
Department's blessing." Among the items sold to China legally:
computers nominally for the Chinese Academy of Sciences that
could be used in nuclear-fusion projects.
But others say the potential harm has been overstated. The Cox
report is "all worst-case scenarios," says Hughes spokesman
Richard Dore. The information Hughes is criticized for sharing
with the Chinese, he says, "was certainly not of a sensitive,
national-security nature." Loral chairman Bernard Schwartz
insisted to shareholders last week that his company didn't help
the Chinese discover what went wrong with their rocket, but
simply reviewed China's own analysis. In general, though, it may
actually serve American strategic interests to have China use
U.S. technology. "There are lots of reasons why we'd want the
Chinese to make phone calls on open equipment that we sold them
rather than closed equipment that they made themselves," says
Under Secretary of Commerce Bill Reinsch.
Then there's the question of whether rules against technology
sharing are even effective. The tech industry, not surprisingly,
argues they often aren't. Current law requires chipmakers to
submit applications to sell powerful microprocessors to countries
(such as China and the former Soviet Union states) that are
subject to highly restrictive export controls. But Intel argues
that it's impossible to prevent the chips it sells to friendly
countries from ending up in less friendly ones. "We make
microprocessors in the millions each month and ship them to
thousands of distributors all over the world, who aren't
prevented from selling to China," says Intel spokesman Bill
Calder. "There's a disconnect there."
Despite the current backlash, no one is really expecting
substantial changes. Indeed, the tech industry's supporters
argue that a crackdown would drive China to European or Japanese
suppliers, which could put more information in the hands of the
Chinese military. "No country is as strict about technology
transfers as the U.S.," says Hughes' Dore. "The way to keep the
lid on is to keep them dealing with American businesses."
--Reported by Cathy Booth/Los Angeles, Michael Krantz/San
Francisco, Elaine Shannon and Adam Zagorin/Washington and Mia
Turner/ Beijing
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Cover Date: June 7, 1999
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