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(RON PAUL opposes) Administration Plan to Subsidize China’s Nuclear Industry
Human Events ^ | 06/06/2007 | Timothy Carney

Posted on 07/22/2007 2:02:07 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian

Administration Poised to Subsidize China’s Nuclear Industry
by Timothy P. Carney

A Japanese-owned company is building nuclear power plants for Communist China, and the Bush administration is ready to use U.S. taxpayer dollars to subsidize the deal to the tune of $5 billion. Although China’s government-owned nuclear industry has a long record of illegal nuclear deals with Iran and Pakistan, administration officials say the technology is not transferable to nuclear weapons, and that the subsidy will create 5,000 jobs in Pennsylvania.

The Export-Import Bank of the United States (Ex-Im) is a federal agency that subsidizes U.S. exports by lending taxpayer money to foreign buyers (such as the Chinese government), or guaranteeing private loans, so that the foreign buyer can purchase U.S. goods.

Westinghouse Electric is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Japanese company Toshiba. Westinghouse manufactures the AP 1000 -- a new model of nuclear power generator -- in Monroeville, Pa.

In February 2005, Ex-Im’s board of directors granted preliminary approval for a $5 billion subsidy -- an unspecified combination of loans and guarantees -- to the China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) as a way of aiding Westinghouse’s bid for the contract (a French company and a Russian company were also competing for the contract.)

This year, the Chinese government awarded the contract to Westinghouse, bringing the record subsidy closer to reality, although the preliminary approval does not guarantee Ex-Im will provide financing. A Westinghouse spokesman told HUMAN EVENTS the company was in the process of applying for Ex-Im financing. Ex-Im spokesman Phil Cogan told HUMAN EVENTS that while a preliminary commitment is by no means a promise by Ex-Im, it indicates that “this is the kind of thing” Ex-Im would subsidize.

Congressional critics from both ends of the spectrum, including Senator Bernie Sanders (I.-Vt.) and Republican Representatives Ron Paul (Tex.), Jeff Fortenberry (Neb.), and Ed Royce (Calif.), have resisted this deal.

For the critics, the deal is problematic on at least three fronts. First, China’s state-owned nuclear industry has a long history of illegal nuclear weapons proliferation, and this subsidy enriches that very industry. Second, some of the jobs generated by this record subsidy deal will not be in the U.S. Finally, aiding China’s nuclear power industry could boost its military capabilities including its nuclear submarine programs.

Rewarding Proliferators

The CNNC is the branch of the Chinese government that manages both nuclear weapons and nuclear power. In recent months, CNNC and other state agencies founded the State Nuclear Power Technology Company (SNPTC). SNPTC, entirely owned by the Chinese government, is now the official purchaser of the nuclear reactors from Westinghouse.

CNNC is a known serial proliferator of nuclear weapons materials. In the late 1990s, U.S. intelligence agencies found that the CNNC had sold 5,000 ring magnets to Pakistan’s A.Q. Khan Research Laboratory. Later, the CIA found that the CNNC sold Pakistan high-temperature furnaces. Both the furnaces and the ring magnets are crucial tools used in enriching uranium to produce fissionable -- i.e., weapons grade -- uranium. Shortly after these sales, Pakistan tested its first nuclear weapon.

In 2004, A.Q. Khan, the Pakistani scientist on the buying end of the CNNC’s sales, was arrested for selling centrifuge materials to Libya. Khan is also known to have aided the nuclear weapons programs of North Korea and Iran. CNNC has, on at least two occasions, had dealings with Iran’s nuclear weapons program, but it is not clear if China has ever actually executed a sale of nuclear weapons materials to Iran.

American Jobs?

Westinghouse and Ex-Im officials have defended this subsidy by pointing out that without it, China would still build the nuclear power plants, but in collaboration with the Russians or the French. By greasing the skids for the Westinghouse contract with its preliminary commitment in 2005, Ex-Im has helped make work for 5,000 manufacturing workers in Monroeville, Pa. In April, however, Westinghouse announced that portions of the power plants would be built in South Korea and other parts in China. Ex-Im cannot finance an export unless most of the goods are made in the U.S.

Westinghouse and the Bush administration point out, however, that if these cutting-edge reactors do well in China, it would spur domestic and world-wide business for Westinghouse, making more jobs in Pennsylvania.

Helping China’s Military?

In late May, Representatives Christopher Smith (R.-N.J.), Diane Watson (D.-Calif.), Fortenberry, and Royce, asked Secretary of Defense Robert Gates in a letter whether the sale could boost China’s military capabilities.

Henry Sokolski, executive director of the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center said that there are reasons to worry about providing China with this technology. “You’re building an infrastructure that can be used and retooled to help out in [China’s] naval reactor sector -- and they do want this for nuclear subs,” the Christian Science Monitor quoted Sokolski.

Last year, during the debate on reauthorizing Ex-Im, the House passed by a 331-to-114 vote an amendment by Representatives Paul and Sanders that would have blocked a subsidy for this deal. The measure, however, was not in the final bill.

As of Tuesday morning, Ex-Im had not yet received an application from Westinghouse or any of its partners with regard to the sale. Sanders, Paul, or Fortenberry will likely act once Ex-Im receives the application, and possibly hold hearings on the deal, which would be the largest subsidy in Ex-Im history.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: china; energy; geopolitics; trade
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To: elhombrelibre
Is it just me or do his supporters get a little worked up about this weirdo?

You want to see worked up, check out the anti-paulists who spam every paul thread.

81 posted on 07/22/2007 3:38:57 PM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian

I agree with much of what RP stands for, but I also disagree with him on some vital issues, such as the WOT. No way are our policies the reason Islam wants us dead. Islam wants anyone who is not Muslim dead, and that war will be with us forever.


82 posted on 07/22/2007 3:40:15 PM PDT by Paperdoll ( Vote for Duncan Hunter in the Primaries for America's sake!)
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To: elhombrelibre

Yeah but deep down they know there fighting a losing battle, so enjoy the entertaining threads


83 posted on 07/22/2007 3:41:57 PM PDT by italianquaker (When will pelosi ask congressman ellison to apologize for his 9-11 remarks?)
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To: elhombrelibre
He’s regularly published in their paper

No, he's not.

84 posted on 07/22/2007 3:43:03 PM PDT by JTN ("I came here to kick ass and chew bubble gum. And I'm all out of bubble gum.")
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To: JoinJuniorAchievement
Muckraker Report: Where do you stand on Guantanamo?

Congressman Ron Paul: Shut it down. The current rationale at Guantanamo is based on the false premise that detainees are not entitled to due process protections. I support court decisions recognizing fundamental human rights, such as habeas corpus. Again, this is an issue that flies in the face of our civic and legal traditions as outlined in the Constitution. As such, I see no purpose for continuing the facility.

85 posted on 07/22/2007 3:43:45 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: samtheman

We have a moral duty to defend ourselves from attack and respond to real threats against our national security. But the war in Iraq was based on neither. If you are so hell bent on saving the world from jihadis why don’t you go start a new Christian army and march on the Holy Land yourself.

Here is Ronald Reagan’s thoughts on Middle East foreign interventionist policy. I doubt you’ll read it but maybe someone here will.

http://www.ronaldreagan.com/leb.html

From the Ronald Reagan Memoirs:

LEBANON, BEIRUT AND GRENADA

In the weeks immediately after the (Beirut) bombing, I believed the last thing we should do was turn tail and leave. If we did that, it would say to the terrorists of the world that all it took to change Americans foreign policy was to murder some Americans. If we walked away, we’d also be giving up on the moral commitment to Israel that had originally sent our marines to Lebanon. We’d be abandoning all the progress made during almost two years of trying to mediate a settlement in the Middle East. We’d be saying that the sacrifice of those marines had been for nothing. We’d be inviting the Russians to supplant the United States as the most influential superpower in the Middle East. After more than a year of fighting and mounting chaos in Beirut, the biggest winner would be Syria, a Soviet client. Yet, the irrationality of Middle Eastern politics forced us to rethink our policy there.

How do you deal with a people driven by such a religious zeal that they are willing to sacrifice their lives in order to kill an enemy simply because he doesn’t worship the same God they do? People who believe that if they do that, they’ll go instantly to heaven? In the Iran-Iraq war, radical Islamic fundamentalists sent more than a thousand young boys - teenagers and younger - to their deaths by telling them to charge and detonate land mines - and the boys did so joyously because they believed, “Tonight, we will be in Paradise.”

In early November, a new problem cropped up in the Middle East: Iran began threatening to close the Gulf of Hormuz, a vital corridor for the shipment of oil from the Persian Gulf. I said that if they followed through with this threat, is would constitute an illegal interference with navigation of the sea, and we would use force to keep the corridor open. Meanwhile, another development promised to bring change to the Middle East: Menachem Begin, deeply depressed after the death of his beloved wife and apparently devoid of the spirit he once had to continue fighting against Israel’s Arab enemies and its serious economic problems, resigned as prime minister.

King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, perhaps thinking American resolve on behalf of Israel might have been diminished by the horrendous human loss in Beirut, approached us with a new peace proposal that he said could end the warfare in Lebanon, and also take Syria out of the Soviet camp and put it in ours. But the proposal would have required us to reduce our commitment to Israel, and I said no thanks. I still believed that it was essential to continue working with moderate Arabs to find a solution to the Middle East’s problem, and that we should make selective sales of American weapons to the moderate Arabs as proof of our friendship. Syria with its new Soviet weapons and advisors, was growing more arrogant than ever, and rejected several proposals by the Saudis aimed at getting them out of Lebanon.

Our intelligence experts found it difficult to establish conclusively who was responsible for the attack on the barracks. When Druse militiamen began a new round of shelling of the marines several weeks after the bombing at the airport, we had to decide whether to ignore it or respond with firepower and escalate our role in the Lebanese war. “We’re a divided group,” I wrote in my journal after a National Security Council meeting held to discuss the renew shelling in early December. “I happen to believe taking out a few batteries might give them pause to think. Joint Chiefs believe it might drastically alter our mission and lead to major increases in troops for Lebanon “ Then, the Syrians took an action that more or less made our decision for us. Syria had launched a ground-to-air missile at one of our unarmed reconnaissance planes during a routine sweep over Beirut.

Although there was some resistance from Cap and the Joint Chiefs over whether we should retaliate, I told him to give the order for an air strike against the offending antiaircraft batteries. We had previously let the Syrians know that our reconnaissance operations in support of the marines were only defensive in nature. Our marines were not adversaries in the conflict, and any offensive act directed against them would be replied to. The following morning, more than two dozen navy aircraft carried out the mission. One crewman was killed and another captured by the Syrians. Our planes subsequently took out almost a dozen Syrian antiaircraft and missile-launching sites, a radar installation, and an ammo dump. When the Syrians fired again at one of our reconnaissance aircraft, I gave the order to fire the sixteen-inch guns of the battleship New Jersey on them. Two days later, we had a new cease-fire in Lebanon, a result, I’m sure, of the pressure of the long guns of the New Jersey - but, like almost all the other cease-fires in Beirut, it didn’t last long.

As 1984 began, it was becoming clearer that the Lebanese army was either unwilling or unable to end the civil war into which we had been dragged reluctantly. It was clear that the war was likely to go on for an extended period of time. As the sniping and shelling of their camp continued, I gave an order to evacuate all the marines to anchored off Lebanon. At the end of March, the ships of the Sixth Fleet and the marines who had fought to keep peace in Lebanon moved on to other assignments. We had to pull out. By then, there was no question about it: Our policy wasn’t working. We couldn’t stay there and run the risk of another suicide attack on the marines. No one wanted to commit our troops to a full-scale war in the middle East. But we couldn’t remain in Lebanon and be in the war on a halfway basis, leaving our men vulnerable to terrorists with one hand tied behind their backs. We hadn’t committed the marines to Beirut in a snap decision, and we weren’t alone. France, Italy, and Britain were also part of the multinational force, and we all thought it was a good plan. And for a while, as I’ve said, it had been working.

I’m not sure how we could have anticipated the catastrophe at the marine barracks. Perhaps we didn’t appreciate fully enough the depth of the hatred and the complexity of the problems that make the Middle East such a jungle. Perhaps the idea of a suicide car bomber committing mass murder to gain instant entry to Paradise was so foreign to our own values and consciousness that it did not create in us the concern for the marines’ safety that it should have. Perhaps we should have anticipated that members of the Lebanese military whom we were trying to assist would simply lay down their arms and refuse to fight their own countrymen. In any case, the sending of the marines to Beirut was the source of my greatest regret and my greatest sorrow as president. Every day since the death of those boys, I have prayed for them and their loved ones.

In the months and the years that followed, our experience in Lebanon led to the adoption by the administration of a set of principles to guide America in the application of military force abroad, and I would recommend it to future presidents. The policy we adopted included these principles:

1. The United States should not commit its forces to military action overseas unless the cause is vital to our national interest.

2. If the decision is made to commit our forces to combat abroad, it must be done with the clear intent and support needed to win. It should not be a halfway or tentative commitment, and there must be clearly defined and realistic objectives.

3. Before we commit our troops to combat, there must be reasonable assurance that the cause we are fighting for and the actions we take will have the support of the American people and Congress. (We all felt that the Vietnam War had turned into such a tragedy because military action had been undertaken without sufficient assurances that the American people were behind it.)

4. Even after all these other tests are met, our troops should be committed to combat abroad only as a last resort, when no other choice is available.

After the marines left Beirut, we continued a search for peace and a diplomatic solution to the problems in the Middle East. But the war in Lebanon grew even more violent, the Arab-Israeli conflict became more bitter, and the Middle East continued to be a source of problems for me and our country.


86 posted on 07/22/2007 3:43:52 PM PDT by t_skoz ("let me be who I am - let me kick out the jams!")
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To: samtheman
But RP is mouthing the talking points of Bin Laden, and RP is sticking his head in the sand rather than facing the number one issue of the century, and RP is voting with the worst block of leftists in congress. That’s above and beyond the call of incompetence. That’s incompetence bordering on, or crossing over into, treason.

I am sorry his foreign policy is more complicated than a bumpersticker thought.

He ALONE submitted a Declaration of War.

You want to talk treason? You must blame everyone else BEFORE you blame him.
If he does not win the Republican Primary, we will be stuck with Hillary.

87 posted on 07/22/2007 3:45:56 PM PDT by JoinJuniorAchievement (“ I am a Veteran, I support Ron Paul.")
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To: vbmoneyspender

Uh-oh...prepared to be flamed.


88 posted on 07/22/2007 3:47:40 PM PDT by abercrombie_guy_38
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
I live in a place where almost everybody gets government money, they'll just piss away the money into Lexus' and strip clubs. How about we use that money to give to people who are interested in making something of themselves.
89 posted on 07/22/2007 3:47:41 PM PDT by TypeZoNegative (Trinidad&Tobago: Proof that a Muslim minority (5%pop) causes a majority of a country's problems.)
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To: Orange1998; samtheman

>Bush thinks China and Mexico are our friends.<

Like we thought Bush was our friend? This man is planning to betray us again! Unbelievable!


90 posted on 07/22/2007 3:48:12 PM PDT by Paperdoll ( Vote for Duncan Hunter in the Primaries for America's sake!)
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To: JoinJuniorAchievement

Taking phrases from Breck Girl, I see.


91 posted on 07/22/2007 3:48:58 PM PDT by abercrombie_guy_38
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian

Bump for Ron Paul.


92 posted on 07/22/2007 3:51:19 PM PDT by Maeve (Do you have supplies for an extended emergency? Be prepared! Pray!)
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
So, basically, we're subsidizing the transfer of nuclear technology to China, so that the same Japanese Company which sold our submarine-propulsion technology to Soviet Russia can make big profits.

That's about the size of it. Justification of policy against the United States because another country will do it if we don't. The justifications for Bush's sellout reach an all time low.

The fact that the Pentagon reviewed this means nothing anymore. The ones who actually put America first over politics were booted out under Poppy and Clinton's terms. What remains is Yes Men till even some of them no longer have the stomach for it or their conscience gets to them.

I hope in my lifetime and even my grandkids life time the family Bush never holds another federal office be it an elected or appointed one. They are indeed as bad as Bill Clinton was policy wise. Maybe more so because more rational leadership was expected out of a Republican. It's like Carter and Ford. There was no difference between them policy wise.

93 posted on 07/22/2007 3:51:36 PM PDT by cva66snipe (Proud Partisan Constitution Supporting Conservative to which I make no apologies for nor back down)
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To: Paperdoll

Bush, Cheney & Co. are Enemies of the Constitution.


94 posted on 07/22/2007 3:52:52 PM PDT by Maeve (Do you have supplies for an extended emergency? Be prepared! Pray!)
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To: vbmoneyspender

Your link did not work. Sorry.


95 posted on 07/22/2007 3:54:55 PM PDT by JoinJuniorAchievement (“ I am a Veteran, I support Ron Paul.")
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To: t_skoz
1. The United States should not commit its forces to military action overseas unless the cause is vital to our national interest.

2. If the decision is made to commit our forces to combat abroad, it must be done with the clear intent and support needed to win. It should not be a halfway or tentative commitment, and there must be clearly defined and realistic objectives.

3. Before we commit our troops to combat, there must be reasonable assurance that the cause we are fighting for and the actions we take will have the support of the American people and Congress. (We all felt that the Vietnam War had turned into such a tragedy because military action had been undertaken without sufficient assurances that the American people were behind it.)

4. Even after all these other tests are met, our troops should be committed to combat abroad only as a last resort, when no other choice is available.

Thank you for posting Ron Paul's foreign policy.

96 posted on 07/22/2007 3:59:09 PM PDT by JoinJuniorAchievement (“ I am a Veteran, I support Ron Paul.")
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To: Maeve

>Bush, Cheney & Co. are Enemies of the Constitution.<

As are all CFR members. They consider it out of date.


97 posted on 07/22/2007 4:00:38 PM PDT by Paperdoll ( Vote for Duncan Hunter in the Primaries for America's sake!)
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian

What’s wrong with a little nuclear proliferation between friends? After all George Bush Sr. already gave China IBM super computers to facilitate their missle launching capability, and it’s all part of the global economy, right?/sarcasm


98 posted on 07/22/2007 4:01:54 PM PDT by gitmogrunt (8 years of Clinton ,8 years of Bush leaves me in a country I don't recognize anymore)
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To: elhombrelibre
Again, American Free Press is where Ron Paul’s thoughts frequently appear. Why?

You were told several times, you chose to ignore. No need for me to parrot. Blackbird.

99 posted on 07/22/2007 4:02:44 PM PDT by BlackbirdSST (I'm dug in, giving no more ground to the rino stampede. BB)
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To: JoinJuniorAchievement
Link
100 posted on 07/22/2007 4:02:50 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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