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Great Wall of America (China)
FEER ^ | By Murray Hiebert/WASHINGTON with Ben Dolven/SHANGHAI

Posted on 08/22/2002 5:57:00 PM PDT by maui_hawaii

American companies are crying 'Foul.' As they rush to sell more hi-tech goods to China, some have hit a wall thrown up by a U.S. government worried about national security and suspicious of Chinese intentions. And critics say the strategy isn't even working

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IT WAS EARLY 2001 and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. was scrambling to get its $1.5 billion chip-making plant in Shanghai up and running. Suddenly, the China-based corporation hit an unexpected obstacle: The newly arrived Bush administration froze an export licence that had been granted in the final days of the Clinton administration for two electron-beam systems that SMIC had ordered from Applied Materials in California.

In the next six months, while a committee made up of representatives of the departments of Defence, Commerce and State reviewed the licence, the Applied Materials deal became another American casualty of Washington's effort to control technology going to China.

The justification for vigilance is simple: national security. By controlling exports of items considered to have both civilian and military applications--powerful computers, hi-tech telecommunications gear, equipment used in semiconductor manufacturing, and sophisticated machine tools--the U.S. believes it can prevent other countries from upgrading their weapons capability.

What's more, the new administration believes it can do it better than the last, which was perceived by Republican hawks as lax on export controls. U.S. companies say that since Bush took office, and particularly since the terrorist attacks on the U.S. nearly one year ago made national security a driving force in decision-making in Washington, they have faced longer delays, more scrutiny, and more rigorous conditions placed on licences that are approved.

U.S. businesses, struggling to boost global sales in the midst of an economic downturn, complain privately that for every unexpected day spent waiting for an export licence, money is lost. Furthermore, say corporate representatives and former U.S. officials, restrictions don't keep technology out of Chinese hands: They just allow rivals to snare sales from American firms.

"It's difficult to quantify how much our companies are losing to foreign competition," says Jennifer Greeson of the Computer Coalition for Responsible Exports, which lobbies on behalf of the computer hardware industry for such heavyweights as IBM, Hewlett-Packard and Sun Microsystems. "You're not just selling a box, but a system, a service, building client relations and gaining a reputation. If a Chinese company has to wait six months to get a U.S. licence, the company may decide to deal with a German company or a Japanese company instead."

U.S. companies fear they will lose market share to competitors in what is already the world's largest mobile phone market, the third-biggest personal computer market and what will become the second-largest semiconductor market by 2010.

For SMIC, by the time the U.S. interagency committee that reviews export licences unanimously approved its request, the company had cancelled one of two orders from Applied Materials and replaced it with a similar machine from a Swedish firm. SMIC senior adviser Chris Chang says that in the rush to get the Shanghai semiconductor fab up and running, "we just couldn't take those kind of delays. We had a schedule." Other American orders are lost even before they're made, as Chinese companies, anticipating delays, turn elsewhere.

This is certainly not music to the ears of the Bush administration, which is perceived as pro-business. Says a senior Commerce Department official, "We at Commerce are sensitive to the need for U.S. companies to have a level playing field internationally."

No one in the Bush administration has declared that the U.S. government has tightened its licensing procedures for exports to China over the past 19 months. "We have no standing policy that we should pay more attention to China," says the Commerce official. Licences to China have for years taken longer than for exports to other places, simply because "China often has more complex issues," he says.

Another U.S. official suggests that the conflict is cyclical; that when the security environment ramps up scrutiny of exports to China, corporate lobbying will eventually force a climb-down. A similar row escalated in 1999 after a congressional committee issued a hard-hitting report that China was stealing military technology from the U.S. "It's all about the atmosphere right now in Washington," says the official.

In this climate, "we're seeing longer unpredictable delays and more conditions put on licences" that are approved, says James Lewis, a technology policy analyst who served as an arms control official in the previous Bush and Clinton administrations. "The problem is the uncertainty. If you can't tell a customer when you can deliver, he will go somewhere else. Everyone is feeling the chill."

Some companies exporting to China say the Bush administration is rejecting more of their export licences, while others believe their approval rate is about the same as under Clinton. All agree that license approvals now take longer and

that officials ask more questions and often attach more rigorous conditions to licences that are approved.

"Some licences say certain things have to be reported after the fact or that certain people can't have access to the technology," says a computer executive. In some cases, Washington has insisted that the company post an American representative to the project site or conduct quarterly inspections along with written reports on how the technology is being used.

"Licences have gotten tighter with the new administration," says an executive of a U.S. telecoms giant who, like most of the representatives of the 18 U.S. companies and industry associations interviewed for this story, asked not to be identified. "The operating committee is raising questions about commercial products that have long been sold and transferred into China. The nature of these questions indicates that they are throwing up every obstacle they can at us." Spokespersons at the departments of State and Defence have not responded to questions for this article.

U.S. company representatives and government officials say of the three agencies involved in approving licences, Defence raises the most questions. The Pentagon's Lisa Bronson, deputy undersecretary of defence for technology security policy, spoke earlier this year about tension in policy-making between concern about China as "a problematic proliferator" of weapons, and interest in the country as "the largest potential future market."

"The challenge for China is striking the balance between the desire to successfully compete in a vast untapped market and the need to protect national security," Bronson told a January hearing of the congressionally appointed U.S.-China Security Review Commission. "Striking the right balance with respect to China is especially difficult, and questions of China's intentions, capabilities and conduct weigh heavily."

As recently as July, the U.S. sanctioned eight Chinese companies and a Chinese citizen for the transfer of goods and technology that the U.S. says contributed to the efforts of Iran and Iraq to acquire chemical weapons and advanced conventional weapons. The sanctions did not apply to the Chinese government.

Many corporate executives interviewed for this article believe that licences are being blocked by officials broadly opposed to engagement with China.

U.S. businessmen also complain that government regulations don't keep up with the rapid pace of technological innovation, effectively tightening licensing requirements. "This administration is very sensitive to this," says the Commerce Department official, noting that early this year the U.S. began to allow much faster computers than before to be exported without a licence.

What's more, according to an April report by the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of the U.S. Congress, the U.S. is alone among its allies in considering China's acquisition of semiconductor-manufacturing equipment "a potential threat to regional or international stability."

The U.S. expects at least 32 other countries to agree because they are members of the Wassenaar Arrangement, a grouping established in 1996 to control the dissemination of sensitive technology. Members have indeed agreed to control exports of a long list of sensitive technology and to inform the other members about any sales. But the grouping and its regulations aren't formally binding, and each country decides on its own what it will sell to whom.

KEEP THEM WAITING

Last year, the Department of Commerce received 1,294 applications for hi-tech exports to China, of which 72% were approved, 3% were denied and 25% were returned to the applicant without action. Compared to 2000, the number of approvals fell 2%, while the number of denials dropped 1% and those returned without action rose 3%. But the average licence took 77 days to process in 2001, or 14 days longer than during 2000.

Corporate officials say the actual number of licence denials is quite low because they sound out licensing offices about a licence's chances of approval before actually submitting an application. They also say the average time for an approval is actually three months to one year, with many hi-tech licences taking closer to one year. The Commerce Department shows a quicker turnaround time because it stops the clock when it returns an application to a company for additional information, company officials say.

In contrast, the Japanese government approves a hi-tech export licence to China in two to three weeks, with a maximum of one month. Germany's maximum is 30 days. Both countries have agreed to control exports of dual-use technologies to China under the Wassenaar Arrangement.

U.S. corporations insist that the tight American licensing regulations aren't effective in keeping the latest technology out of Chinese hands, because they can still buy the equipment from other countries. "Thirty or forty years ago when most technology was developed in the U.S., unilateral controls may have been effective," says a senior official of a telecoms firm that exports to China, "But that's no longer the case." The General Accounting Office says that despite U.S. export controls, Chinese semiconductor-manufacturing technology is now only two years or less behind that of the United States.

In fact, many analysts question whether the export controls actually work. Lewis, the former official in the State Department's military affairs department, told the U.S.-China Security Review Commission in January that export controls are "irrelevant to Chinese military modernization," adding that "efforts to restrict hi-tech trade are more likely to damage than improve U.S. national security." Because China can get the technology from other countries, Lewis said, the U.S. loses more than corporate sales: It also gives up access and the intelligence-gathering opportunity that comes with it.

And once the technology gets to China, according to the General Accounting Office, the U.S. does little to monitor its use. "We found that the U.S. officials in China tasked with this job have not conducted any checks on semiconductor manufacturing equipment in the last five years," the GAO report says.

Experienced companies, meanwhile, learn to adapt. Today, Chang of SMIC says he hasn't had to cancel any other orders from U.S. companies because his firm is now better able to gauge how long it will take to process an application. "We do our planning right," Chang says.

Despite their frustrations, U.S. companies have been reluctant to take their complaints public. Their reasons are twofold: first, they don't want to worsen their working relations with government officials. "We may not like the process, but we have to be careful how vociferously we complain because we have to keep working with these people," says an official with a hi-tech trade association.

The second reason that business isn't protesting loudly is anxiety about being condemned for putting profit above national security. "When the Defence Department comes to the table with security concerns, it's hard for others to fight back," another trade association representative says. "No one wants to be the person who sells something to China and then becomes responsible for [military] proliferation."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
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To: faulkner
Already spamming I see.
21 posted on 08/23/2002 7:05:25 AM PDT by tallhappy
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To: faulkner; tallhappy
Faulkner, why do you not address my other points? I noticed that you seem to focus solely on the economic dimension. Indeed, we must always consider it. However, the businessman who focuses solely on the economic dimension whilst ignoring the geopolitical dimension, while perhaps winning the gamble in the short term, is likely to experience untimely turn overs in the long term. We have seen it time and time again particularly during the 20th century. The most extreme examples were the businessmen dealing with Germany during the 1930s. Some of them not only lost big due to WWII, in some cases they were actually thrown in the slammer for treason.

That's the problem with most US businessmen these days (my / your peers). Most of them neither want to consider nor talk about the geopolitical dimension. They have become too $&@*$@ arrogant and confident in the West and in the particular form of capitalism that has come into vogue since the late 1980s (there are many forms after all, you know this to be true...). Indeed, it looked to many like this form defeated the East, but why then, is the East now ascendent? Perhaps the Sun Tzu way of looking at things? In point of fact, the "winning of the Cold War" was not nearly so clean a win as many think. Much of what happened 1988 - 1993 was very ambiguous and without a clear settlement or winner. Yet, many Westerners started to beat upon their chests and gloat - a bit too early I think.

Viewing what appears to be crystalizing as a very new world situation with the new century, any objective analyst would have to, at this point, admit that the sort of ubiquitous span of Western control via multinational corporations and Western based financial networks might have been just a bit oversold. Already we can see that the theories of Francis Fukuyama and Thomas L. Friedman have serious gaps and flaws. Once again, I suspect, we shall have to confront both geopolitical and economic conditions that are less than ideal for the free nations of the world. War? Perhaps. Pain? You bet. In any case, those few business people who bring themselves to consider other dimensions besides the economic one, and without wishful thinking, will be the overall winners as we proceed through the first real wave of serious global chaos since the 1940s.

22 posted on 08/23/2002 7:49:49 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD
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To: faulkner; AmericanInTokyo
There was never very much outsourcing to Japan. Japan has always had higher labor rates and overhead than even the US (at least it has since the 1960s). That said, wise US corporations have utilized the technologies of Japan especially via componentry (including advanced materials technology and PCB fabs).

While on the subject of Japan, there are still a far greater percentage of vertically integrated firms there versus the outsourced and PRC mongering US. And that will be a good thing for them when the #&$#* hits the fan.

23 posted on 08/23/2002 7:54:11 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD
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To: faulkner
You label consideration of the geopolitical dimension versus the economic dimension as "Communist." This is very foolish thinking. Yes, indeed, Communists always prided them selves with their geopolitical acumen. So too did we up until we convinced ourselves that "we won the Cold War." Now what?
24 posted on 08/23/2002 7:57:02 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD
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To: faulkner
In the long run, we will be glad that we have economic contacts with these countries. Especially during the next great global crisis, be it war or others.
25 posted on 08/23/2002 7:58:44 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD
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To: faulkner; swarthyguy
Furthermore, you appear to be quite out of touch with the changes that have happened in India. Whereas in Europe, there are only faint rumblings of rightist backlash against Socialism, in India, the rightists are in power. It's the greatest thing to happen from a Western perspective in a really long time. In the meanwhile, our useful idiots continue to coddle Pakistan, who are niether rightists nor particularly fond of the West (recent lip service notwithstanding). Now would be a good time to embrace India, before things get too chaotic. Who knows, they may be OUR lend lease plan if things get really hairy!
26 posted on 08/23/2002 8:05:43 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD
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To: belmont_mark
ProChinese cheerleaders focus solely on the economic and have a habit of badmouthing countries with a greater level of freedom than the fiefdom run by the Butchers of Beijing.
Examples -- Brazil, Russia and their favorite, Inja.

They discount and belittle noneconomic values of freedom and liberty -- their purpose being to exalt China and China having little of those qualities, they resort to attacking countries that operate differently; that is, differently from China, a fascist, military dictatorship motivated by hate for the USA and very willing to throw in its lot with the murdering jihadis.

Free Tibet and Puck the Fascisti of Chine.
27 posted on 08/24/2002 9:19:32 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: maui_hawaii
That act will be to have open and transparent and PUBLIC disclosure of corporate operations in China

Given the current investigations into corporate practices and "Martha," it would not be inappropriate to extend corporate transparency to all business that has any interests in America at all.

28 posted on 08/24/2002 9:23:41 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale
Damn straight. Bump.

In the end though, if they are honest and transparent concerning China operations, they will uncover that a lot of business is done out of political motivations. Also, a lot of companies don't even want to be in China.

Of course there is the old addage that when goods don't cross borders, armies will.

I would hope for the China apologist crowd to be knocked off their high horses. To an extent thats happened.

After thats been done we can see the CCP for what it is and play hardball with them, and realize things aren't all peechy keen with them. China isn't better than anyone. They are not "the wave of the future"...

29 posted on 08/24/2002 9:35:05 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: RightWhale
The USCC is supposed to be researching the relationship a lot more than has been done in the past. They are doing a good job, so far, but they can't do everything at once hence there is a lot more work to be done.
30 posted on 08/24/2002 9:37:45 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: RightWhale
A lot of people argue "free market! free market! The market will take care of itself!"

Then they decry any and every type of government intervention. Any time the government does anything at all its called "socialism"...

If it were not for political government directive by Washington DC, we would not be doing business with China.

If government can open China, or anywhere else for that matter, then government can also advocate and enforce a balanced and secure trade policy.

31 posted on 08/24/2002 9:48:40 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: maui_hawaii
They are not "the wave of the future"...

It is rare for an ancient civilization to recover its past glories. Once they peak and burn out, they stay gone. Not that they don't try from time to time to bring it back and realize their destiny. Mussolini tried to bring back Rome. Saddam is trying to being back Babylon. Arabia is trying to bring back Damascus. We won't wish China luck in bringing back the Middle Kingdom; nobody wants it.

32 posted on 08/24/2002 9:49:34 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: maui_hawaii
bump
33 posted on 08/24/2002 9:49:34 PM PDT by Cacique
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To: RightWhale; Cacique
We won't wish China luck in bringing back the Middle Kingdom; nobody wants it.

WOW. BIG bump. Quote of the week.

The globalists are not really globalists. They are China-ists. If they want to be globalist as far as trade goes, thats fine, but that means being globalist, not a China hand.

34 posted on 08/24/2002 9:57:04 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: maui_hawaii
A lot of people argue "free market! free market! The market will take care of itself!"

From Hieronymous on the Commodity Futures Trading Act of 1974:

"the transactions and prices of commodities on such boards of trade are susceptible to speculation, manipulation, and control, and sudden or unreasonable fluctuations in the price thereof frequently result of such speculation, manipulation, or control, which are detrimental to the producer or the consumer and the persons handling commodities and the producer and byproducts thereof in interstate commerce"

Commodity futures markets look to be the free-est markets there are. And maybe it is so. But it is only extensive regulation by government that makes it so.

Extending this to free markets, only government regulation can guarantee a truely free market. Anarchy leads directly to disaster.

This can be extended to real estate and mining claims. Without laws there is chaos.

35 posted on 08/24/2002 10:02:32 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale
only government regulation can guarantee a truely free market

Exactly. Fair trade bump. Free is good when everyone has the same set of rules.

Football has rules, yet the competition decides who is really the best team.

No one else's government stays out of the international market. Thats why Bush getting trade powers was/is a good thing.

If our "trade" "partner" sells everything to the US, but at the same time throws every road block to us selling to them, thats not a square deal. The US should take a pound of flesh out of someones @ss when they start things of that nature.

China is on the top of the list.

36 posted on 08/24/2002 10:11:25 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: RightWhale
Better yet, with China there is very little hope to ever have anything nearing, or even resembling balanced trade.

With that being the case, I am of the opinion that we should trade with those countries who offer such opportunities.

37 posted on 08/24/2002 10:13:23 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: RightWhale
We should not screw up our economics in order to satisfy someone's politics. We should do business the way that is fair and balanced. After that, deal with the issues that come up. Don't throw out the first in order to avoid the second though.
38 posted on 08/24/2002 10:16:16 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: RightWhale
You know, now that I think about it, a lot of the time, the real problem here is that these countries are scared of us.

We are pretty darn good at business, marketing, selling, etc. In a fair competition, who is gonna come out on top?

Are they going to out innovate us? No. Are they going to out market us? No. Are they going to be more creative than us as a whole? No.

They know this. We are not hegemons. We are just better at what we do, and it challenges their strongholds.

39 posted on 08/24/2002 10:46:06 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: Madame de Winter
I like most of what libertarians say but their position on economics, dare I say, SUCKS!

Bump.

Check out this thread....

40 posted on 08/24/2002 11:13:03 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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