
ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:95071902.POL DATE:07/19/95 TITLE:STATE DEPARTMENT REPORT, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19 NEWS BRIEFING -- Spokesman Nicholas Burns discussed the following topics: NOT PROPER TO PLACE UNDUE BURDEN ON U.S.-CHINA MEETING The spokesman warned that it would not be proper "to place an undue burden" on the August 1 meeting between Secretary of State Christopher and Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen in Brunei. The meeting will provide a very good opportunity to address the most important issues in U.S.-China relations, and it is a very important meeting, he said. "It's important because of the troubles we've had, the misunderstandings that have characterized a number of issues in the relationship." While Christopher is looking forward to his meeting with Qian, "I don't think it's proper to place an undue burden on this meeting," Burns told reporters. "Somehow there's been some sense from Beijing that this meeting has to resolve all the major issues, that it's a decisive turning point. "It's certainly a very important meeting, but there should be important engagements -- meetings -- between the United States and China beyond August 1 and we fully expect that will happen," the spokesman said. On one of the controversies between Washington and Beijing, Burns said Chinese authorities denied a U.S. Embassy officer's request to meet with Harry Wu, a prominent Sino-American human rights expert who was detained last month after crossing into China from Kazakhstan. While on a previously scheduled July 16-19 trip to Wu Han in Western China, the embassy officer asked permission to visit Wu. After weighing the request for two days, Chinese officials denied it, Burns said. Although the embassy officer was not permitted to visit Wu, Chinese officials told her that they had been "authorized to receive from her and pass to Mr. Wu a power of attorney form and English-language reading material that he had requested and that she had brought for him," the spokesman said. "We're disappointed that our officer was not allowed to see him and we will seek...further access to him," Burns said. The U.S.-China consular convention requires that consular access to detainees be granted at least once every 30 days. A consular officer visited Wu earlier this month. "We're asking the Chinese government for greater flexibility," the spokesman said. U.S. SEEKING INFORMATION ABOUT CHINESE MISSILE TESTS The United States is seeking additional information about Chinese military missile tests before issuing any formal comment, the spokesman said. "We've certainly noted the recent announcement by the Chinese Peoples Liberation Army, the PLA, of surface-to-surface missile exercises approximately 150 kilometers north of Taiwan in the East China Sea," he said, adding the United States intends to seek more information from the Chinese government on the purpose of the tests and their duration. "Since we have very little information, really not more than you have from press reports," Burns told reporters, "I don't think it's wise or appropriate to deliver a comment, negative or positive, on these tests. I think it's really much wiser for us to speak to the Chinese government first. "We want to deal in a very professional, stable manner; we want to give them a chance to let us know what they are doing and to assure ourselves that we have sufficient information to form an opinion on them, and we certainly are not in that position." NNNN