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China's Conversion Is Cause for Caution


Article # : 10705 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 1 / 1986  2,883 Words
Author : Ray S. Cline
Ray S. Cline, former CIA deputy director for intelligence, is chairman of the United States Global Strategy Council.

       President Ronald Reagan is right about the Soviet Union. It is, in its political structure, an empire tightly controlling a large number of non-Russian peoples. Its dictatorial rulers are hostile and, when circumstances permit, aggressive toward the outside world. The Soviet communist Party's centralized totalitarian system is a cruel anachronism in modern society. Oppressing its own people, the Soviet Union sets itself up as the main strategic adversary of the United States.
       
        Soviet leaders clamor for the empty détente of the early 1970s, which enabled Moscow to build up intimidating military power and extend its influence into Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Ethiopia, Angola, Nicaragua, and Vietnam. Soviet rulers react to the facts of power, not rhetoric, and this is why Mikhail Gorbachev, present chief executive of the Soviet Communist Party and State, met with Reagan in Geneva in November 1985.
       
        The Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), and the technological threat it represents, brought Gorbachev to the negotiating table to try to get the United States to relax tensions, as it did in the 1970s under the détente illusion.
       
        Tragic Errors
       
        Unfortunately, in another strategically important part of the international forest, the president appears to be allowing himself to slip into tragic errors, contrary to his own personal beliefs, in his relations with the second giant communist state on the face of the globe, the People's Republic of China (PRC). The Reagan administration treats the government of a billion Chinese people, with immense potential for ... (1999 of 17568 Characters)
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