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Bush To Speak Out Against China Policies On Day He Arrives For Olympics

BEN FELLER | August 6, 2008 10:53 PM EST | AP

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President Bush arrives for a joint news statement with Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2008, at the Government House in Bangkok, Thailand. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

BANGKOK, Thailand — With all eyes on Beijing, President Bush bluntly told China that America is strongly opposed to the way the communist government represses its people, a rebuke delivered from the heart of Asia on the cusp of the Olympic Games.

In perhaps his last major address in Asia, Bush said that America speaks out for a free press, free assembly and labor rights not to antagonize China's leaders, but because it's the only path the potent U.S. rival can take to reach its full potential.

"America stands in firm opposition to China's detention of political dissidents and human rights advocates and religious activists," Bush said.

"We press for openness and justice not to impose our beliefs, but to allow the Chinese people to express theirs."

Along with his chiding, Bush offered praise for China's market reforms and hope that it will embrace freedom, reflecting the delicate balance that the president seeks to strike with the potent U.S. rival.

"Change in China will arrive on its own terms and in keeping with its own history and its own traditions. Yet change will arrive," he said.

Bush's brought his message to Thailand, a turbulent democracy. The marquee speech of his three-country trip hailed deepening ties between the U.S. and Asia. He pledged that whoever follows him in the White House will inherit an alliance that is now stronger than ever.

The president planned to quickly pivot from his speech to a full day of outreach toward the people of Myanmar, also known as Burma, who live under military rule across the border.

Yet heading eagerly on Thursday to the Beijing Olympics himself as a sports fan, Bush faced pressures all around: a desire not to embarrass China in its moment of glory, a call for strong words by those dismayed by China's repression, and a determination to remind the world that he has been pushing China to allow greater freedom during his presidency.

But his message will surely be noted in China, which has already knocked Bush for intruding in its affairs by hosting Chinese dissidents at the White House ahead of the games.

"The leadership in Beijing will almost certainly find his comments irritating or objectionable," said Sophie Richardson, the Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch. "But they will clearly understand that the United States will not impose any real consequences if they do not make progress on human rights."

Seeking an event scrubbed free of protest, China has rounded up opponents and slapped restrictions on journalists, betraying promises made when China landed the hosting rights.

Bush says he built a relationship with China's leaders that has built up honesty and candor and allowed him to have more influence. He cited examples of significant alliance over Taiwan, North Korea's nuclear program and shared economic concerns. He has also been adamant that the Olympics is not a time to pursue the U.S. political agenda.

Given his setting, Bush devoted a surprisingly small portion of his speech to Myanmar.

One of the world's poorest countries, Myanmar has been under military rule since 1962, when the latest junta came to power after brutally crushing a pro-democracy uprising in 1988. Mass street demonstrations, led by Buddhist monks, were again put down last September.

"Together, we seek an end to tyranny in Burma," Bush said. "The noble cause has many devoted champions, and I happen to be married to one of them."

First lady Laura Bush is an outspoken advocate for Myanmar, drawing attention to a southeast Asian nation unfamiliar to many Americans. On Thursday in Thailand she will visit a border refugee camp in Mae La, home to thousands of people who fled Myanmar's violence.

After his speech, Bush will visit Mercy Centre, which is based in Bangkok's largest slum and provides help to children living with HIV or AIDS.

Bush will also get an update on the recovery from the cyclone that devastated Myanmar's heartland and killed more than 80,000 people in May; have lunch with Burma activists; and do an interview with local radio journalists in hopes of influencing events across the border.

Bush heralds Thailand's democracy as alive and well, but it is deeply embattled.

Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej's 6-month-old coalition government came to power in elections, but only after a bloodless coup against predecessor Thaksin Shinawatra.

Samak faces daily demonstrations demanding his resignation. He is accused of blocking corruption charges against Thaksin and trying to amend the constitution to cling onto power.

Though Samak regards himself as a friend of Myanmar's generals, Bush heaped praise on his Thai hosts when he arrived, calling them close allies in the war on terror.

About 25 people around the convention center where Bush spoke welcomed Bush. But a Muslim group shouted "Bush, get out. God is great" as the presidential motorcade passed. The protesters handed out leaflets saying "George Bush is a war criminal."

"We are her to protest Bush's policy on the so-called war on terror in Iraq and Afghanistan. People are dying there every day," said Jiraoj Mahmud Kuo, a 28-year-old protester.

BANGKOK, Thailand — With all eyes on Beijing, President Bush bluntly told China that America is strongly opposed to the way the communist government represses its people, a rebuke delivered from...
BANGKOK, Thailand — With all eyes on Beijing, President Bush bluntly told China that America is strongly opposed to the way the communist government represses its people, a rebuke delivered from...
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06:10 AM on 08/08/2008
There is a video of Bush at a Thai school running on CNN now under the title "Bush visits Thai school"

http://edition.cnn.com/video/

Near the end of the video Bush ruffles a young boys hair. This seems fine until you realise that in Thai culture it is very much frowned upon to touch another persons head. To quote

"In Thailand, the head is sacred. Thais believe that a person's soul abides in the crown of the hair on top of the head. To bump, hit, rub, or touch the head is to offend the soul, perhaps causing it to run away from home. Many people feel that if their head is touched, they must undergo a ceremony to coax the soul back to the crown, or they will become severely ill."

from http://thaistudies.payap.ac.th/online_part3.html

I guess just another example of a Bush mistake. Doesn't he have advisers? Or does he just not listen?
12:09 PM on 08/07/2008
POT and KETTLE?
10:12 PM on 08/06/2008
This means nothing, Bush is still going to Peking anyway. More symbolism with no substance.
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09:08 PM on 08/06/2008
On what basis does George Bush criticize China on human rights?

Are the Chinese not waterboarding correctly?
08:51 PM on 08/06/2008
Hu Jin Tao and Wen Jiabao must be rolling in the floor with laughter !
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MissingAmerica
08:24 PM on 08/06/2008
Wouldn't that be a hoot if they revoked his Visa, too? It would just show that nobody wants Bush!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Voodude
08:17 PM on 08/06/2008
Wouldn't it be hilarious if China deported Bush?
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12:09 PM on 08/07/2008
Only if it's to the Hague.
06:32 PM on 08/06/2008
Meggie See Profile I'm a Fan of Meggie

yeah, mctwit did manage to make her look smarter than he is. but I think she's already too busy to add work in the white house. and only repubs elect movie stars to national office. everyone else knows that while they are entitled to their opinion they are movie actors and not real life action figures.

Paris IS smarter than that wrinkly old white haired dude! Did he get a good 'ol butt kicking yesterday. That was hilarious!
06:22 PM on 08/06/2008
The biggest irony is that everyone here is concerned about China's human rights while over 80% of Chinese people are happy with their own government and the direction China is taking.

With all the liberty and freedom we have here in the US, why is everyone bitching and whining? Why is approval rating for both White House and Congress so low?

Of course the easy answer is that the 1.3 billion Chinese people are all brain-washed. How many of you have actually talked to ordinary Chinese people living here in the US to get THEIR view on China and the Chinese government? Of course there are dissidents and those that strongly support your view on China. Is it possible that the vast majority of Chinese people living here, who have been quiet and silent, they might actually have a diferent opinion? They might actually share the view of those 1.3 billion brain-washed mainland Chinese?

www.chinationreport.com for daily balanced news about China
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
11907281
07:52 PM on 08/06/2008
Seeing what they do to dissidents and political opponents might have something to do with that 80%. Plus, what other government could they compare it to ? None have been allowed the chance to prove themselves. Besides that, you are so right and the rest of the world is so wrong.

p.s - Is your website accessible from china?
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11:03 PM on 08/06/2008
I have to give the of Chinese people a bit more credit.
Unlike Faux Snooze fans, at least the majority of Chinese people realize they're being brainwashed.
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ohmercy
06:17 PM on 08/06/2008
He better watch out or they will revoke his VIsa.

Better yet, maybe they'll keep him.
06:34 PM on 08/06/2008
I think they still have a lot of space (dungeons) inside the great wall. They can accommodate him there.
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ohmercy
07:51 PM on 08/06/2008
you read my mind!
LOL
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ritenow
Don't confuse facts with the truth
05:10 PM on 08/06/2008
Give me a break!
04:16 PM on 08/06/2008
What a Bussy - can't tell them to their faces!
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03:30 PM on 08/06/2008
"My fellow Americans- I am p!ssed at the Chinese. I ordered the Peking Duck and it didn't peek at me. Heh. It didn't even have eyeballs- just two holes where they used to be. I'm not a hundred percent sure- but I think it was dead, too. Heh. Heh. " - GWB
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Moshe
Shalom to all
03:12 PM on 08/06/2008
Maybe Bush could condemn China for the brutal invasion and occupation of another nation, for torture, for corruption, for not respecting human rights and civil liberties, for spying on their own people . . .

Never mind.
03:00 PM on 08/06/2008
How about Hu Jintau talks about Gitmo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SCG2
03:28 PM on 08/06/2008
It would be about as productive.