Bush-Hu meetings polite but tense
China leader is willing to move on economic reform
President Bush jokingly makes a face as he tries to open a locked door while leaving a press conference in Beijing Sunday. He made better progress on economic issues.
Charles Dharapak, Associated Press
BEIJING In a day of polite but tense encounters, President Hu Jintao of China told President Bush on Sunday that he was willing to move more quickly to ease economic differences with the United States, but he gave no ground on increasing political freedoms.
Although American officials described the leaders as more comfortable with each other on Sunday than in any previous encounter, Hu made clear, by his words and his government's actions, that he had no intention of giving in to American pressure.
American officials said none of the human rights cases on a list President Bush gave to Hu in September had been resolved by the time Bush stepped into the Great Hall of the People on Sunday morning.
By afternoon, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, meeting with reporters, acknowledged that China appeared to have put dissidents under house arrest or detained them in advance of the trip. She said the issue was being raised "quite vociferously with the Chinese government."
Meeting with reporters in the evening, Bush said his talks had amounted to a "good, frank discussion," but he seemed unsatisfied. He chose his words about Hu carefully and repeated that the relationship with China was "complex," though later he added that it is "good, vibrant, strong."
"China is a trading partner, and we expect the trade with China to be fair," he said. "We expect our people to be treated fairly here in this important country."
On economic issues that are of major concern to American businesses letting market forces set the value of the undervalued Chinese currency and protecting intellectual property from rampant piracy in China Bush made marginal progress. He secured a public statement from Hu that he would "unswervingly press ahead" to ease a $200 billion annual trade surplus that wildly outstrips anything Bush's father faced with Japan in the late 1980s.
But Hu set no schedule for further currency moves, which are politically unpopular in China because they would make Chinese goods less competitive abroad. An American participant in the meetings said it was clear that "no Chinese leader was going to act immediately under the pressure" of a request from a foreign leader.
Bush attended a service early Sunday morning at a state-sanctioned Protestant church near Tiananmen Square, saying afterward, "My hope is that the government of China will not fear Christians who gather to worship openly."
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