In yet another step on the road toward World War Three, NATO "mistakenly" bombed the
Chinese embassy in Yugoslavia killing three
people and injuring twenty. This action has released a fierce, violent reaction in China and has led to an official halting of diplomatic relations between it and the U.S. and has greatly increased
the odds of a direct military conflict in the coming years.
As described in Origins of the Third World War, China, in alliance with Russia, will ultimately face an historic confrontation with the U.S. in a global realignment designed to balance or eliminate the military threat it holds.
Aided by propaganda the Chinese media issues, its citizens are told the attack was deliberate and that the role of the U.S. in the Kosovo Conflict is to increase its imperial power. To them this is a threat.
China has by far the largest manned military and navy in the world and is set to become the new power-house for the twenty-first century. It has nuclear missles and has the secrets to build more thanks to the recent spying episode.
A harsh editorial in the communist party newspaper the People's Daily which accused NATO of being the
"archcriminal of humanitarian disasters."
"This is a rare barbaric crime in the history of international relations. The inhuman atrocity of trampling on the internationallaw has incited extreme indignation in the Chinese people and strong condemnation from the international community," said the newspaper in a commentary.
The commentary, entitled "Archcriminal of Humanitarian Disasters" said the "bloody facts have stripped the US-led NATO of its mask as a humanitarian fighter and thoroughly exposed its true nature of ravaging humanity with force...Facts have shown that the archcriminal that produces the humanitarian disasters is no one else but the US-led NATO," it added.
The result by students an citizens in China says it all:
Sunday May 9 3:58 PM ET
Chinese Attack U.S. Embassy, Curse NATO
Chinese Attack U.S. Embassy, Curse NATO
By Benjamin Kang Lim
BEIJING (Reuters) - Screaming ``Kill Americans'' and cursing
President Clinton, Chinese students hurled rocks and bottles at
the U.S. embassy Sunday after NATO missiles killed four people
in China's diplomatic mission in Belgrade.
The British Embassy in Beijing was also pelted with concrete
rubble and paint. Tens of thousands of demonstrators took to the
streets of at least a dozen other Chinese cities.
But after whipping up the popular fury by declaring the NATO
strike a deliberate act of war, Chinese authorities pulled back
from the brink, issuing a statement intended to limit the
violence and soothe jittery foreigners.
Vice President Hu Jintao said in a special television
broadcast that while he supported the ``keen patriotism'' of
students, demonstrations should not go too far. He insisted that
foreigners, including diplomats and businessmen, were safe.
``We must guard against extreme behavior and be vigilant
against people taking advantage of the opportunity to disrupt
normal social order,'' Hu said.
NATO has said the embassy bombing, occurring almost seven
weeks into an air war against Yugoslavia's military, was a
tragic mistake and the United States has apologized to China.
Hu also said China's economic reform and market opening
policies would not change, sending out the message that calm
reason would prevail over raw emotion.
U.S. Ambassador James Sasser was trapped in his embassy,
guarded by U.S. Marines, as enraged students tried to storm the
compound.
In a telephone interview with the CBS program ``Face the
Nation,'' Sasser called the situation ugly, saying rock-throwing
demonstrators had broken nearly every window in the embassy's
chancery and his personal residence. He said his wife and son
had been evacuated to a safer location elsewhere in Beijing.
``No question that we're hostages here,'' Sasser told CBS,
the din of the demonstration audible in the background.
Police saturated the embassy district, but made no attempt
to stop the violence. Instead, they sought to keep the
demonstrators moving in orderly batches.
At one point several students broke into the compound and
tried to tear down the American flag from its pole.
``Get out, American pigs!'' the crowds roared.
Hours after Hu's speech, most demonstrators had melted away,
leaving a hard core chanting at the embassy's main gates.
Hu's comments highlighted the dilemma facing Chinese
leaders, who must be seen to lead public expressions of outrage
while trying to preserve social stability at a politically
charged moment.
Authorities are bracing for trouble next month on the 10th
anniversary of the 1989 army crackdown on pro-democracy student
protests.
Several Western reporters were punched and kicked Sunday and
the U.S. Embassy advised American nationals to stay off the
streets. The International School of Beijing and other
expatriate schools in the capital have cancelled classes Monday
and Tuesday.
German sources said demonstrators broke into the German
consulate in the southern city of Guangzhou Sunday, smashing
through one security door but failing to break through a second.
No diplomats were present at the time, the sources said.
In the central industrial city of Nanjing, students staged a
sit-down protest outside a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant and
plastered posters on windows saying ``Strike The U.S. Economy.''
A foreign student was beaten up, witnesses said.
Anti-NATO protests erupted from Shanghai on the eastern
seaboard to Lanzhou in the far west.
Trade unions joined the protests in the southern city of
Guangzhou, where several thousand factory workers marched in
rain past the U.S. consulate chanting ``Stop American mad dogs
from biting.''
The People's Daily newspaper contended that NATO had
purposely ``spilled Chinese blood.'' Xinhua news agency quoted a
prominent Chinese scientist saying the attack was ``elaborately
planned and is a shame of high-technology.''
Xinhua said a Chinese team led by a Foreign Ministry
official left for Belgrade Sunday to investigate the bombing.
In Beijing, students wrapped rocks in newspaper which they
set on fire before hurling the projectiles into the U.S. embassy
compound. Some demonstrators held aloft blazing poles to try to
ignite the Stars and Stripes on its flagpole.
A crudely made fire bomb was hurled into the embassy
compound but caused little damage.
The embassy expressed ``profound sorrow'' over the bombing
and offered ``deepest condolences to the families of the
innocent victims of that deplorable accident.''
``We must not let this mistake impede further progress in
developing stronger U.S.-China relations that are so
fundamentally in the interest of both our countries,'' the
embassy said in a statement.
Saturday night, protesters swarmed over the walls of the
U.S. diplomatic compound in Chengdu, capital of the southwestern
province of Sichuan, and broke through the front door of the
main consulate building before police chased them out.
The consul-general's house was seriously damaged by fire.