By BRADLEY KLAPPER
Associated Press
ULAN
BATOR, Mongolia (AP) - Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton took
aim Monday at China's model of economic growth without democracy,
arguing that it undermines long-term prospects and urging other Asian
countries to expand markets and political freedom at the same time.
Without
mentioning Beijing by name, Clinton laid out a week of diplomatic
efforts she'll make across Asia to press governments into improving the
rule of law and free expression. Speaking at a woman's event in
Mongolia, China's northern neighbor, she said limiting freedom "kills
innovation and discourages entrepreneurship," and ultimately undermines
economic expansion.
"We
need to make the 21st century a time in which people across Asia don't
only become more wealthy," she said. "They must also become more free."
The
message reflects the battle of values between Washington and Beijing as
they jostle for strategic and economic advantages across the continent.
President Barack Obama has tried to pivot U.S. power to the region, in
part to reverse a slide toward China in recent years as its economy
boomed and America's struggled.
Clinton,
who'll also visit Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia over the next five days,
held up Mongolia as a positive example of advancement. Having visited
the country once before, as first lady in 1995, she returned to the
capital of Ulan Bator via a potholed road undergoing expansion, past
billboards advertising Western firms and skyscrapers sprouting up
amidst the Soviet-era architectural relics dominating the cityscape.
She
was formally welcomed below a giant statue of Genghis Khan across the
city's communist-era central plaza from a Louis Vuitton shop, further
underscoring the old and new Mongolia and reflecting its rapidly
expanding wealth.
"My trip
reflects a strategic priority of American foreign policy today,"
Clinton said. "After 10 years in which we focused a great deal of
attention on the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, the United States
is making substantially increased investments - diplomatic, economic,
strategic and otherwise - in this part of the world. It's what we call
our pivot toward Asia."
A
country more than twice the size of Texas with only 2.7 million people,
Mongolia is tapping into its huge deposits of gold, copper, coal and
other natural resources. But unlike its neighbors, undemocratic China
and increasingly authoritarian Russia, Mongolia's expansion in wealth
has been accompanied by greater freedom for its people.
Clinton
stressed this point, but her visit also comes as international mining
companies scramble for some of the country's mineral wealth. The prize
is a share of Tavan Tolgoi, a coal field with estimated reserves of 6.4
billion tons just 200 kilometers from China, the world's biggest
consumer of coal. Among the bidders for a strategic stake is Peabody
Energy, a St. Louis-based coal mining titan that has lobbied Washington
to support its bid.
Mongolia
has also contributed to U.S. strategic interests. It has sent troops to
Afghanistan and Iraq, and to U.N. peacekeeping operations in Africa,
part of a foreign policy designed to carve out protection for itself
against Chinese and Russian domination.
Clinton
said she remained inspired by Mongolia's transition to democracy in the
1990s and the six successful rounds of parliamentary elections it has
held. "Against long odds, surrounded by powerful neighbors who had
their own ideas for Mongolia's future, the Mongolian people came
together with great courage to transform a one-party communist
dictatorship into a pluralistic political system," she said.
She
contrasted Mongolia's path with that of other Asian governments who've
fought the trend toward greater liberty, while also holding up the
democratic achievements in Thailand, Taiwan and even Burma to dispel
the notion that democracy is antithetical to Asian values. She rejected
suggestions that democracy upsets stability or is a privilege for the
wealthy.
"This is the
right time to talk about democracy in Asia, as many countries in this
region grapple with the question of which model of governance best
suits their society and circumstances," she said. "The path they choose
will shape the lives of billions of people and the future of this
region."
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