[tag]China[/tag]’s [tag]Hu Jintao[/tag] will receive a warm welcome at the Bush White House today, complete with a 21-gun salute the on the South lawn. [tag]Bush[/tag] and [tag]Hu[/tag] will then discuss international affairs, followed by the traditional news conference that always accompanies meetings between the U.S. presidents and foreign leaders.
Actually, never mind that last part.
Contrary to the standard protocol for visiting heads of state, there will be no news conference at which American and [tag]Chinese[/tag] [tag]journalists[/tag] can ask unscripted [tag]questions[/tag].
The [tag]White House[/tag]’s acquiescence to a Chinese demand that Mr. Hu not be subjected to possibly embarrassing queries about political prisoners, religious freedom or censorship of the Internet symbolizes a major element of Mr. Bush’s policy — his willingness to relegate China’s worsening performance on political freedom and human rights to a back burner.
I guess Hu isn’t exactly taking a “when in Rome” attitude.
The WaPo slams Bush’s decision to go along with this press-squelching policy and notes the pressing questions that the Chinese leader should face. But then again, I question whether Bush really has the standing and credibility to raise the point. After all, Hu avoids unscripted questions for fear of embarrassment and to avoid uncomfortable subjects. Doesn’t that sound a little familiar?