National News Republicans criticize lax’national security policies By William C. Mann The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration has displayed “lax attitudes toward national securi ty,” the Senate Intelligence Com mittee chairman said Sunday, cit ing reports Chinese stole U.S. technology to produce a better nu clear bomb. The committee already is inves tigating commercial technology transfers that Sen. Richard Shelby and other GOP leaders contend could help the Chinese upgrade their missile forces. The new allegations “will cer tainly” mean more hearings, said Shelby, who criticized the admin istration for “lax attitudes toward national security.” “We have been on top of this lax security for a number of years. We’ve been pushing, we've been prodding the administration to do more, to tighten up security,” Shel by said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott predicted Congress would be “very aggressive” in dealing with the administration. “I think Congress is going to have to toughen up in dealing with this administration, particularly when it comes to China and the vi olations that have occurred there,” he said on “Fox News Sunday.” The New York Times and Newsweek magazine reported that China had obtained from Energy Department nuclear laboratories knowledge of America’s top-secret W-88 miniaturized warhead. Reiterating the administration position, White House national se curity spokesman P.J. Crowley said Sunday in a telephone inter view that an interagency assess ment to determine “what damage, if any,” was done started in 1996 and that the appropriate commit tees of Congress have been kept “updated throughout.” “Meanwhile, once we knew the scope of the problem we have in stituted a series of very strong mea sures to improve security and counterintelligence at DOE labs,” Crowley said. Republicans contend the admin istration allows dangerous transac tions so as not to disturb always touchy relations with one of the largest U.S. trading partners. Lott, R-Miss., said the case is “just another example of where the administration apparently is more interested in engagement (with China) than they are what’s hap pening in that engagement.” “The administration continues to resist really getting into what caused the problem and solving the problem,” Lott said. “China is get ting to be more and more of a prob lem, both in their human rights con duct and the way we deal with it, but also a continuation of their ef forts to get technology improperly and then use it improperly.” Clinton travels to hurricane-battered Central America By Sandra Sobieraj The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Hamstrung by domes tic politics, President Clinton ventures emp ty-handed into hurricane-clobbered reaches of Central America this week. His message of solidarity with America’s neighbors is aimed as much at Congress as at the people rebuilding the region’s roads, homes and schools. Clinton embarks Monday — without his wife, sidelined by a recurring back problem — on what is intended to be a four-day good will tour of reconstruction projects in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala and Hon duras, those hardest hit by last fall’s Hurri cane Mitch. “Our moral responsibility as a neighborto this region coincides perfectly with our in terests as a nation,” said National Security Adviser Sandy Berger. But the president leaves at home nearly $1 billion in U.S. aid trapped on Capitol Hill by unrelated, partisan disputes over spending. Most likely, he will encounter the disap pointment of Central Americans who fault his trade policy as halfhearted. A U.S. promise not to deport illegal immi grants back to El Salvador and Guatemala during the disaster crisis was set to lapse Monday. But Foreign Minister Eduardo Stein Bar illas of Guatemala warned that the forced re turn of a large number of immigrants would severely crimp recovery efforts. “Our battered economies are not going to be able to sustain this influx of people back to the region,” he said. Clinton will address the Salvadoran legisla tive assembly Wednesday. He will stand with disaster victims in a schoolyard in Posoltega, Nicaragua, where mudslides wiped out entire villages, and lend support to U.S. troops pitch ing in on the reconstruction. At Guatemala City’s anthropology muse um, Clinton plans a roundtable talk on peace with citizens still smarting from a Guatemala truth commission report last week that blames most of the deaths and disappear ances during that nation’s 36-year civil war on the U.S.-backed army and the CIA. On Thursday, Clinton is to convene a summit with Central American presidents to make sure the post-Mitch crisis does not derail free-market economics and democrat ic systems. 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