你如何解释美国使馆的秘密外交电传说天安门广场没有发生屠杀?

回答: 侯德健说的是真话吗?Londonfarmer2013-06-04 04:53:46

美国使馆当年发给美国务院的秘密电传两年前被维基解密嚗光, 称64清场时未发生大规模流血事件, 与侯德健所说符合. 我同宿舍的大学同学是最后从广场撤退的, 也是同样讲的. 我看是你在造谣吧! 当年报道天安门广场屠杀的BBC记者James Miles也承认他"传达了错误的印象", "There was no Tiananmen Square massacre, but there was a Beijing massacre". 不管你出于任何目的, 请尊重事实, 尊重历史,  这也是对六四死难者的最起码的尊重!

自己看文章吧! www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/wikileaks/8555142/Wikileaks-no-bloodshed-inside-Tiananmen-Square-cables-claim.html. 看不懂英文用GOOGLE翻译. 这里是关键的一段
 

Inside the square itself, a Chilean diplomat was on hand to give his US counterparts an eyewitness account of the final hours of the pro-democracy movement.

"He watched the military enter the square and did not observe any mass firing of weapons into the crowds, although sporadic gunfire was heard. He said that most of the troops which entered the square were actually armed only with anti-riot gear – truncheons and wooden clubs; they were backed up by armed soldiers," a cable from July 1989 said.

The diplomat, who was positioned next to a Red Cross station inside Tiananmen Square, said a line of troops surrounded him and "panicked" medical staff into fleeing. However, he said that there was "no mass firing into the crowd of students at the monument".

According to internal Communist party files, released in 2001, 2,000 soldiers from the 38th army, together with 42 armoured vehicles, began slowly sweeping across the square from north to south at 4.30am on June 4. At the time, around 3,000 students were sitting around the Monument to the People's Heroes on the southern edge of the giant square, near Chairman Mao's mausoleum.

Leaders of the protest, including Liu Xiaobo, the winner of last year's Nobel Peace prize, urged the students to depart the square, and the Chilean diplomat relayed that "once agreement was reached for the students to withdraw, linking hands to form a column, the students left the square through the south east corner." The testimony contradicts the reports of several journalists who were in Beijing at the time, who described soldiers "charging" into unarmed civilians and suggests the death toll on the night may be far lower than the thousands previously thought.

In 2009, James Miles, who was the BBC correspondent in Beijing at the time, admitted that he had "conveyed the wrong impression" and that "there was no massacre on Tiananmen Square. Protesters who were still in the square when the army reached it were allowed to leave after negotiations with martial law troops [ ...] There was no Tiananmen Square massacre, but there was a Beijing massacre".
 

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