SFGate: American CEO lobbies for routes to China

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Wednesday, June 16, 2004 (AP)
American CEO lobbies for routes to China



   (06-16) 15:44 PDT DALLAS (AP) --
   American Airlines' chief executive says he has asked Chinese government
officials to allow more routes between that nation and the United States.
   China is the key to American's plans to increase service to Asia, and the
airline is focusing first on adding flights between Chicago and Shanghai,
a key business center, Gerard Arpey said Wednesday.
   "I've spent a lot of time in Asia this year," he said. "The GDP numbers =
in
that region of the world are quite extraordinary and traffic is really
rebounding very aggressively."
   American's service to Asia has been "behind the curve," he added.
   American, the largest U.S. carrier, flies directly to Tokyo and serves
other cities, including Beijing and Hong Kong, with flights on other
carriers under code-sharing agreements.
   Under current rules, Northwest and United are the only U.S. passenger
carriers serving China.
   Arpey said the U.S. and Chinese governments appear willing to let two mo=
re
U.S. carriers fly directly to China, and Fort Worth-based American wants
to be one of those.
   The company asked its pilots in January for permission to approve more
flights to Asia, and the union has signaled willingness to change work
rules to allow the long flights -- some more than 16 hours.
   Arpey, who is CEO and chairman of both American and its parent, AMR Corp=
,
said the airline is making progress in a turnaround from near-bankruptcy
last year. The airline's biggest success has been at cutting costs, he
said.
   AMR shares rose 4 cents, to $11.90, in trading on the New York Stock
Exchange.

On the Net: www.amrcorp.com

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Copyright 2004 AP

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