Friday, February 5, 2021

The BBC’s Horrifying Uyghur-Torture Story

 Comment by editor: this reminds us during WWII, the treatment of Jew by Nazi, which was also ignored by most countries and denied by the Nazi.

The BBC has published some of the most horrifying evidence yet of the Chinese Communist Party’s mass atrocities against the Uyghurs, detailing a disgusting campaign of systematic rape and torture.

An estimated 1 million Uyghurs — and other Turkic peoples in the Xinjiang region — are detained in the CCP’s concentration camps. The brave work of the victims of this modern gulag, as well as that of the reporters and researchers who have fought to bring their stories to light, has added granular detail to the world’s understanding of an ongoing crime against humanity. The BBC story is the latest emergency call for the world to speak the truth about what’s happening in Xinjiang, and do what it can to combat it.

The BBC story features the testimony of Tursunay Ziawudun, a Uyghur woman imprisoned for nine months in the camps. Weaving together the testimony of Ziawudun and other Uyghur detainees, interviews with teachers and police in Xinjiang, in addition to satellite and primary-source analysis corroborating their accounts, the BBC reporters show that the abuses go far beyond the regime’s aggressive program of political brainwashing.

The torture endured by these Uyghur women included rape and torture with electric batons, in addition to other unspeakable acts of sexual violence. At one point, a teacher forced to work in the camps recounts witnessing the gang rape of a 20- or 21-year-old girl perpetrated before an audience of 100 detainees; the authorities subsequently punished anyone with visibly distressed reaction. Such atrocities aren’t the work of individual sadists, but are deliberate and systematic, as dictated by China’s foul totalitarian regime and Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping.

At the end of its report, the BBC quotes Ziawudun, “They say people are released, but in my opinion everyone who leaves the camps is finished.” In her view, as the BBC puts it, that’s the point of the “surveillance, the internment, the indoctrination, the dehumanisation, the sterilization, the torture, the rape.” Ziawudun again: “Their goal is to destroy everyone. And everybody knows it.”

Indeed, everybody knows it, or should. The CCP’s campaign against the Uyghurs is not merely a disproportionate reaction to terrorist attacks and riots that took place in Xinjiang in the years leading up to the current “strike hard” campaign. The BBC report shows how rape is wielded in the camps as a weapon against the Uyghurs as a people. It’s also been used in Uyghur homes, where under a Party program, Han Chinese men are sent to live with and share the beds of women whose husbands have been detained. And in June, it was revealed that the Party is engaged in a systematic campaign to forcibly sterilize Uyghur women and abort their pregnancies.

This all fits into Beijing’s longstanding plan of settling the region with Han Chinese, and in this future, there is no place for the Uyghurs. The regime doesn’t just want to eliminate their culture; it seeks their physical annihilation.

Chinese officials have compared their treatment of the Uyghurs to spraying crop-killing chemicals, likening practicing Muslim Uyghurs to malignant tumors and Islam to a communicable disease.

The Chinese Communist Party is guilty of crimes against humanity and genocide, as the State Department found in January, and as Joe Biden said on the campaign trail and Antony Blinken affirmed during his confirmation hearing. The CCP’s brutality meets the internationally recognized legal definitions for these acts, including under the U.N.’s 1948 Genocide Convention. Debate over the meaning of these terms can be overly legalistic but being forthright about them might help galvanize more of an international response.

There’s been some progress on that front, mostly led by the United States, but few countries have even issued a sharp condemnation of the CCP’s campaign against the Uyghurs. The U.N. secretary general hasn’t. Washington stands alone in having enacted sanctions targeting the officials responsible. And despite recent governmental moves to crack down on Uyghur forced labor, too many multinational corporations remain ensnared in Xinjiang’s slave-labor-supported cotton industry.

For every story like Ziawudun’s, there are probably hundreds of thousands of others just as horrific. Absent a drastic course correction, we will learn many of them one day — while sharing in the collective shame of not having done more.

The Times Lavishes Praise on China’s Coronavirus Response and Calls It ‘Reporting’

 Isaac Schorr

The not-so-secret admirers of the Chinese Communist Party at the New York Times are at it again. For a long time, the Times’ opinion section has gawked at and fawned over the CCP and its ability to “get things done.” As far back as 2009, columnist Tom Friedman was arguing that “one-party autocracy” has “great advantages.” At least “when it is led by a reasonably enlightened group of people, as China is today.” Enlightened? Is that the word?

Sadly, Friedman’s admiration for the People’s Republic of China’s brand of authoritarianism has slowly bled into the news side as well, as evidenced by the publication of a new “reported” piece on China’s coronavirus response, titled “Power, Patriotism and 1.4 Billion People: How China Beat the Virus and Roared Back.”

The article begins by asserting that China “has mobilized its vast Communist Party apparatus to reach deep into the private sector and the broader population, in what the country’s leader, Xi Jinping, has called a ‘people’s war’ against the pandemic — and won.” Its four authors further celebrate the CCP by saying that its victory in this war — the Times appears to concur with the CCP’s self-assessment — has “emboldened Mr. Xi, who has offered China’s experience as a model for others to follow.” From the sound of it, so too is the Times.

That’s far from all the praise the authors lavish on Chairman Xi and his murderous regime. For example: “The government appeals to material interests, as well as to a sense of patriotism, duty and self-sacrifice,” they tell us. Moreover, the CCP provided a Chinese pharmaceutical firm with “everything it needed” to produce a vaccine: lab space and $780,000. For perspective, the U.S. government allocated $18 billion to Operation Warp Speed, which yielded safer and more effective inoculations.

The CCP “operates in part through fear,” they acknowledge, recounting how “when a villager near Shijiazhuang tried to escape quarantine to buy a pack of cigarettes, a zealous party chief ordered him tied to a tree.” But they follow that story with an unchallenged explanation from a Chinese journalist: “Many measures seemed over the top, but as far as they’re concerned it was necessary to go over the top, if you didn’t, it wouldn’t produce results.” Ah, of course.

Just as telling as what the Times does say is what it doesn’t.

You wouldn’t know it from reading the article, but in the Xinjiang region of China, the coronavirus has not slowed down Xi Jinping’s genocidal crusade against the PRC’s Uyghur Muslim minority. In fact, the state capacity of the Chinese government has only accelerated and accentuated their persecution. At present, 1 million Uyghurs are being held captive in concentration camps, and a new report from the BBC includes horrifying details about their treatment. Uyghur women inside and outside the camps are subject to CCP-sanctioned rape — often done in front of crowds as an intimidation tactic — as well as forced sterilizations and abortions. As National Review’s editorial on the matter put it:

This all fits into Beijing’s longstanding plan of settling the region with Han Chinese, and in this future, there is no place for the Uyghurs. The regime doesn’t just want to eliminate their culture; it seeks their physical annihilation.

The Times deems the CCP’s heavy-handed response to the pandemic “patriotic” and reflective of a dutiful Chinese ethic. Nothing could be further from the truth. In Xinjiang, coronavirus measures have included forcing Uyghurs to imbibe “traditional Chinese medicines” and subjecting them to other inhumane treatment. Consider the following story from the Associated Press last August:

When police arrested the middle-aged Uighur woman at the height of China’s coronavirus outbreak, she was crammed into a cell with dozens of other women in a detention center.

There, she said, she was forced to drink a medicine that made her feel weak and nauseous, guards watching as she gulped. She and the others also had to strip naked once a week and cover their faces as guards hosed them and their cells down with disinfectant “like firemen,” she said.

“It was scalding,” recounted the woman by phone from Xinjiang, declining to be named out of fear of retribution. “My hands were ruined, my skin was peeling.”

State power isn’t being wielded for patriotic purposes in China, it’s being used for the Party’s purposes. Some of those, such as curbing the pandemic, may have the intended outcomes. However, they have been implemented not because the CCP cares deeply about the best interests of the population, but because they provide stability, which the CCP values above all else. Patriotism is about devotion to one’s homeland, and by extension its inhabitants. There is no special bond between those at the head of the Chinese government and the Chinese people. The former is willing to intern, torture, and murder the latter to achieve its ends.

Failing to mention the CCP’s Xinjiang atrocities is bad enough. But also unmentioned in the Times piece is that the PRC used its state capacity — so venerated by the Times — to muzzle and jail doctors who dared to speak the truth about the virus, suppressing for weeks evidence of the human-to-human transmission of the virus and thus denying the rest of the world time to prepare. Remarkably, the Times’ reporters are also apparently unaware of the mountain of evidence suggesting that its case and death numbers have been doctored by the CCP. It’s easy to “win” when you control the scoreboard.

It’s a sign of moral confusion, or perhaps bankruptcy, for the New York Times to have published a puff piece — both clumsy and contextless — about a genocidal regime that unleashed a devastating pandemic on the rest of the world and call it “reporting.”

威权、爱国主义和14亿人:中国对新冠的“人民战争”

Comment by editor: let us read this article together with the next one "The Times Lavishes Praise on China’s Coronavirus Response and Calls It ‘Reporting’". Great example of freedom of speech.

命令是1月12日夜里下达的。几天前,环绕北京的河北省暴发了新的新冠病毒疫情。中国政府的应对方案既大胆又直截了当:必须建设一个预制房的完整小镇把人隔离起来,项目于次日一大早开工。

部分工作落在了建筑公司老板韦烨的身上,他将在征用来的农田上搭建安装1300个预制房。

韦烨说,合同、图纸、材料订单——所有事情“经过几个小时都给落实了”。他还说,他和手下为了赶工拼死拼活地工作。

“这个压力肯定是会有,”他说,但他也为能尽自己的一份力量感到“特别光荣”。


在新冠病毒肆虐全球的这一年里,中国已经做了许多其他国家不愿或不能做的事情。使用同等程度的强迫与劝说,中国调动起庞大的共产党机构,渗入到私营部门和广大人口之中,对大流行病展开了一场国家领导人习近平所说的“人民战争”,并取得了胜利。

中国现在正在从中收获长期的好处。当新冠病毒最早在中国中部城市武汉出现、中国领导层似乎处于1989年“六四”事件以来最紧张时刻的时候,这个结局几乎没人预见到。

这一成功已让中国在经济和外交上处于有利地位,反击美国和其他担忧其不可阻挡的崛起的国家。这一成功也让习近平更有信心,他将中国经验作为榜样提供给他国。

虽然当初武汉的官员们曾因担心政治后果而犹豫不决、行动迟缓,但现在只要有新感染的迹象出现,当局就会立即采取有时甚至是过头的行动。今年1月,河北当局马上动用了中国早已练就的策略,对数百万人进行病毒检测,将整个社区隔离起来——所有这些做法的目的,是让官方通报的感染病例——14亿人口中每天仅几十例——归零。

中国政府采用了多年来的惯用做法,在基础设施项目上投入大量资金,同时为支持企业发放贷款并减税,以避免出现与大流行病有关的裁员。尽管去年年初曾出现萎缩,但中国目前是恢复了稳定增长的唯一主要经济体。

在疫苗研发方面,政府为疫苗生产商建新厂提供土地、贷款和补贴,还提供了快速审批渠道。两种中国疫苗正在大规模生产中;更多的疫苗即将到来。尽管中国疫苗表现的效力低于西方竞争对手的疫苗,但已有24个国家签约购买,因为在政府的敦促下,中国公司承诺更快地供货。

新西兰和韩国等其他国家没有采取严厉措施,也已很好地遏制了病毒,在民主制度下,中国式的严厉措施政治上不可接受。但在中国领导人眼里,这些国家没有可比性。

北京在遏制大流行病的各个方面,包括医疗、外交和经济方面取得的成功,让其更加坚信其迅速调动人员和资源的威权主义能力,认为这让它具有美国等其他大国没有的决定性优势。这是一个强调不惜一切追求结果,并且需要公众默然接受的模式。

按照这种观点,中共不仅必须控制政府和国有企业,还必须控制私营企业和个人生活,将集体的好处置于个人利益之上。

“他们能够将这个一党专政国家的所有资源调动起来,”纽约福特汉姆大学(Fordham University)中国法律与政治学教授明克胜(Carl Minzner)说。“这当然既包括强制性工具——对上百万人的流动实行严格的强制性限制,也包括可能是中国独有的高效率官僚工具。”

通过这样做,中国共产党当局压制了言论、管束并清洗了异见观点,并且扼杀了任何个人自由或流动的概念——这种做法在任何民主社会都是不得人心且不能为人所接受的。

在中共领导层中,一种被证明是正确的感觉显而易见。在2020年的最后几天,中国的最高政治机构——由七名成员组成的中共中央政治局常务委员会——在北京召开了一个相当于年度政绩评估的会议,理论上,常委们能在会上对自己和同事进行批评。

他们非但未对任何不足之处有任何暗示——例如,中国在全球面临着日益增长的不信任,反而高度赞扬了中共的领导力。

“当今世界正经历百年未有之大变局,但时与势在我们一边,”习近平在1月的另一个会议上对官员说。

全党动员起来

最近几周,随着新感染病例不断出现,国务院发布了覆盖面很广的新通知。“反弹风险丝毫不能忽视,”通知说。

这些规定反映了中国政治体制的微观管理本质,在这个体制中,最高领导人拥有从中央政治决策机构操纵每条街道,甚至每座公寓楼的控制杆。

国务院要求各省市设立24小时指挥中心,主管人员将就本地的表现问责。国务院的通知要求,设立足够多的集中隔离点,不仅要在阳性病毒检测结果出来后的12小时内将人隔离起来,还要对与病毒检测呈阳性者有过密切接触过的数百人进行严格隔离。

人口在500万以下的城市,必须具备在两天内完成全员检测的能力。人口超过500万的城市,需要具备在三到五天内完成全员检测的能力。

这种动员的关键在于中共调动其庞大官员网络的能力,每个地区的每个部门和机构里都有中共官员。

政府可以很容易地将“志愿者”部署到新的热点地区,包括在今年1月的新疫情暴发后将4000多名医务人员派往河北。“身为共产党员,走在人民最前面,”以入党为夙愿的20岁大学生白岩说。

有1100万人口的石家庄是被封城的城市之一。石家庄郊外一个村子里的共产党员周小森说,派来的人能帮助管理违规者,也可以帮助有需要的人。“如果出去买点药和菜,我们代理,”他说。

政府既用实际利益,也用爱国主义、责任感和自我牺牲精神来号召人民。

帮助建造石家庄附近集中隔离点的国有承包商中铁十四局集团公开发出请战书,让员工宣誓为抗疫不遗余力。请战书上写道,“不计报酬,不讲条件,不打折扣,无论生死”,还有员工的签名和按的红色指印。

官员网络的运作部分也有赖于恐惧。由于新冠疫情管控不力,去年已有5000多名地方党政官员被免职。这个体制基本上不鼓励官员采取节制做法。

中国东北城市通化的居民最近抱怨,政府官员在没有为食品供应和其他需求做好充分准备的情况下突然封城。石家庄附近的一名村民试图偷偷跑出隔离点去买包香烟后,过激的村支书下令将他绑在树上。

“很多措施看起来是过头了,但是这些过头的措施对他们来说是必要的,”一家中国报纸的前编辑、作家陈敏说。武汉封城期间,他一直在武汉。“不过头就没有效果。”

对政府在危机早期的不作为和掩盖做法的愤怒已经消退,这是这个制度压制坏消息和批评的后果。中国的成功已在很大程度上将那些可能对中共从中央控制一切提出异议的声音淹没了。通过警告,甚至监禁那些挑战其胜利故事版本的活动人士,当局也重塑了公共叙事。

刚开始的时候,新冠病毒大流行似乎暴露了“习近平式治理的根本性病态”,华盛顿战略与国际研究中心(Center for Strategic and International Studies)研究员裘德·布兰切特(Jude Blanchette)说。

“事实上,在经过一段时间后回过头来看,我们看到这个系统在很大程度上以习近平所希望的方式发挥了作用,”他补充说。

河北实施的这些措施迅速见效。2月初,该省记录了一个月以来首次没有出现新冠病毒感染者的一天。

 经济复苏

在许多国家,关于如何在保护公众健康和保持经济运行之间取得平衡存在着激烈争论。在中国几乎没有。两件事它都做到了。

即使是去年的武汉,在76天里,当局几乎将所有地方都封闭了,但他们允许主要工业继续运营,包括钢铁厂和半导体工厂。他们在小规模疫情发生时也采用了这一策略,以大大小小的方式,不遗余力地帮助企业。

中国的经验强调了许多专家提出过、但很少有国家遵循的建议:疫情越快得到控制,经济就能越快复苏。

虽然危机初期的经济阵痛很严重,但大多数企业就算关闭也只关闭了几周。几乎没有合同被取消。几乎没有工人被解雇,部分原因是政府极力阻止企业这样做,并通过贷款和减税提供帮助。

“我们统筹推进疫情防控和经济社会发展工作,抓紧恢复生产生活秩序,”习近平在去年说。

浙江华远汽车零部件有限公司仅仅停产了17天。在地方当局帮助下,该公司租用大巴车把春节期间分散在各地的工人接了回来——由于中国大部分地区一开始都处于封锁状态,返工不太容易。政府的通行证让他们的大巴车可以通过限制通行的检查站。

工人们只能在工厂和宿舍之间走动,经常接受体温检测。公司的大客户比亚迪开始生产口罩,并将货物运到华远。

很快,公司接到的订单就超过了它的处理能力。

安徽省的一家救护车制造商迅速增加了生产,购买了华远生产的螺丝、螺栓和其他紧固件。后来,随着病毒的传播和海外供应商的停产,中国汽车制造商也开始需要这些产品。

“我们对客户进行了筛选优化。附加值不是特别高的业务,我就不要了,”该公司副总经理陈锡颖说。“一些回款也好,业务发展前景不是特别好的客户,我们就把它剔除了。”

和中国一样,华远迅速反弹。到4月,该公司已订购了近1000万美元的新设备,以启动第二条高度自动化的生产线。该公司计划在现有340名员工的基础上再增加47名技术人员。

疫情暴发前,跨国公司开始在中国之外寻找业务,一定程度上是受到特朗普政府与北京贸易战的刺激。病毒本身也加剧了人们对依赖中国供应链的担忧。

然而,在世界其他地区努力保持商业开放之际,疫情却加强了中国的主导地位。

联合国贸易与发展会议(United Nations Conference on Trade and Development)的数据显示,去年,中国出人意料地首次超过美国,成为外国直接投资的目的地。在全球范围内,投资暴跌42%,而中国的投资增长了4%。

“尽管疫情造成了人员伤亡和破坏,但从经济角度看,这对中国来说是因祸得福,”上海高等金融学院副院长朱宁表示。

外交工具

去年2月,当新冠病毒肆虐武汉时,中国最大的疫苗生产企业之一科兴生物技术公司没有能力开发一种能够阻止它的新疫苗。

公司缺乏一个高度安全的实验室来进行所需的高风险研究。它没有能够生产注射剂的工厂,也没有建厂的资金。

因此,该公司首席执行官尹卫东向政府寻求帮助。2月27日,他会见了中共中央政治局委员蔡奇和北京市市长、环境科学家陈吉宁。

在那之后,科兴拥有了它所需要的一切。

官员允许其研究人员进入全国最安全的实验室之一。他们提供了78万美元,并指派政府科学家协助。

他们还为北京一个地区的新工厂建设铺平了道路。市政府捐赠了这块土地。以北京市为主要股东的北京银行提供了一笔920万美元的低息贷款。

当科兴需要一种通常要18个月才能从国外进口的发酵罐时,政府命令另一家制造商全天24小时不停工作,把它们生产出来。

这是习近平在武汉封城两天后的政治局常委会议上所概述的那种政府全面动员的做法。他敦促中国“加快治疗药品和疫苗研发”,北京也投入了大量资源。

私营公司康希诺生物与中国人民解放军合作,不眠不休地工作,在3月前生产出第一批试验药剂。国有制药公司国药集团在三天半的时间里获得了建厂所需的政府资助。

科兴的尹卫东将该项目称为“克冠行动”,以配合国家抗击疫情的战时用语。“也就是只有在这样的综合条件保障下才能使一个车间投入运行,”他对官方报纸《新京报》表示。

在尹卫东2月27日的会议结束后不到三个月,科兴就研制出了一种可进行人体试验的疫苗,并建立了一家大型工厂。该公司每天生产40万支疫苗,希望今年能生产10亿支。

为本国制造疫苗的快速过程最终打开了另一种机遇。

随着新冠病毒在国内基本被扑灭,中国可以向海外销售更多的疫苗。这些疫苗“将作为全球公共产品”,习近平去年5月在世界卫生大会上承诺。

尽管官员们对这种说法感到愤怒,但“疫苗外交”已成为一种工具,用来平息部分对中国失误的愤怒,在中国受到来自美国和其他国家的压力之际,帮助支撑其全球地位。

“这就是中国可以发挥作用的地方,看上去像一个真正的救世主,像一个患难时期的朋友,”前比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会(Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation)中国负责人叶雷(Ray Yip)说。

中国国内的效率并没有轻松转化为在国外的胜利。中国疫苗的有效性较低。巴西和土耳其的官员已经抱怨过延误。尽管如此,许多迄今已同中国签约的国家承认,他们无法为美国人或欧洲人制造的疫苗等待数月。

1月16日,塞尔维亚成为第一个接受中国疫苗的欧洲国家——大约100万剂,疫苗来自国药控股。该国总统亚历山大·武契奇(Aleksandr Vučić)在寒风中与中国大使站在一起,欢迎第一批飞机运送的物资。

他告诉记者,他“不怕炫耀”与中国的关系。

“我对此感到自豪,并将投入越来越多的时间和努力,来创造甚至改善我们与中国领导人和中国人民的良好关系。”

Thursday, February 4, 2021

Sacrifices required to avert cross-strait war: former U.S. official

 Washington, Feb. 3 (CNA) Taiwan must be ready to make sacrifices and bolster its military preparedness in order to prevent a possible war with China, a former U.S. security official said Wednesday.

Matt Pottinger, who served as deputy national security advisor under former President Donald Trump, urged the U.S. and other nations to take "substantive" actions to help Taiwan avert a potential conflict with China.

People in Taiwan must also "understand how significant and dangerous" the situation in the Taiwan Strait has become, as a result of Beijing's expansionist ambitions, Pottinger said during an international relations conference at Florida International University.

"The people of Taiwan should really rally around their leadership and understand that they are going to have to make sacrifices," Pottinger warned. "There are things that they're going to have to do to prepare for war in order to hopefully deter war."

Meanwhile, Republican Senator Jim Risch told the conference that China's crackdown on Hong Kong last year had made the question of Taiwan's future "all the more urgent and serious."

The military balance of power between China and Taiwan is shifting, which is eroding conventional deterrence and putting the U.S. military and its allies at risk, Risch said.

In addition to Taiwan's importance as a democracy, its geography is also key to the security of U.S. allies, and its technology is critical to global competition with China, he said.

On those grounds, Risch said, Taiwan is "one of the most strategic issues we face in this decade," and "must remain a key priority" for the U.S.

Another speaker at the conference, Hong Kong democracy activist Nathan Law (羅冠聰), suggested the U.S. send a message that it is not intimidated by China. This can be achieved though greater interaction by the U.S. with Taiwan and its leaders, he said.

At the same time, the U.S. must recognize the "concrete threat" of military conflict in the Taiwan Strait, said Law, who fled to the United Kingdom last year for fear of persecution under Hong Kong's new national security law.

Citing conversations with reporters in China, Law said Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) had promised to tackle the Taiwan issue, in a bid to have his term limits lifted.

If that is true, Xi would likely feel pressured to accomplish such a goal by force, given that it would be "impossible" to do so using infiltration, soft power or other peaceful means, Law said.

With the People’s Republic of China, Don’t Trust, Because You Can’t Verify

Therese Shaheen Thu, February 4, 2021, 3:30 AM 

 In the Time magazine list of the Top 100 Most Influential People for 2017, People’s Republic of China (PRC) President Xi Jinping was described as “forever the iconoclast breaking the mold.” The write-up pointed out “the potential that one day we might look back and say that Xi’s time at the helm marked the inflection point for his country and his people.” 

 The essay’s author was former secretary of state John Kerry, now back in government as the Biden administration climate czar. (More on that later.) Kerry was right in his assessment of Xi, if perhaps not in the way he intended. The Xi era has been “an inflection point” in that it has ushered in a clear consensus that — contrary to the prevailing view prior to Xi — China will not become freer as it becomes richer. There is growing general acceptance in both public and elite opinion that the PRC is a competitor and adversary. 

 The hope that China, as it developed economically, would glide into democratic-capitalist norms guided the policy of every U.S. administration since President Carter granted U.S. diplomatic recognition to the PRC in 1979. The approach was based on the belief that Deng Xiaoping, who had consolidated his power by 1978, at heart was a market-driven reformer and that political liberalization would follow market liberalization. 

 That has not happened. That this approach was erroneous is now accepted by Democrats and Republicans, by elected officials on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue, and by U.S. allies across Asia and Europe. - ADVERTISEMENT - Even more remarkable than the acknowledgement that the policy was wrong — something policy-makers and politicians don’t like to admit, even in hindsight — is the increasingly popular view that not only were assumptions about Communist China and regime intent wrong, but also that there was enough evidence for successive administrations after Carter’s to have known at the time that they were on the wrong track. 

 There were certainly American analysts and policy-makers whose service in earlier administrations reflected a more accurate assessment of Beijing’s true intentions. But the typical reaction to that minority view tended to be derision at the “failure” of those analysts to understand the more nuanced, artful statecraft of the people executing the broader policy. 

 But today, there is broader acceptance of the view that Deng and his successors prior to Xi weren’t reformers, and that we had ample evidence of this then. Of course, Deng showed this as early as 1989, in the Tiananmen massacre. But there were other signals. Over time, as China emerged from its economic and political isolation, increasingly the world observed opaqueness in defense spending, the involvement of the People’s Liberation Army in every aspect of the Chinese economy, ever more aggressive subversion of democratic Taiwan, a growing global network of propaganda and influence operations, and deliberate undermining of international institutions including the WTO, the World Health Organization, and others. These actions are not the inventions of the Xi regime; they were on display with increasing clarity over many years during previous regimes. 

 Even so, there is no time for recriminations about “who lost China?” The point is that Communist China was never “winnable.” That there is agreement about this now is sound basis for current and future policy. What is most important is that we not let the self-delusion happen again. Of course, Xi makes it easier to avoid that because his intentions are so obvious. What is hard to understand about a million Chinese Muslims in concentration camps? About the militarization of man-made islands dotting the South China Sea and violating the sovereignty of multiple neighboring countries? About military incursions into Taiwan’s internationally recognized air-defense zones? About arresting democratic politicians and journalists in Hong Kong? 

 And yet there is still a tendency to simply take the Communist regime at its word in its intentions and declarations. Media and others tend to blithely accept, for instance, China’s obviously cooked books concerning economic growth. Time reported with confidence in January that “China’s Economy Grew in 2020 Amid the Global Pandemic as U.S. and Others Floundered.” The PRC claims the economy grew 2.3 percent even as the U.S., Japan, and the major economies of Europe likely all shrank. 

 Derek Scissors, chief economist of the authoritative China Beige Book, has concluded that China’s economy also probably shrank in 2020. In a paper for the American Enterprise Institute, Scissors writes that it is China’s own data in other areas that give the lie to its fantastic claims of economic growth in a pandemic-seized global economy that was one of the worst in history. Scissors points to double-digit declines in fixed investment, retail sales, net exports, and other accounts in first-quarter 2020, yet GDP decline was a mere 3.3 percent. He concludes that the positive “GDP figure only made sense if the rest didn’t.” His analysis points to several other hard-to-reconcile apparent facts to bolster his conclusion about the full year. Despite such analysis, the financial press, Wall Street analysts, and elected officials simply repeat what the government in Beijing wants them to believe: that China grew in 2020. 

 The same is true about China’s role in the pandemic itself. Much like financial reporting of dubious economic-growth statistics, China’s reported pandemic case counts deserve scrutiny. The Johns Hopkins COVID-19 tracker has the PRC, with a population of 1.4 billion, having experienced 100,000 cases, fewer than Bahrain, with 1/1,000th the population. At 4,800 deaths, the PRC — where the virus originated — reportedly has experienced fewer deaths than in the U.S. state of Connecticut (3.56 million population). Of course, the truth is impossible to know, so we simply report implausible Chinese official data. It has been well-documented by citizen-journalists and others that China seriously repressed reporting about the virus in November and December 2019, well before the world was aware of the problem. Doctors were censored in filing reports about a new and uncertain flu-like virus they were seeing in patients. It has now been established that the official statistics the country released well into 2020 were off by as much as 100 percent. 

 If the Communist government were confident in its current reporting, why has it strong-armed attempts by the World Health Organization and countries in that body to seek transparency about the origin and handling of the outbreak? Foreign journalists have limited access, and citizen-journalists continue to be harassed. In December 2020, Zhang Zahn drew a four-year prison sentence after a three-hour trial for her reporting about what was happening in Wuhan around the time of the outbreak, which was not the model of public health or virus eradication that the Communist government had presented to the rest of the world. Zhang was convicted for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble.” There obviously is ample indication that — despite the world’s apparent belief that “the China model” has dealt with the virus — the truth on the ground is quite different. 

 Which brings us back to the Biden administration, now the steward of U.S. China policy in the era of “we know what we got wrong, so let’s not repeat that.” The administration assumes office as the PRC continues to obfuscate about the global pandemic, and against a backdrop that we now understand how prevailing beliefs about the PRC were wrong for most of the past 40 years. Resisting China’s outlandish claims in every area of engagement is important in setting the right basis for the engagement the administration says it wants with the PRC. 

 The Biden team is off to a good start by recognizing the challenge, as expressed in the declarations of its foreign-policy team and as has been reported in these pages by Jimmy Quinn. In his Senate confirmation hearing, Secretary of State Antony Blinken seemed to acknowledge how wrong the foreign-policy community got the PRC over many preceding decades. He also indicated that he recognizes how China projects a façade of strength when, as he put it, “my own conviction is that there are many apparent weaknesses that China continues to hide when projecting its model.” 

 Blinken rightly believes that “China poses no doubt the most significant challenge of any nation state to the U.S.” He said it is his intention, as the chief architect of the Biden foreign policy, to approach the U.S.–China relationship from a position of strength. 

 To do so, he should proceed on the basis of the following precepts: 

 1) Xi and his Communist Party cohorts will repeat the boldest of lies for as long as the world repeats them. 

 2) Everything the foreign-policy establishment believed about China for 40 years turned out to be wrong, and that was knowable at the time. So let’s not do that again. 

 Blinken should appreciate each of these premises from firsthand experience. He was a senior Obama foreign-policy official at the National Security Council and State Department when, to take just one example, Xi Jinping was lying to President Obama about his pledge never to militarize the man-made islands in the South China Sea — which, of course, are now Chinese military installations. 

 Still, the administration will want much from China. Whether it is the most immediate priority, it is clear that climate change will be a first-tier platform for China engagement in the Biden administration. John Kerry will work hard for China’s cooperation in helping move the world toward the Paris Climate Accord target of net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions by 2050. Here, too, we see on full display the PRC tendency to promise everything because the West will believe anything. The green world swooned last September when Xi declared at the U.N. General Assembly that the PRC would be “carbon-neutral” by 2060. In an analysis by The Economist, the claim seems to be of a piece with China’s claims about GDP growth, about COVID eradication, and much else. Beijing seems to believe that it can get by with its customary mix of opacity, Western gullibility, lack of verifiable data, and outright falsehoods 

 When it comes to emissions reductions, The Economist compares the experience in the EU, which is on path to nearly halving its emissions by 2030 from their peak level in 1990. China would have to double that rate of reduction in just 30 years to meet its declared goal — though the PRC last year built 60 percent of the world’s coal-fired power plants. Just like Beijing’s economic-growth statistics, the numbers don’t add up, and they never will. If Kerry and his team think they will be getting honesty and straight talk from the PRC, particularly if it involves trade-offs in other areas — U.S. support for Taiwan or ignoring the PRCs human-rights atrocities — then we will soon find ourselves on the path to repeating our mistake of believing China when we know in real time that we should not. 

 The Biden team seems to believe that it can maintain a relatively hard line on China and at the same time “engage” Beijing to reach mutually agreeable goals. It remains to be seen if that can be done. Ronald Reagan, when faced with a determined adversary that declared it was going to reform according to market forces, said that the United States would “trust but verify” Gorbachav’s perestroika policies. 

 But the Cold War was quite different from what we face today. Much of U.S.–USSR interactions were based on state-to-state treaties that codified the standoff and permitted intrusive verification. Those mechanisms are unavailable to Biden and his team as they seek to engage the Communist government in Beijing. To sift through Beijing’s bogus claims in everything from economic growth to pandemic response and climate talks, the Biden mantra should be “distrust, because you can’t verify.” Doing so will help prevent analysts 40 years from now from concluding that not only were the policies of today wrong, but also that those making the policies knew they were wrong the whole time.

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Containing China is not a feasible option

Comment by the editor: Is containing China a feasible option? The author of this article argues it is not, simply because China is too big, too powerful and too important. The editor does not agree, and just on the contrary, it is exactly because it is too big and too powerful, now is more important than ever before to start to contain it. It is not an option, it is a necessity. If we still want our way of living, there is no choice. Communism, just like Nazism, is a cancer. It is growing big, it is growing powerful, but it just means it will cause more trouble down the road, you can not choose to live with cancer, can you? So when it is still not too late, let us get united and get rid of the cancer. Just like in the Lord of the Rings, the dark lord Sauron is surely big, powerful, with great strength no one can match, but when united,  the Elves, the Dwarves, and Men did defeat him, didn't they? United, there is nothing we can not achieve. 

How should the United States react to the rise of China? This is one of the biggest questions facing the new American administration. Many Americans say some form of containment is possible. Indeed, this is one of the few points on which the administration of Joe Biden and his predecessor tend to agree. We can also see the political advantage: common enemies can unify a divided country. But is this really an achievable policy? I believe the answer is: no.

Such an essentially null vision of the US-China relationship is contained in The world upside down by Clyde Prestowitz. He insists that: “There is no dispute between the Chinese people and the people of the United States.” His objection is directed rather to the Communist Party. A similar vision infuses The longer telegram: towards a new American strategy for China, written by an anonymous “former senior government official” (referring to George Kennan’s long telegram of February 1946, which proposed to contain the Soviet Union). It also states that: “The most important challenge facing the United States in the 21st century is the rise of an increasingly authoritarian China under the presidency. . . Xi Jinping. “The challenge, he asserts, is not China but its despotic state.

I sympathize with the anxiety that pervades these posts. China’s actions in Xinjiang and Hong Kong underscore its disregard for human rights and international agreements. Beijing threatens Taiwan’s de facto autonomy and extends its hold over the South China Sea. In short, China is behaving more and more like a great rising power led by a ruthless and efficient despot.

The Longer telegram argues that the threat of China’s attempt to achieve world domination must be met by defending a long list of vital US interests: the maintenance of collective economic and technological superiority; protect the global status of the US dollar; maintain overwhelming military deterrence; prevent Chinese territorial expansion, especially forced reunification with Taiwan; consolidate and expand alliances and partnerships; and defend (and, if necessary, reform) the liberal rules-based international order. Yet simultaneously, the document calls for addressing common global threats, including climate change.

Is all this achievable? No, I do not think so.

First, China is a much more powerful adversary than the Soviet Union. It has a much more prosperous economy, a more vibrant technological sector, a much larger population, a more cohesive political system, and a much more competent government. China’s relative economic performance is astounding.

More importantly is its potential. China faces enormous economic challenges. But you don’t have to manage them well to have the largest economy in the world. At present, China’s per capita output (at purchasing power parity) is one-third that of the United States (up from 8 percent in 2000) and half that of the EU. Suppose this is only half of the US level by 2050. China’s economy would then be as large as those of the US and the EU together.

Second, the Chinese economy is highly integrated internationally. While this is a source of vulnerability for China, it is also a source of influence. The Chinese market exerts a magnetic attraction on a multitude of countries around the world. As Singaporean researcher Kishore Mahbubani points out, most countries want good relations with the United States and China. They will not be happy to choose the United States over China.

Finally, over the past two decades, and especially the past four years, the United States has devastated its reputation for common sense, decency, reliability, and even adherence to basic democratic standards. This matters, because his allies will be crucial in the envisaged combat. As Jonathan Kirshner states in Foreign Affairs, “The world cannot ignore the Trump presidency,” especially its shameful end. Worse yet, this aspect of the United States is clearly still alive. The United States used to talk about the need for China to be a “responsible stakeholder”. But after the pride of the “unipolar moment”, the war in Iraq, the financial crisis and the presidency of Donald Trump, is the United States a responsible actor?

This is not intended to advise despair. It is recognizing reality. So what can we do?

First, the United States and its allies must revitalize their democracies and economies. On the latter, they must indeed protect their technological autonomy. But the most important way to do this is to revitalize their scientific and technological infrastructure, including by renovating education and encouraging the immigration of talented people.

Second, they must defend the core values ​​of adherence to the truth and freedom of expression against all enemies, domestic and foreign (including China). They must also unite to do this. China should not be allowed to go after small countries and intimidate them one by one.

Third, they must renovate the institutions of the world economy they have created and come up with new multilateral rules that bind China’s behavior and by which they too will be bound.

Fourth, the United States and its allies must clarify which fundamental interests they will defend, if necessary by force.

Last but not least, they must focus their attention, as Mr. Biden has now done, on the common project of protecting the global commons for all of us.

The relationship of the United States with China is not like that with the Soviet Union. Yes, there will be a lot of competition, but there must also be deep cooperation. To the extent that there is a war of ideologies, the freedom and democracy of the West remain more attractive. The real challenge they face is not China, but the restoration of these values ​​at home.

Monday, February 1, 2021

Trump's trade war on China was a failure in every possible way

comment by Iforg: trade war may not achieve its economic goal, but politically, it did make people aware of the unfair trading reality caused by the Chinese government, subsidy, IP theft, trading barrier, etc...

 

The Biden administration plans to review the phase one U.S.-China trade deal, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Friday. Based on publicly available data, it's hard to imagine they'll find anything other than a debacle.

Driving the news: China isn't even close to fulfilling its end of the deal — having come up 42% short of its commitment, Chad Bown, a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, reported late last week.

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  • The phase one deal was meant to be the Trump administration's reward for U.S. farmers, manufacturers and other business owners who had been bludgeoned by Trump's tax on American businesses via the trade war's tariffs.

What was supposed to happen: The trade war was billed as a plan to bring China to its knees by choking off the all-important American market with 25% tariffs on many imports that would rein in the U.S. trade deficit, boost American exports and slow China's rise as a global superpower.

What really happened: "The trade war with China hurt the US economy and failed to achieve major policy goals," a recent study commissioned by the U.S.-China Business Council argues, finding that the trade war reduced economic growth and cost the U.S. 245,000 jobs.

  • Last year, the U.S. trade deficit widened to its largest on record. In the fourth quarter, the U.S. goods trade deficit hit its highest share of GDP since 2012 and the U.S. current account deficit jumped to its highest level in more than 12 years in the third quarter.

  • Foreign direct investment to the U.S. fell 49% in 2020 — outpacing the overall global decrease of 42%.

  • These trends had all been moving in this direction since 2017, and were accelerated by the coronavirus pandemic as Trump refused to remove tariffs despite their strain on businesses.

The big picture: "The tariffs forced American companies to accept lower profit margins, cut wages and jobs for U.S. workers, defer potential wage hikes or expansions, and raise prices for American consumers or companies," analysts at Brookings noted in August.

The other side: China's trade surplus last year hit a record $535 billion, up 27% from 2019. Exports rose 21.1% in dollar terms in November year over year and 18.1% in December from a year earlier, touching an all-time high.

  • For the full year, the trade surplus with the U.S. was $317 billion, 7% higher than in 2019.

  • Foreign direct investment to China rose 4% to $163 billion.

Reproduced from Peterson Institute for International Economics; Chart: Axios Visuals

Most economists agree that trade deficits don't actually hurt an economy. And while the U.S. trade deficit with China did decrease somewhat during Trump's time in office, the deficit increased with other countries and overall.

  • Meanwhile, China's trade surplus and its trade with other countries increased.

The bottom line: In addition to hurting U.S. businesses and workers, tariffs also drive up prices, and inflation expectations are starting to rise.

  • The U.S. current account deficit also is helping further weigh down the value of the dollar, economists say, another factor that could boost inflation.

  • Manufacturers, including Whirlpool and Polaris, have recently said they are struggling to meet consumer demand due to supply-chain constraints and coronavirus-related safety measures — both of which are pushing up costs.

404文:委内瑞拉,这个上天眷顾的国家是如何毁掉的?

编者注:读这篇文章,想起了王莽。伟大的理想,高尚的品质,如果加诸于自我,大概可以成为半个圣人。但是如果想加诸于整个社会, 则往往会带来巨大的灾难。何也?人性。 按:原文发表于2023年12月15日,目前已遭到屏蔽。(近期,委内瑞拉总统选举投票后,选委会宣布卸任总统马杜罗赢得第三个...