National Post (National Edition)

BEIJING’S HIDDEN HAND

HOW THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY IS RESHAPING THE WORLD

- CLIVE HAMILTON AND MAREIKE OHLBERG

The following is an excerpt from Hidden Hand: How the Chinese Communist Party is Reshaping the World.

The comforting belief that democratic freedoms have history on their side and will eventually prevail everywhere has always been tinged with wishful thinking. World events of the past two or three decades have shown that we can no longer take these things for granted. Universal human rights, democratic practice and the rule of law have powerful enemies, and China under the Chinese Communist Party is arguably the most formidable. The party’s program of influence and interferen­ce is well planned and bold, and backed by enormous economic resources and technologi­cal power. The wide-ranging campaign of subverting institutio­ns in Western countries and winning over their elites has advanced much further than party leaders might have hoped.

Democratic institutio­ns and the global order built after the Second World War have proven to be more fragile than imagined, and are vulnerable to the new weapons of political warfare now deployed against them. The Chinese Communist Party is exploiting the weaknesses of democratic systems in order to undermine them, and while many in the West remain reluctant to acknowledg­e this, democracie­s urgently need to become more resilient if they are to survive.

The threat posed by the CCP affects the right of all to live without fear. Many Chinese people living in the West, along with Tibetans, Uyghurs, Falun Gong practition­ers and Hong Kong democracy activists, are at the forefront of the CCP’s repression and live in a constant state of fear. Government­s, academic institutio­ns and business executives are afraid of financial retaliatio­n should they incur Beijing’s wrath. This fear is contagious and toxic. It must not be normalized as the price nations have to pay for prosperity.

Every Western democracy is affected. As Beijing is emboldened by the feebleness of resistance, its tactics of coercion and intimidati­on are being used against an increasing­ly broad spectrum of people. Even for those who do not feel the heavy hand of the CCP directly, the world is changing, as Beijing’s authoritar­ian norms are exported around the globe. When publishers, filmmakers and theatre managers decide to censor opinions that might “hurt the feelings of the Chinese people,” free speech is denied. A simple tweet that upsets Beijing can cost someone their job.

The CCP works hard to convince people in China and abroad that it speaks for all Chinese people. It yearns to be seen as the arbiter of all things Chinese, and insists that for Chinese people, wherever they are, to love the country means to love the party, and only those who love the party truly love the country. It claims that the party is the people, and any criticism of the party is therefore an attack on the Chinese people.

It is disturbing to find so many people in the West falling for this ruse and labelling critics of CCP policies racist or Sinophobic. In so doing they are not defending Chinese people, but silencing or marginaliz­ing the voices of those Chinese opposed to the CCP, and the ethnic minorities who are persecuted by it. At worst, they are agents of influence for the party. In this book, then, we draw a sharp distinctio­n between the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese people. When we use the word “China” we do so as shorthand for the political entity ruled by the CCP, in the same way that one might say, for example, that “Canada” voted in favour of a resolution at the United Nations.

Conflating the party, the nation and the people leads to all kinds of misunderst­anding, which is just what the CCP wants. One consequenc­e is that overseas Chinese communitie­s have come to be regarded by some as the enemy, when in fact many are the foremost victims of the CCP, as we shall see. They are among the best informed about the party’s activities abroad and some want to be engaged in dealing with the problem.

The distinctio­n between the party and the people is also vital to understand­ing that the contest between China and the West is not a “clash of civilizati­ons,” as has been claimed. We face not some Confucian “other,” but an authoritar­ian regime, a Leninist political party replete with a central committee, a politburo and a general secretary backed by enormous economic, technologi­cal and military resources. The real clash is between the CCP’s repressive values and practices, and the freedoms enshrined in the UN’s Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights: the freedom of speech, assembly, religion and belief; freedom from persecutio­n; the right to personal privacy; and equal protection under the law. The CCP rejects each of these, in words or in deeds.

People who live in close proximity to China understand this much better than do most in the West. It is this understand­ing that has fuelled the recent protests in Hong Kong, and led to the re-election in January 2020 of Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen. In a landslide vote, the people of Taiwan used the ballot box to say no to the CCP.

Some on the left, despite their history of defending the oppressed, find reasons to blind themselves to the nature of China’s government under Xi Jinping. They have forgotten how totalitari­anism can overpower human rights. Even so, anxiety about the CCP’s activities crosses political boundaries, not least within the U.S. Congress where Democrats and Republican­s have formed an alliance to challenge Beijing. The same applies in Europe. Despite their other disagreeme­nts, people from the left and the right can agree that China under the CCP is a grave threat not only to human rights, but to national sovereignt­y.

The reasons why so many people in the West downplay or deny the threat posed by the CCP is a theme of Hidden Hand. One reason is of course financial interest. As Upton Sinclair put it, ‘It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understand­ing it.’

Another reason, especially in the case of some on the left, is “whatabouti­sm.” China may be doing some unpleasant things, goes this argument, but what about the United States? The tactic is more effective with Donald Trump in the White House, but whatever criticisms one might have of the U.S. and its foreign policy, both historical­ly and today — and we are strong critics — they do not in any way diminish or excuse the extreme violation of human rights and suppressio­n of liberties by the CCP regime.

Ignorance explains some of the difficulty the West is having in coming to grips with the threat of the CCP, as does the fact that it has not previously had to contend with such an adversary. During the Cold War, no Western country had a deep economic relationsh­ip with the Soviet Union. Conscious of the economic and strategic importance of China, many nations are trying to get smarter about the country at the very time Beijing is pouring money into helping us “better understand China.” Receiving informatio­n straight from the horse’s mouth might seem a sensible route, but, as we will show, this is a bad mistake.

Clive Hamilton is an Australian academic and author of Silent Invasion, a book on China’s influence on Australia. Mareike Ohlberg is a senior fellow in the Asia Program of the German Marshall Fund. The excerpt reprinted by permission of Optimum Publishing Internatio­nal.

 ?? KEVIN FRAYER / GETTY IMAGES ?? As Beijing is emboldened by the feebleness of resistance, its tactics of coercion and intimidati­on are being used against
an increasing­ly broad spectrum of people, write Clive Hamilton and Mareike Ohlberg in Hidden Hand.
KEVIN FRAYER / GETTY IMAGES As Beijing is emboldened by the feebleness of resistance, its tactics of coercion and intimidati­on are being used against an increasing­ly broad spectrum of people, write Clive Hamilton and Mareike Ohlberg in Hidden Hand.

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