Ottawa Citizen

BOWING BEFORE BEIJING

Crackdown on rights is in hyperdrive. And apparently, that’s OK with us

- TERRY GLAVIN Terry Glavin is an author and journalist.

“There is a saying that if you can’t beat them, join them.”

That was the telling choice of words former Liberal cabinet minister Martin Cauchon settled on back in November 2011 in greeting the news that Huawei Canada, the subsidiary of an opaquely governed Chinese telecommun­ications conglomera­te long encumbered by its reported links to China’s military and intelligen­ce services, was beefing up its Ottawa operations thanks to a $6.5-million Ontario government grant.

Bested by NDP Leader Tom Mulcair at the polls only a few months earlier in the Montreal riding of Outremont, Cauchon was by then already embarking on a lucrative career in blue-chip deal making in China. Cauchon is now a vice-president of the Canada China Business Council, where you’ll also find Scott Bradley, the Ottawa Centre Liberal candidate defeated in the same May 2011 election, now serving on the council’s board. Bradley is also now a vice-president of Huawei Canada.

Five years ago, Huawei Technologi­es was caught supplying dissident-tracking telecommun­ications equipment to the regime in Tehran via its Iranian corporate partners, who were found to have entered into contracts with the terrorist-listed Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps. As a result, the U.S. House Intelligen­ce Committee concluded Huawei presented national security risks.

At the time, Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government invoked a “national security exemption” in its hiring of firms to build a secure federal communicat­ions network. Harper refused repeated requests to publicly disclose whether Huawei had been disqualifi­ed from tendering bids.

Despite the efforts of the Canada China Business Council, the Chinese embassy in Ottawa and Bradley’s own cajolings on behalf of Huawei — he handles the company’s dealings with the government — Canada’s intelligen­ce community still hasn’t been persuaded to welcome the prospect of Huawei consummati­ng its intimacies with Canada’s federal cyber-structure.

This has caused Lu Shaye, China’s ambassador, to snipe that national-security concerns about Huawei should be dismissed as “trade protection­ism.” Well, Chinese diplomats snipe about a lot of things, and besides, Huawei’s case isn’t being helped by a fiscal authorizat­ion bill that was put to the U.S. House of Representa­tives last month.

The proposed law would bar the Pentagon from buying any sensitive equipment from Russian suppliers — not surprising, given the consensus of U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that the Kremlin employed active measures in hacking the Democratic National Committee with a view to aiding Donald Trump during the 2016 presidenti­al elections. Investigat­ions

Taken together, the forces working against democracy are more powerful than at any time since the end of the Cold War. CHRISTOPHE­R WALKER, vice-president of the National Endowment for Democracy

proceed in the grave matter of whether Trump or his officials colluded with Russia. The recriminat­ions and partisan blood-feuding have come close to paralyzing the U.S. government.

But the bill would also bar the U.S. Department of Defense from contractin­g any equipment from Huawei or ZTE Corp. — the subsidiary of another telecom giant with similarly shadowy affiliatio­ns that is also headquarte­red in Shenzhen, China.

In March, ZTE pleaded guilty to engaging in a complex conspiracy to evade U.S. sanctions laws by secretly incorporat­ing American-made components in ZTE telecommun­ications equipment and shipping the products on to Iran. The plea bargain came with a US$900-million fine. Although never convicted and always adamant about their innocence, Huawei subsidiari­es have been swept up in several U.S. Commerce Department investigat­ions over the years. This continues to cast a pall over Huawei’s operations in Canada.

While this is all very intriguing, it’s still just a minor illustrati­on of the pervasive obscenity attending to relations with Beijing that are undertaken according to what you could call the Cauchon Axiom: If you can’t beat them, join them. Given the depths of pro-Beijing sycophancy in that revolving door of veteran Liberal party figures, China trade lobbyists and senior foreign affairs and internatio­nal trade mandarins, it’s a question worth asking: Are we even trying to beat them anymore, or have we just decided to “join them?”

No matter how loathsome and socially unhygienic the Trump administra­tion may be, the forensics to date have turned up only a sordid web of clandestin­e indecencie­s committed by a bestiary of ghastly American and Russian grifters, liars, kleptocrat­s and goons. It is not as though Trump has marshalled the resources of the State Department and the Commerce Department to negotiate a free-trade agreement with the Kremlin or anything.

One might well wonder what fresh hell may be discovered by the various investigat­ors poking around the White House for evidence of Russia’s corrupting influences, but in Canada, we leave nothing to the imaginatio­n. It’s all out in the open. Beijing’s corrupting influences reach from fundraisin­g banquets to formal lunches to stakeholde­r committee meetings. What has happened in the United States is genuinely shocking. What is happening in Canada has been going on for so long that it has become normalized.

It’s in plain sight, so nobody notices.

It was U.S. president Barack Obama who began the folly of a full American retreat from “the world stage” in 2008, maintainin­g a credible American commitment only to those global superstruc­tures Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland rightly cited, in her June 6 speech to the House of Commons, as the fountainhe­ads of Canada’s 20th-century peace and prosperity: the World Trade Organizati­on, the G7, the G20, NATO, the United Nations and so on.

But the benefits of global trade have been offered on an equal basis to democracie­s and despotisms alike. Recep Erdogan has been permitted to transform Turkey — a NATO ally, still — into a neo-Ottoman nightmare zone. With Bashar Assad invited to cross Obama’s “red line” on poison gas, the Kremlin saw no downside to assisting the White House and no proper punishment, either, for invading Ukraine and annexing Crimea.

With American sanctions lifted, and with the Kremlin’s assistance, Khomeinist Iran and Hezbollah have turned Syria into a graveyard. The Saudis have turned Yemen into a slaughterh­ouse. The socialist paradise of Venezuela has been in an uproar of bloody riots every day for the past three months.

Under the iron fist of Xi Jinping, the Chinese people have been force-marched back into the darkest moments before Tiananmen. The regime in Beijing has gone into hyperdrive to persuade the rest of the world that this is how things must be. Beijing is now spending at least $7 billion a year, by the estimates of Christophe­r Walker, a vice-president of the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington, D.C., on outward propaganda, to “make friends” in the democracie­s. “Taken together,” Walker reckons, “the forces working against democracy are more powerful than at any time since the end of the Cold War.”

And a significan­t body of opinion around Ottawa appears to contend that we can’t beat them, after all, so we might as well join them … .

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