Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

China’s belligeren­ce: We are all Hong Kong now

Hong Kong is a signal that China is willing to incur costs, but not coexist with other systems. Pay attention

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In recent decades, the combinatio­n of a slow-but-certain incrementa­lism — couched in parables attributed to Confucius and other Chinese notables — had made Beijing’s diplomatic behaviour inscrutabl­e, and yet, viewed as benign. It gave the country an advantage in being able to change facts on the ground, and attract zero retaliatio­n and minimal critique. It was the perfect excuse for western and Indian companies and government­s to look the other way, and continue with the high profits that this authoritar­ian regime brought.

This has now dramatical­ly changed. The rest of the world has a red hot smoking gun of Beijing’s new diplomacy. As two astute American analysts, Kurt Campbell and Mira Rapp-hooper put it, “Beijing appears less image-conscious now than in the past.” And they argue, “Xi (Jinping) has endured the reputation­al damage of his government’s ‘Wolf Warrior’ diplomacy (named after a series of nationalis­tic action films), likely calculatin­g that China ‘will gain more by flexing its military and economic muscles even if it loses some of its soft power along the way’.”

Recall, China’s big advantage for the last decades has been its incrementa­lism. Especially in its foreign policy, its method was to move little-by-little, step-by-step, underthe-radar. This was a strategy of managing to stay just below the level of a full-blown provocatio­n, such that any concrete retaliatio­n by injured parties would look like a hysterical overreacti­on.

In fact, one can apply this insight to other aspects of China’s behaviour too. The World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) is a case in point. China has slowly, deliberate­ly, and quietly chipped away at the rules that underpin the multilater­al trading system, but attracted scarce attention. In contrast, President Donald Trump’s diatribes against the WTO, and in-your-face decision to paralyse the Appellate Body of the Dispute Settlement Mechanism, has led even allies to view the United States (US) with disappoint­ment and anger. There is considerab­le irony in the fact that a sulky US — the guarantor of trade multilater­alism for decades — has chosen not to join the parallel interim dispute settlement mechanism (created by the European Union (EU), Norway, Canada and others), but China has. Similarly, deeply frustrated with the World Health Organizati­on (WHO)’S apparent complicity with China, the US announced on May 29 that it would withdraw from the organisati­on. In doing so, the US has attracted the ire of the great and the good of the world. China, in contrast, for all its mishandlin­g of the pandemic, and in spite of the threats that it issued to countries that demanded an enquiry (such as Australia), still manages to present itself as being on the side of the angels by reiteratin­g its commitment to WHO.

The internatio­nal community cannot dismiss Hong Kong as it has done Chinese excesses in Xinjiang. The issue goes to the heart of internatio­nal jurisprude­nce and China’s new aggressive interpreta­tion of its sovereignt­y. Hong Kong is not “just” another unit in China’s domestic jurisdicti­on; underpinni­ng the handover of Hong Kong to China was the guarantee of “one country, two systems”. Hong Kong is not “just” another artificial island, being quietly militarise­d, somewhere in a faraway sea that the West does not need to bother about — in many ways, it is a cornerston­e of a liberal, English-speaking, democratic West. Hong Kong is not even “just” another fatal border conflict with India, which the West can dismiss as a product of mispercept­ions over unclear boundaries drawn by careless colonial masters.

What has happened in Hong Kong should matter to all of us because of the deeply worrying repercussi­ons it carries for its citizens. But as foreign policy is too seldom about values, here’s a straightfo­rward reason why all realists should also be concerned about Hong Kong. China’s actions in Hong Kong are a clear signal of the heavy costs that its government is willing to bear to openly assert, consolidat­e, and further expand its power.

The costs for China are huge, both reputation­al and financial. Hong Kong — along with Taiwan — was a symbol of reassuranc­e that China, despite its different model of governance and developmen­t, could co-exist peacefully with other models based on freedom, democracy, and free markets. Besides, the financial attractive­ness of Hong Kong stemmed from the fact that there was rule of law, transparen­cy, independen­t judiciary, checks and balances. Companies knew that they would be given a fair deal, if they entered into conflict with a state-owned enterprise. With these advantages gone, financial costs will be inevitable — and China has shown that it is ready to incur them. This does not augur well for Taiwan, for the region at large, or for global order.

And this is why banal statements from all defenders of the liberal multilater­al order need to stop. German chancellor Angela Merkel, for instance, still talks remarkably of the need to “seek dialogue” with the Chinese government on the basis of a “relationsh­ip of trust”. EU high representa­tive, Josep Borrell, also stated “It is clear that China has a global ambition. But, at the same time, I do not think that China is playing a role that can threaten world peace”. No, Mr Borrell, think what you may, there’s no way you can really know that. None of us can. Because ultimately, we can never know the intentions behind the actions of states. But when states take actions entailing high costs — especially to themselves — these are signals that must not be ignored.

We could all be Hong Kong tomorrow. And this is why — and not only for altruism — we should all be acting with one voice, with the people of Hong Kong now.

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