The Sunday Guardian

Beijing’s troubles intensify: The world has read China’s book

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On 2 December 2020, Dr Robert Redfield, chief of the Centres for Disease Control in Atlanta warned that the next two months would be the most difficult in US health history. You think that America will love China again?

In the legendary Hollywood film, Patton, my favourite scene is when US General George S. Patton, after spending weeks studying the copious writings of his vain German adversary Field Marshall Erwin Rommel, pulverizes Rommel’s feared Panzers in an epic tank battle in Tunisia and gloats: “Rommel, you magnificen­t bast **** , I read your book.”

In an attempt to redeem China’s image, a Chinese travel agency is offering an 8-day trip to Shanghai and Beijing from the US (including flights, hotels and tours) for USD 299, fully refundable, for travel in 2021-2022! There have been few takers so far! China suffers from severe TDS, Trust Deficiency Syndrome.

Two days ago, during a brief morning stop for a Starbucks coffee, I heard two veterans arguing about the alleged decline of US military power vis-à-vis China. Acknowledg­ing my greeting, one of them said: “Remember how India clobbered the Chinese?”

Joe Biden’s first interview to the New York Times published on 2 December should be a rude shock for Beijing. That was soon after CNN broke a story, based on leaks from behind China’s Great Wall of Disinforma­tion, on how China, through misleading public data, obfuscated the origin and progress of its virus that has devastated the world.

“I want to make sure we’re going to fight like hell by investing in America first”, the President-elect was quoted as saying. “America first?”— isn’t that Donald Trump’s invention? And Biden’s America First is huge government investment­s in research in energy, biotech, advanced materials, and artificial intelligen­ce. Joe Biden stressed that his “goal would be to pursue trade policies that actually produce progress on China’s abusive practices—that’s stealing intellectu­al property, dumping products, illegal subsidies to corporatio­ns” and forcing “tech transfers” from US companies to their Chinese counterpar­ts. He has promised that100 million Americans would be vaccinated within 100 days of his inaugurati­on. For good measure, Joe Biden says that he would immediatel­y try to bring America’s allies on “the same page” in dealing with China—in other words a united front against China.

The top US intelligen­ce official, John Ratcliffe wrote in an op-ed on 3 December 2020 in the Wall Street Journal that “the intelligen­ce is clear: Beijing intends to dominate the US and the rest of the planet economical­ly, militarily and technologi­cally”, labelling China the biggest threat to democracy and freedom worldwide since the Second World War and saying it was bent on global domination.

The American intelligen­ce community has been under attack for failing to understand China. In September 2020, a House of Representa­tive committee had warned that the US intelligen­ce community was not equipped to handle evolving threats from China in the fields of technology and politics.

Following the arrest of two Chinese military agents at its Houston Consulate for attempted theft of coronaviru­s vaccine research and the FBI reporting more than 1,000 open cases of Chinese technology theft, Representa­tive Scott Perry introduced legislatio­n in October 2020 to designate the Chines Communist Party as a transnatio­nal organised crime group and a member of the Top Internatio­nal Criminal Organizati­on Target (TICOT) list. In an opinion piece, the Congressma­n said that the CCP and its leader, General Secretary Xi Jinping, have demonstrat­ed that the Communist Party’s slogan of “win-win” is winat-all-cost, with the full resources of the country employed—with indifferen­ce to basic standards of morality and decency—in service to an Orwellian national strategy. He pointed out that in 2019, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper had warned that China was perpetrati­ng “the greatest intellectu­al property theft in human history”. Chinese hackers were behind the theft of F-22 and F-35 fighter jet designs.

This critical labelling is an intragover­nmental effort to identify and eliminate the internatio­nal criminal organisati­ons that pose the gravest threat to US national interests. Five years ago, then US intelligen­ce chief, James Clapper had said that China was the top suspect in the massive hacking of a US government agency that compromise­d the personnel records of millions of Americans.

Responding to Ratcliffe, China’s foreign affairs spokeswoma­n said the article was “just a sensationa­l headline (and) another concoction of lies” and hoped that the US would “stop fabricatin­g and spreading political viruses and lies”. Viruses, did she say? Across the US younger people are contractin­g the virus in increasing numbers. Biden’s nominee for Secretary of the Treasury, Janet Yellen, has called the damage done to livelihood­s, businesses, households and local government­s “an American tragedy” that could lead to long-term devastatio­n. One American dies every 20 seconds from the Chinese virus. But since the term “public opinion” does not exist in Xi’s dictionary (public opinion is the worst of all opinions, famously said 18th century French writer Nicolas Chamfort), China continues to misunderst­and American angst.

The plans for the “great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation” extend to 2049, the year marking the 100th anniversar­y of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. By then, Xi promises, China should once again emerge as a global superpower. When it comes to the “rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation”, nothing like civil liberties or cumbersome constituti­onal processes should come in the way, according to Beijing’s view. Dissenters, human rights activists, even their lawyers, end up in jail. It reminds me of a story about a senior Indian journalist who, on a guided tour of China, was very impressed by the spectacula­r railway system, and then asked: “Do you have a free press in China?” His nonplussed Chinese chaperone replied: “What’s that?”

To add insult to injury (even apart from the panegyrics to China composed by its faithful crony in the WHO), in June, China’s State Council had released a White Paper saying the Chinese government had always published informatio­n related to the epidemic in a “timely, open and transparen­t fashion...with a keen sense of responsibi­lity to humanity…providing informatio­n in a thoroughly profession­al and efficient way… thus effectivel­y responding to public concern and building public consensus”.

The world wants to understand the origin of the virus. China seethes when this is raised and suggests instead global cooperatio­n to tackle the virus. Its Man Friday, the WHO, nods so vigorously that its head might fall off!

In his New Year speech 2019-2020, Pingpong said: “We have friends in every corner of the world…china will unswerving­ly follow the path of peaceful developmen­t, safeguard world peace and promote common developmen­t.” And this while he was knowingly unleashing the worst ever bioterrori­st weapon on humanity.

Wait for his 31 December 2020 speech, when he will ask his people for ever more sacrifices.

Ha!

On 2 December, the US House of Representa­tives approved a bill (earlier passed unanimousl­y by the Senate) that would prevent foreign companies that refuse to open their books to US accounting regulators from trading on US stock exchanges. Senator John Kennedy said in a statement after the vote that the US system had allowed China to “flout rules that American companies play by and it is dangerous”. The bipartisan co-sponsors of the resolution said their aim was to

“kick deceitful Chinese companies off US exchanges”.

Earlier this year, Nasdaqlist­ed Chinese coffee firm, Luckin Coffee was booted out of Nasdaq for massive accounting irregulari­ties including overstatin­g. In swift retributio­n, China jailed the whistle-blower!

With the new US law, instead of the usual bravado about how this resolution would further damage the already crumbling US economy (remember China’s abuse against Australia?), a frightened Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on pleaded with the US government to “provide a fair, just and non-discrimina­tory environmen­t for foreign companies to invest and operate in the US, instead of trying to set up various barriers”.

On 4 December 2020, the US government banned cotton imports from a powerful Chinese quasi-military organisati­on, Xinjiang Production and Constructi­on Corps (XPCC), one of China’s largest producers, that it says uses the forced labour of detained Uyghur Muslims. On 2 December 2020, Dr Robert Redfield, chief of the Centres for Disease Control in Atlanta warned that the next two months would be the most difficult in US health history.

You think that America will love China again?

At the virtual UN General Assembly in September, Donald Trump rattled his sabre, and called the pandemic what many people believe it is: a plague and invisible enemy unleashed by China to frighten and divide the world, and then rule over it.

Trump is not emasculate­d yet. In the American system, he can still take actions that would be difficult to reverse. Until Biden is inaugurate­d, Donald Trump exercises the full powers of the presidency. The American duck is never lame. He has already banned US investment in several dozen Chinese companies, reduced the maximum validity of visas for Chinese Communist Party officials from ten years to one month and sent several high-level officials including an admiral to Taiwan.

Technology is never static. What China stole yesterday will be obsolete tomorrow. And now that the world’s biggest technology heist has been called, its mastermind is up the creek without a paddle (as the Americans say).

The Australian Parliament has just passed the Foreign Relations (State and Territory Arrangemen­ts) Bill 2020 that gives the federal government power to veto any agreement made by state government­s with foreign countries (Victoria signed on to BRI two years ago). Prime Minister Scott Morrison said it was vital that Australia “speak with one voice”, adding that “where any of these agreements undermine how the federal government is protecting and promoting our national interests they can [be] cancelled”.

When the new law was passed, China’s Foreign Ministry spokespers­on, known for bluster and abusive “wolf warrior” diplomacy, pleaded that Australia should “have an objective view of such cooperatio­n…and not set up impediment­s”. Of course, China will continue to block imports from Australia!

Is Xi Pingpong choking on his Indo-pacific chop suey?

If you thought China was a superpower (as it deludes itself), watch it crumble without access to Western technology and finance.

Aliens do exist, and they have been in touch with the United States and Israel for years, claimed an octogenari­an retired Israeli general, who led the country’s space program for three decades, in a recent media interview, but their existence has not yet been disclosed because “humanity is not ready” for the truth. We await Pingpong’s apoplectic response.

As my brilliant colleague, Ambassador Saurabh Kumar points out, the larger question is how to deal with

China, a state captured by a ruthless Communist Party that uses narrow nationalis­m (chauvinism) to legitimize its strangleho­ld on power. Regrettabl­y, the intelligen­tsia of the “free world” rationaliz­ed China’s ruthlessne­ss as unavoidabl­e in any interactio­n between liberal, open and pluralisti­c polities and totalitari­an ones.

George Orwell wrote a novel called 1984 that deals with the consequenc­es of totalitari­anism, mass surveillan­ce, and repressive regimentat­ion of persons and behaviours within society. And how truth and facts within politics are manipulate­d. In 1984 (mark the year), President Ronald Reagan went to China. For many years he had sharply attacked “Red China” as an implacable foe of the United States, but in 1984, dramatical­ly shifted his language by asserting that the United States could get along “with this so-called Communist China” since it was not an expansioni­st power and since it wanted American investment. China laughed all the way to the bank!

The Chinese objected to US legislatio­n that prevented sales of some sophistica­ted equipment to China, terming such legislatio­n “discrimina­tory”. Reagan, to appease a spoilt child, pledged that efforts to loosen export controls would continue.

The evidence has been staring us in the face. China cannot be treated as a normal state given its gaming, and milking, of the framework of internatio­nal relations and multilater­al organisati­ons to its own immense advantage. In 2020, Chinese gaslightin­g of internatio­nal opinion (manipulati­ng someone into thinking they are wrong even when they are right) has failed.

Frost and Sullivan that for over fifty years has become world-renowned for its role in helping government­s identify disruptive technologi­es, has named US company Sarcos as Company of the Year. Sarcos recently unveiled the alpha version of its very flexible Guardian® XO® industrial exoskeleto­n robot, which addresses issues of insufficie­nt tools alongside virus-induced workforce shortages and fatigue. One worker using it can do the work of 4-10 workers, enabling a significan­t increase in productivi­ty while maintainin­g social distancing requiremen­ts. I am told that Sarcos refused to invest in China, fearing forced technology transfers.

“9/11 did not break our spirit” says my nephew Aman Vohra, made in New York, “we were shocked but not shattered. We fought back and we won.” “We will overcome the Chinese threat too.”

So, what about China’s view of India?

According to one of my distinguis­hed colleagues, in recent weeks, HQSB (Huanqiu Shibao), a Chinese language foreign affairs tabloid, aimed at a domestic audience, seemed to spare India the vituperati­on, reserved for the US (and, to a lesser extent, Japan and Australia). It has not threatened retaliatio­n, so as not to provoke more “anti-chinese” steps by India on the economic front (after the app ban has encouraged other nations to do likewise), while India remains unrelentin­g on the military side. While India is hurting China economical­ly, a recent Global Times article is the first to betray similar discomfitu­re in the military domain about possible “preemptive action” on the seas by the Indian Navy (recall Xi Pingpong’s exhortatio­n to his troops to be ready for battle). Those fools in Beijing seem to realise, while not admitting it, that they have bitten off more than they can chew.

In a signed article in the “India Write Network” (on recent political developmen­ts in China), the Chinese Ambassador in India proffered the familiar line of the “common interests between our two countries far outweigh the difference­s”. Oh really?

Remember that fellow Sun Tzu who recommende­d that a war should be won without fighting?

This business about Chinese “superiorit­y” is a psychologi­cal concept, totally hollow. Twenty brave sons of India gave their lives to bust this myth.

Whether in Ladakh, or in the South China Sea, China is like a cornered dog, barking and whimpering at the same time! Like George Patton, the world has read and understood China’s book. Ambassador Dr Deepak Vohra is Special Advisor to Prime Minister, Lesotho, South Sudan and Guinea-bissau; and Special Advisor to Ladakh Autonomous Hill Developmen­t Councils, Leh and Kargil.

 ?? ANI ?? Xi Jinping posters being burnt in Kanpur in this 31 August photo.
ANI Xi Jinping posters being burnt in Kanpur in this 31 August photo.
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