The Sunday Guardian

Red China’s pandemic crime will wreck Xi’s ambitions

- GAUTAM MUKHERJEE

Assuming the US report says Covid-19 is a Chinese-made virus developed at the WIV that deliberate­ly combined bat viruses with the as yet incurable AIDS virus so that it could transmit to humans, what is to be done?

The noose is finally tightening. China has presented a golden opportunit­y to the United States. For long years the US has appeased Red China despite its sharp trade practices, its espionage, the one-sided trade deficits, its diplomatic belligeren­ce, its military sabre-rattling. All this because of its reliance on a profitable supply chain. It was a winwin situation for which some irritants were best ignored. But now, the world has lost 3.5 million dead to Covid of which the US accounts for over 591,265.

The world’s first global bio-warfare indemnitie­s and reparation­s are about to fall due. But only sovereign executive action by the US can make them stick. Even Usbased lawsuits are unlikely to yield enforceabl­e results.

China, said Biden recently, is fixing to “eat our lunch”. The President, with decades of experience in government, knows a calibrated confrontat­ion with China cannot be avoided, or put off any longer.

The decision to fix responsibi­lity for Covid was taken soon after a two-hour conversati­on between Biden and Jinping, with the latter conceding nothing except a willingnes­s to cooperate on climate change. And like the “thug” Biden called Xi informally, Jinping warned of a “disaster for both” if penalised for Covid.

China may well be running scared under the bluster. It is already reeling under massive internal and external debt, large scale unemployme­nt, food shortages, simmering domestic discontent. Its GDP and exports are sharply down.

Former President Trump imposed tariffs and a trade war but the indemnitie­s were waiting till the pandemic could be managed. Germany wanted to impose $160 billion for itself, but Trump was thinking in trillions.

China is also hard-pressed to continue financing its external infrastruc­ture projects. However, with massive censorship, repression, propaganda and “wolf warrior” diplomacy, China strives to present a business-as-usual façade. Course correcting a little lately, Xi has asked his diplomats to become “lovable” and reach out to the internatio­nal media.

Biden has tasked the US “intelligen­ce agencies” including the Central Intelligen­ce Agency (CIA). This is in supersessi­on of all the doctorly opinionati­ng so far, and is a clear-cut geopolitic­al move.

In the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) centenary year, the foregone conclusion­s in the intelligen­ce report will be submitted, unless Biden wants to absolve the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV), of all blame. This, in less than 90 days from now.

Assuming the report says Covid-19 is a Chinese-made virus developed at the WIV that deliberate­ly combined bat viruses with the as yet incurable AIDS virus so that it could transmit to humans, what is to be done?

China will have to pay for accidental­ly or deliberate­ly leaking the virus. And then spreading it via at least 400,000 infected or carrier Chinese travelling from Wuhan, not to Beijing or Yunnan, but to the US, Europe, and other parts of the world, for over 90 days. Three months of spreading the virus before China announced the existence of Covid-19.

First, there will be formal indictment­s. Then, massive demands by way of fines and reparation­s. Avoiding the Internatio­nal Court of Justice that China does not recognise, and which has no power to enforce its decisions, is desirable. Ditto the UN where China has compromise­d many of its agencies, including the WHO. And where it possesses a veto in the UNSC.

If China refuses to pay, as is expected, the economic sanctions, confiscati­ons and bans will have to begin. Both Chinese exports and imports will have to bear the brunt. Chinese services and infrastruc­ture companies will probably also be banned.

The American actions taken will provide a template for countries the world over. The effort will be to severely punish China economical­ly. Sovereign or diplomatic immunity will not be infringed upon to avoid retaliatio­n. Visas to Chinese nationals may be denied. Chinese organisati­ons, often used for spying, may be expelled. Ditto, Chinese students and academics. Chinese assets and investment­s in the US can be seized as compensati­on. Share values in all Chinese companies listed on US bourses can be captured.

India’s imports from China were at under $67 billion before most, plus services and companies were banned after

Chinese aggression in Eastern Ladakh. That too was trying to take advantage of the Indian preoccupat­ion with the pandemic.

The US imported almost $500 billion worth from China in 2020. Many countries, on their own initiative, including India and Canada, have banned Chinese 5G firms like Huawei, fearing espionage.

There will need to be a series of economic actions and sanctions to compensate for the trillions of dollars in US damages. America could redirect all imports from China to other countries. It supplies the US with electrical machinery, other machinery, furniture, bedding, toys, sports equipment, plastics, food and snack items. Services from China are worth $20 billion.

In retaliatio­n China will probably ban $125 billion worth of US imports. Compared

to the damage done to America, this loss would be minuscule. Besides, this pandemic as bio-warfare was planned by the Chinese military two years ago. This is documented.

While up-to-date figures are still being compiled, the US economy contracted 3.5% in 2020, something not seen since 1946. The US budget deficit at nearly $3.5 trillion was at 16% of GDP. To bounce back, huge stimulus packages are being processed as part of an unpreceden­ted $6 trillion annual budget by the Biden administra­tion.

America has suffered over $12 trillion in losses during 2020, plus equivalent indirect losses. That is almost two years’ US gross domestic product (GDP). Halfway through 2021, a third wave or more only has the massive and costly vaccinatio­n drive to stave it off.

The US unemployme­nt rate in May 2020 was at 14.7%, up from just 3.5% before the pandemic. This has not been seen since the Great Depression.

Many countries, led by the US example, will not buy Chinese despite temporaril­y increased costs. This will create new trade linkages outside Chinese influence. This will be awkward at first, because China has long been a supplier of raw materials, manufactur­ing parts and finished goods. It will also be monitored and prevented from channellin­g its goods via proxies.

China has penetrated the sovereignt­y of many of its debtor nations like a latterday East India Company ruthlessly seizing territory. It has inadverten­tly shown the way on how to deal with it. Seizing Chinese assets seems eminently fair.

All this, while checking and curbing China’s military and diplomatic attempts to wiggle out of the situation, and its pursuit of world domination.

In the end, it must be remembered that a prosperous Red China was created by the Nixon-mao entente in the 1970s. But China only began its double-digit growth under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s. 30 years later, China was a Usfuelled powerhouse and second biggest economy in the world. But this prosperity turned its head and changed its attitude.

The CCP, its militant generals and supreme leader now think it is time to topple the US. However, the unseemly haste of this pandemic, engineered to bring the world to its economic knees, may be China’s Pearl Harbour moment.

To check any military adventuris­m, coalitions of battle-hardened military checks by multiple countries will indeed be active in the Indian Ocean and the Indopacifi­c. There will be an unpreceden­ted policing of all the possible flash points in the land and seas of the region, and heightened alerts elsewhere. China’s belt and road, silk route, and string of pearls initiative­s will be constraine­d using diplomatic pressure on its junior partners. Those who supply China with raw materials, petroleum and even access, will be asked to stop if necessary. The Straits of Malacca, a main conduit for Chinese supplies to its Pacific ports will be watched and monitored. Along with Hambantota, Gwadar, Chabahar, Djibouti, and elsewhere where China has bases or access.

China could, in turn, menace non-nuclear states in the Pacific/south/east China Sea region such as Vietnam, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippine­s, Taiwan. It could also move against India knowing that nuclear weapons cannot be used.

However, once China undertakes any overt military action, it will allow others to retaliate, and possibly expose its lack of battle experience.

There has been a grave miscalcula­tion on Xi Jinping’s part. It is the failure of megalomani­acs throughout history who underestim­ate their adversarie­s. This hubris will, instead destroy the hold of Xi Jinping and the CCP over the hopefully titled Middle Kingdom.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People recite the party oath in front of a screen showing Chinese President Xi Jinping during an event marking the 100th founding anniversar­y of the Communist Party of China at the Memorial of the First National Congress of the Communist Party of China in Shanghai, China on Friday.
REUTERS People recite the party oath in front of a screen showing Chinese President Xi Jinping during an event marking the 100th founding anniversar­y of the Communist Party of China at the Memorial of the First National Congress of the Communist Party of China in Shanghai, China on Friday.
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