New Straits Times

CHINA HAS TRUMP JUST WHERE IT WANTS HIM

US president a mere blip on Beijing’s 33-year plan for global dominance

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YANGON that was a farsighted expression of US confidence almost 70 years ago.

Xi’s speech to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China marked his apotheosis. He has joined the pantheon along with Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. His thought is now dogma. His China has entered a different phase. Having grown independen­t and then rich, it is now “becoming strong”. To what end will the strength be used?

China, Xi said, “offers a new option for other countries and nations who want to speed up their developmen­t while preserving their independen­ce”. A new era has begun “that sees China moving closer to centre stage”.

There could scarcely be a more explicit offer of China as an alternativ­e, single-party, authoritar­ian model to the liberal democratic system of the US (of which Trump has been such a feeble advocate). China is now “actively pursuing almost an ideologica­l competitio­n with the US,” said Yun Sun, a senior associate at the Stimson Centre. Xi’s speech was “a declaratio­n of the Chinese saying that we have won this game, we are winning this game”.

They are, for now. The Chinese gambit — in the past, China has been reticent about offering itself as a global paradigm — comes at a moment of American democratic fracture. It’s a good moment for Beijing to talk of arriving “centre stage”.

Trump does not really have ideas. He has impulses (like his dangerous infatuatio­n with Saudi Arabia). On his Asian swing, the president spoke of pursuing a “free and open Indo-Pacific region” built around democracie­s including India, Japan and Australia. This was the right thing to say to counter China.

Hundreds of millions of Asians outside China don’t want to find themselves obliged to study Xi Jinping Thought. They prefer liberalism to Leninism. Xi Jinping Thought calls for building the Chinese military into “worldclass forces that obey the party’s command, can fight and win”. It portrays the leadership of the Communist Party as “the defining feature” of Chinese society.

So, Trump’s commitment to Indo-Pacific freedom is significan­t. It’s also dubious. Trump likes surpluses, hates deficits. It’s not clear whether any Trump strategy can get beyond such zerosum rabble-rousing.

Around Asia, the last thing countries want is to have to choose between China and the US. From Singapore to Myanmar, they know that America is the only possible balance to China. If China is money and investment, the US is security and freedom.

The Chinese-American relationsh­ip is what the regional order depends on. Those Chinese targets for 2035 and 2050 presuppose one essential thing: regional stability. That’s the headline, not Trump’s machinatio­ns.

A second Korean War would be a nuclear war. This is the last thing China wants. The secondto-last thing is the end of the North Korean regime and a united Korean Peninsula at its border, allied to the US. China’s rise to dominance is predicated on stability until that dominance is achieved. Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader, must be managed in this context. Therefore, China will try to squeeze Kim, not to the point of denucleari­sation (let alone collapse), but to the point where he does not further provoke US or Japan. The question is whether Kim is controllab­le.

The other question is whether Trump is controllab­le. Xi projects the image of a reliable partner committed to an open, stable trading system.

Trump, meanwhile, goes on walkabout with the Saudis. For now, a convention­al Saudibacke­d war in Lebanon against Iranian-backed Hizbollah is more likely than nuclear war with Pyongyang. These things happen when an America-First American president can’t think beyond next week (or money). NYT

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? United States President Donald Trump inspecting a guard of honour with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, China, on Thursday.
REUTERS PIC United States President Donald Trump inspecting a guard of honour with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, China, on Thursday.
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