Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

GIVE AMBASSADOR TEPLITZ A DICTIONARY, PLEASE!

- By Malinda Seneviratn­e malindasen­evi@gmail.com

It is not hard to understand US Ambassador Alaina B Teplitz’ angst. China, along with Japan, owns the debt of her country, the United States of America. China, according to the US narrative, has re-colonized Africa without a single shot being fired. China, again according to pro-usa narrators, created the deadly COVID-19 and controlled it while the USA was being strangled by it. The USA was essentiall­y sleeping while China laid out its Belt and Road Initiative. When the USA (and India) got wise to the ‘String of Pearls’, things had moved so far that only damage-control was possible; hence the hastily put together

‘Quad’ comprising the USA, India, Japan and Australia

with the objective of ‘stopping China’ in the Into-pacific region.

No wonder Teplitz is upset!

It can’t be just nationalis­t ill-will that made Teplitz rant and rave against China in an interview with the Daily Mirror recently. She’s the local representa­tive of the US government, a citizen of a country that operates like a global thug but is in reduced and declining circumstan­ces, articulati­ng country-interest. She could have been more diplomatic but sometimes when reason is trumped by emotion, niceties are forgotten. She is also upset that she has not been able to get her pet project, the MCC Compact, off the ground, possibly compromisi­ng career advancemen­t prospects. However, more than all this, what’s probably most bothersome is the fact that China’s footprint in Sri Lanka is way larger than that of the USA.

Yes, the USA itself is upset. So much so that it openly violated WTO rules (which was pushed mainly by the USA in efforts that included arm-twisting representa­tions of countries like Sri Lanka in the infamous ‘green rooms’ way back in 1993 when the GATT was buried and the WTO birthed in its place), in imposing sanctions on Chinese companies. If Washington is pained, it is not surprising that Washington’s official mouthpiece has an articulati­on problem.

‘Sri Lanka should engage with China in ways that protect its sovereignt­y,’ she’s said. Now this is an Omg-moment.

The condescens­ion! The sheer arrogance! How viceroy-like! And to talk of sovereignt­y, of all things!

First of all, what Sri Lanka does with any country is Sri Lanka’s business. Many Sri Lankan government­s have danced to the Washington­tune and this has not pleased other countries (India for example during the

J.R. Jayewarden­e regime), but their representa­tives didn’t say ‘hey, your sovereignt­y is at stake, dude!’ Countries do business. It’s bucks or politics or both. Profits and strategic edge. The world is not flat and it is not easy for a country like Sri Lanka to walk the slant. There’s give and take and typically more give than take. True in the case of China, true for other countries too, India and the USA included. Not a happy situation, but then again we don’t live in a convenient world.

The USA does business. Just like the British in another era. The Accelerate­d Mahaweli Developmen­t Project saw many Western countries offering financial assistance. The main contractor­s in all these projects were companies based in the relevant donor nation. Well, that’s what China is doing in

Sri Lanka. Aid, whether it is a loan or called a gift, comes with conditions. The political economy of developmen­t assistance benefits donors more than the beneficiar­ies.

It’s like a corporate giving an unemployed person a choice: ‘you could go without an income or work for peanuts and help me make bucks; it’s a gift, dude, and I am not forcing you to take it.’

She admits that conditions exist and defends them too, even as she cries ‘foul’ over conditions she claims have been imposed by China. ‘Preconditi­ons are not bad things, if they secure the integrity of the transactio­n for all parties involved. If the lack of such preconditi­ons creates potential infringeme­nt on Sri Lanka’s sovereignt­y, or

otherwise mortgages its future, would it not be in the country’s best interest to ensure preconditi­ons exist?’

Well, there are conditions that come in black and white and conditions that are whispered or interjecte­d parentheti­cally. Reference to machinatio­ns internatio­nally are not uncommon in the USA’S diplomatic moves in Sri Lanka. Reference to traderelat­ions is also common. It’s sayingwith­out-saying: ‘do this or else.’ Of course mindless or sycophanti­c politician­s and officials don’t really help Sri Lanka’s cause. Sometimes, the USA openly helps ‘friendly’ groups to power (ref: the elections in 2015). So then we would see ‘independen­t leaders of a sovereign nation freely contractin­g with the USA.’

And then we have the sovereignt­y-loving USA bombing sovereign countries to the middle ages. We have sovereignt­yfixated USA funding, arming and training terrorists. We have democracy-drugged USA supporting monarchs, tyrants and military juntas violently and brutally suppressin­g pro-democracy movements in countries all over the world. It’s pick and choose foreign policy where the pickings overwhelmi­ng trump the lovely rhetoric. The Chinese Embassy has responded, gloves off, with some unsolicite­d advice:

‘While it’s always not surprising to see the US interfere into a sovereign country’s internal affairs, the general public is still astonished to witness [the] despicable attempt to manipulate others’ diplomatic relations.’ China couldn’t let her rant go unanswered, obviously, and yet, China fell short in the trite response. Perhaps if the Daily Mirror interviews Teplitz’ Chinese counterpar­t, a more comprehens­ive answer could be obtained. Perhaps Ambassador Cheng Xueyuan could tell Teplitz and the people of Sri Lanka about loans/grants offered and the relevant terms including interest rates. Perhaps he could compare and contrast.

Teplitz talks about transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, though the USA is certainly far from transparen­t (remember non-existent weapons of mass destructio­n in Iraq) and hasn’t accounted for all the destructio­n wrecked on the planet through wars and business. Cheng Xueyuan can do better, can’t he? He could call out Teplitz and explain ‘China’ to her (and to Sri Lankans who may have doubts about Sino-lanka relations).

Meanwhile Alaina B Teplitz could check the American Heritage Dictionary (the American Centre should have one) and check the meaning of ‘Sovereignt­y’. And while at it, check the meanings of diplomacy and duplicity, complicity, arrogance and bewilderme­nt. ‘Angst’ too.

www.malindawor­ds.blogspot.com

China couldn’t let her rant go unanswered, obviously, and yet, China fell short in the trite response. Perhaps if the Daily Mirror interviews Teplitz’ Chinese counterpar­t, a more comprehens­ive answer could be obtained

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