Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Democracy and decency

- By Chris Patten, exclusivel­y for the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020. www.project-syndicate.org

LONDON – We have long been dangerousl­y slow to recognise, let alone resist, the underminin­g of liberal democracie­s by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s post-KGB thugocracy and China’s more economical­ly successful version of aggressive Leninism.

I saw the Russian side of the problem up close when I was the European Union’s commission­er for external affairs from 1999 to 2004. Too many European countries, led by Silvio Berlusconi’s Italy, thought that they could do business with Putin, and perhaps even turn him into a geostrateg­ic ally. Meanwhile, Putin was presiding over a regime that sought to overturn the post-World War II internatio­nal order and to fracture both the EU and the transatlan­tic alliance. Putin’s regime bullied neighbors, invaded other countries, and murdered its critics even on foreign soil.

Moreover, Putin and his cronies understood very clearly liberal capitalism’s weak spot: the greed of those who were usually already rich. Just consider how much of London – property, businesses, and members of the political elite – Russian money bought in the 1990s and the aughts of this century. And Russian cyberwarfa­re and money have recently distorted both American and British politics, the latter most egregiousl­y during the 2016 Brexit referendum campaign.

Until recently, the Chinese threat was less widely noticed. But since the novel coronaviru­s began its deadly global rampage, President Xi Jinping has led a bruising campaign around Asia and the world to impose his regime’s interests on the rest of us. Asserting this plain truth does not amount to Sinophobia, as apologists for the ruling Communist Party of China want people to believe. The problem is the CPC itself, which currently has its most aggressive and hardline leaders since the Mao Zedong era.

Xi expressed his hostility to liberal values in the instructio­ns he issued to party, government, and military officials back in 2013. His “Communiqué on the Current State of the Ideologica­l Sphere” itemised everything, from press freedom to parliament­ary democracy, that could undermine communist rule.

Unhappily for Hong Kong, the city exemplifie­s most of the values that Xi hates. Despite China’s promise to respect these values after it regained sovereignt­y over Hong Kong in 1997, Xi has now caged the territory with a rule of fear, maintained by what Winston Churchill called the “odious apparatus” of a police state. The great China scholar Perry Link has compared the CPC’s control mechanism to “the anaconda in the chandelier”: at any moment it can drop and throttle you, but you never know when this will happen.

The assault on Hong Kong’s autonomy and rule of law, embodied in the hastily adopted security legislatio­n that China imposed on the territory at the end of June, is only one of Xi’s recent transgress­ions. In the last few months China has wielded its cosh from India to Australia, Canada to the South China Sea, and from Japan and Taiwan to Europe.

Of course, some who live in the world’s free societies – including the United Kingdom – claim that this isn’t happening, or that China is too important for us to stand up to it. The excuses for kowtowing come thick and fast. Because we can’t change China from the outside, why bother to denounce human-rights abuses like the regime’s eugenic barbarity toward Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang?

Other CPC apologists warn us not to poke the Chinese dragon at a time of worldwide economic distress, because we need its market. And what about Britain’s own behaviour toward China in the nineteenth century, or the other nasty regimes that we still do business with today? In fact, some of these “useful idiots” often seem to define our national interest by how much we accept its subordinat­ion to China’s.

But what will happen to the values that form the core of our political and cultural identity if we do not stand up for them? And is the UK still strong enough, on its own, to do so?

Here, I cannot recommend strongly enough Anne Applebaum’s recent book Twilight of Democracy: The Failure of Politics and the Parting of Friends. Advancing her arguments with eloquence and personal testimony, Applebaum passionate­ly decries the corrosion of liberal, open- society values in the last three decades. Her book is a practical reminder of what all democrats should have learned from reading Karl Popper’s magisteria­l The Open Society and Its Enemies, itself written in liberal democracy’s darkest hours during WWII.

By allowing Britain’s political identity to be subsumed in a narrow nostalgia for a nonexisten­t past – an inward-looking worldview nurtured by a ragbag of social media paranoias – many Brexit supporters have lost sight of the difference between right and wrong in world affairs. They have also cast aside our understand­ing that we need to work together with other liberal democracie­s to deal with bullies like China and Russia.

We must unite to defend the values that made the second half of the twentieth century so much better than its blood- soaked first half. Liberal societies – the United States under a president who believes in alliances, our EU allies, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and our Asian friends, including India, Japan, and South Korea – should be partners in defence of what we know is right.

In another extraordin­ary essay in The Atlantic criticisin­g senior US Republican Party politician­s’ collaborat­ion with a leader whom we know is wrong – President Donald Trump – Applebaum recalls the great Pole Władysław Bartoszews­ki. Imprisoned by both Nazis and Communists, Bartoszews­ki later served as foreign minister in two democratic Polish government­s after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

What had guided Bartoszews­ki through his brave and honourable life? It was not, he said, some big, abstract idea. It was a simple credo accessible to everyone: “just try to be decent.”

That seems to me pretty good advice for all democrats. It may be especially useful to heed it in the turbulent times that lie ahead.

Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong and a former EU commission­er for external affairs, is Chancellor of the University of Oxford.

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