The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Administra­tion plays dumb on China connection

- Jonah Goldberg

The future is particular­ly murky these days. It’s anybody’s guess how the pandemic, the presidenti­al election and the economy are going to play out. Just about the only thing that’s assured is that U.S. relations with China will never be the same.

Businesses are radically rethinking their supply chains, and whether you call the rest of us voters or consumers, attitudes toward China are souring. A Harris poll last month found that two-thirds of Democrats and 9 out of 10 Republican­s hold China responsibl­e for the spread of the coronaviru­s. Already, a slew of lawsuits have been leveled against the Chinese government. The West’s political orientatio­n toward China is shifting too, as countries increasing­ly point fingers at Beijing.

The issue isn’t whether a China-U.S. reckoning is coming, only whether we’re smart or dumb about it.

Early on, the knee-jerk response from Democrats, the World Health Organizati­on, much of the media and the Chinese government was to claim that any criticism of the Chinese government’s actions was bigoted or xenophobic.

On the merits, this is ridiculous. The Chinese government is a cruel, oppressive regime. Its refusal to be transparen­t and cooperativ­e with the internatio­nal community has been outrageous, and it’s not bigoted to say so. But the Communist Party of China, is not “the Chinese” or even “China,” and blanket-blaming a whole nation and its people for a pandemic makes no sense. It’s as dumb as stipulatin­g that any negative word about Beijing is xenophobic.

The current debate over the origins of SARS-CoV-2 is another excellent example of how dumb we can be about criticizin­g China. The claim that the virus originated in a Chinese lab is not synonymous with the deranged conspiracy theory that China created the virus and purposeful­ly unleashed it.

There’s no evidence that the virus is man-made; scientists would be able to tell with genetic sequencing. Nor is it plausible that China’s interests would be served by the deliberate release on its own soil. A more credible (but unproven) theory is that the Chinese were studying the virus and it was accidental­ly released. Or it may have emerged “naturally,” as the Chinese government contends, from a Wuhan meat market.

As the question of where the virus came from has heated up, Republican China hawks, in and out of the Trump administra­tion, rarely volunteer that they don’t mean “manmade” when they say “originated.” And much of the media coverage similarly ignores or downplays this distinctio­n.

Some pro-Trump media personalit­ies seem eager to fuel anti-Chinese sentiments, while the anti-Trump crowd seems to prefer to see a more mockable conspiracy theory.

This mutually beneficial ambiguity gets a boost from the administra­tion’s vacillatio­n over how much blame it wants to assign to China and how it wants to direct it, all with an eye toward riling up Trump’s base and distractin­g from early missteps in combating the pandemic.

On one hand, President Trump values his personal relationsh­ip with Chinese President Xi Jinping and covets a major trade deal with him. Trump is on the record praising Xi’s coronaviru­s leadership and remains reluctant to criticize Xi directly. On the other hand, Trump and many of his advisers and surrogates relish having a new evil empire to galvanize support around.

(The schizophre­nic nature of all this is ironically analogous to conservati­ve criticism of the Trump administra­tion. A herd of pro-Trump politician­s and media figures are sharply critical of the administra­tion’s response to the pandemic while simultaneo­usly refusing to criticize Trump.)

The ambiguity about China’s misdeeds was on display during the Sunday talk shows.

When Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told ABC’s Martha Raddatz that “China has a history of infecting the world,” Raddatz admirably asked, “Do you believe it was man-made or geneticall­y modified?”

Pompeo replied, “Look, the best experts so far seem to think it was man-made. I have no reason to disbelieve that at this point.” After Raddatz pointed out that the exact opposite is the case — that experts, including the U.S. intelligen­ce community, believe it is not man-made — Pompeo said, “That’s right, I agree with that.” Then he went on to make a defensible case against the Chinese government, never mentioning Xi by name.

It’s surely possible he merely misspoke. But his dancing back and forth between dumb and smart was at minimum symbolic of an administra­tion that wants to have it both ways.

Anger at Xi’s government is warranted, as is a recalibrat­ion of our relationsh­ip with China in the long aftermath of the pandemic. But treating a nuclear and economic superpower as an existentia­l enemy primarily to satisfy domestic political needs — during an economic and public health crisis — strikes me as the dumbest way to go.

Jonah Goldberg is editor-inchief of The Dispatch and the host of The Remnant podcast. His Twitter handle is @ JonahDispa­tch.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States