The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

China is outsmartin­g the U.S. in transporta­tion

- Jim Cameron

Which is the No. 1 country in the world for transporta­tion? Certainly not the United States. Not even countries in the European Union. No, you have to look farther east, as Marco Polo did in 1271, to find the future — China.

I’m so tired of ignorant Americans chanting “we’re number one,” when we are not. Not in health care, education and clearly not when it comes to using transporta­tion to bolster our world trade.

Compare our crumbling interstate highway system, much of it built during the Eisenhower administra­tion, to China’s superhighw­ays, twice the length of our own.

Or look at our decaying railroads versus the 15,000 miles of high-speed rail on the Chinese mainland, making Amtrak’s Acela look like a toy train (145 mph versus 220 mph, one train for 300 passengers per hour versus China’s 1,000-passenger trains departing every 15 minutes).

We keep hearing of the Trump administra­tion’s plans for rebuilding our infrastruc­ture, but nothing ever comes of it. We pay lip service to that crucial investment but never appropriat­e it as the priority it is.

Meanwhile, China keeps spending $300 billion a year on its roads, rails and ports, much of that money coming from bargain-loving American consumers. Crucially, part of that investment is focusing overseas, creating a new Silk Road to markets in Europe and Africa.

Beijing has promised $8 trillion in loans to developing countries to build deep water ports and rail terminals to service China’s 1,000-plus container ships delivering its products overseas. Compare that to the U.S.’s merchant marine fleet, just 175 American-owned vessels.

China has invested heavily in the port city of Gwadar Pakistan, linked to western China by rail. And in the tiny African nation of Djibouti, positioned strategica­lly at the mouth of the Red Sea, China not only built and owns the superport there but has establishe­d its first overseas military base there with 400 troops.

Djibouti is just a toe-hold in Africa, but the port is connected by a Chinese-built railroad to nearby landlocked Ethiopia, one of the wealthier countries in Africa and anxious to acquire Chinese-made products.

Of course, China is only doing what other empirebuil­ding countries like Great Britain did in the 1800s — issuing loans to countries that they’ll never be able to repay while providing lucrative markets for their products. Kind of a lose-lose situation for the debtor markets. When Pakistan and Djibouti can’t repay those Chinese loans, use your imaginatio­n to guess what they’ll have to give up instead.

To protect those Chinesebui­lt ports and megaships, China’s People’s Liberation Navy is enjoying rapid growth, soon to rival the U.S. Navy’s capabiliti­es in the Pacific. By 2030 they will have 530 warships and submarines.

Even the land route from China to Europe is being revived with rail. There are now three trains a day departing the industrial and technology hub at Xian traveling Marco Polo’s old route west through Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Georgia carrying containers filled with electronic­s and textiles.

The transconti­nental journey takes about two weeks but is cheaper than air and faster than shipping. It’s not a bullet train, just efficient low cost transporta­tion through 60 countries with 5 billion potential customers.

So while the Trump administra­tion battles China with tariffs and empty rhetoric (like calling COVID-19 “Kung Flu”), the Chinese leadership is playing the long game. We are not only getting outspent by Beijing, but outsmarted.

 ?? STR / AFP/Getty Images ?? A train which can run at speeds up to 185 miles per hour goes on a trial run in Shanghai on May 11, 2011.
STR / AFP/Getty Images A train which can run at speeds up to 185 miles per hour goes on a trial run in Shanghai on May 11, 2011.
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