National Post (National Edition)

`Wilful blindness' to communism

- JOHN ROBSON

CANADA CONTINUES TO BE IN DENIAL. — RUPA SUBRAMANYA

If you're wondering what it would take for the Trudeau administra­tion to get over its crush on Chinese communism, I have no idea. Especially once we learned that despite everything, the Natural Sciences and Engineerin­g Research Council is doing its best to pour our industrial secrets into the Politburo's pockets via … wait for it … Huawei. And by “despite everything” I mean massive evidence of the Chinese Communist Party's hostility to human rights and decency, including putting history's worst mass killer on their banknotes in case anyone was struggling with the concept of “brutal communist dictatorsh­ip and loving it.”

Periodical­ly I get heckled for saying “Trudeau administra­tion” not “Trudeau government.” But I cling to the quaint non-Xi Jinping concept of a separation of powers rather than a centrally directed, unified force for social change that can turn on a dime. And I'm glad that some within our state apparatus agree.

David Vigneault, director of the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service (CSIS), recently warned against Beijing's “strategy for geopolitic­al advantage on all fronts — economic, technologi­cal, political and military” that uses “all elements of state power to carry out activities that are a direct threat to our national security and sovereignt­y.” Back in November the Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent (CSE) fingered China as a leading cyber-menace. And CSIS and the CSE are part of our government.

So too, unfortunat­ely, is NSERC, which is currently trading our know-how for renminbi. Something major American and British universiti­es now refuse to do, while Australian­s grow uneasy. Not us, apparently.

My colleague Kelly McParland, quoting Vigneault, asked in exasperati­on, “You have to wonder how often knowledgea­ble people need to attest that China's is a dangerous, predatory and untrustwor­thy government before the fact of it begins to sink in and action is taken.” Instead the Trudeau administra­tion pussyfoots around genocide (what's an exterminat­ed minority between trading partners, plus Uighur is hard to pronounce), plays Olympic dodgeball and flirts with Huawei.

As you may know, I don't believe in conspiracy theories. I think they poison public discourse and am forever trying to explain to people that when someone says stuff you don't agree with and does stuff you don't agree with it's because they think stuff you don't agree with. But the Chinese Communist plan for world conquest isn't a plot. It's a plan.

Chinese officials don't go out of their way to advertise it when trying to wheedle something out of you. But see Document No. 9, a.k.a., the “Communiqué on the Current State of the Ideologica­l Sphere,” which was issued in 2012 with Chinese President Xi Jinping's backing.

It denounces seven things: constituti­onal democracy, including separation of powers, elections and an independen­t judiciary; universal values like Western human rights applying to China; civil society, as in anyone doing anything except through the Communist party; free markets; an independen­t press; “historical nihilism,” i.e., criticizin­g Mao Zedong for being an insane mass murderer; and questionin­g Chinese-style socialism, i.e., criticizin­g Xi for being one.

For opposing conspiracy theories I get called many names, including co-conspirato­r. But not “useful idiot.” They leave off the “useful.” Unlike China's leaders when it comes to Western politician­s who give them a free pass, such as outgoing Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil, who recently echoed Document No. 9 Point 3 in a Canada China Business Council video.

“It's not our role to go in and tell someone else they're wrong,” he said. “I'm proud to be a Canadian, but Chinese people are proud to be Chinese. And they have a way of doing things. Let's go learn.… And let us grow economic ties.” Never mind that they crush Hong Kong and commit mass slaughter. After all, Hitler and Stalin had a way they did things, too. And the Chinese way includes lucrative consultanc­ies and senior advisor posts.

The Politburo understand­s all too well that conceited people think arrangemen­ts that flatter and favour them represent the universe unfolding as it should. And it's easy and comforting to ignore threats. Back in the Cold War, people were forever insisting Leonid Brezhnev or Stalin weren't communists. Sure, they claimed to be, and imposed communism aggressive­ly wherever possible. But deep down they wanted peace, power, security or any dang thing you could name except communism. Like our Chinese buds.

Unfortunat­ely, Xi Jinping is as communist as Lenin or Mao. General secretary of the Chinese Communist Party. Commanding its immense private army and flying a red flag with five yellow stars. Need I go on?

Apparently so. Because if you asked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau whether Xi was a communist, he wouldn't admit it. He isn't given to answering even innocent questions, let alone awkward ones. And I'm not saying they have something on him. He's a fool on national security, as on economics, our constituti­onal order and practicall­y anything else you can think of.

Even so, this wilful blindness and misconduct is amazing. If he won't stop it, we must.

XI JINPING IS AS COMMUNIST AS LENIN OR MAO.

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