The Sunday Guardian

China Dream: Xi needs a wake-up call

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Xi cannot hope to turn his Dream into a reality without an honestly ‘benign and peaceful’ engagement with other nations, mindful of their sensitivit­ies.

China’s White Papers on National Defence traditiona­lly start by referring to the country’s “benign and peaceful rise”. The refrain is also repeated by Chinese diplomats at all internatio­nal interactio­ns. But the actions of the country tell another story. While this wordsactio­ns mismatch has long been observed, most nations chose to ignore it, lulled by their economic interests. They saw greater prudence in hedging, and hoping for the best.

That luxury now seems to be lost owing to a blatant display of Chinese belligeren­ce across theatres—in South China Sea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan, South-east Asia, India, to name a few. The fact that China is behaving thus even as nations are grappling with an unpreceden­ted health emergency caused by Covid-19, which too originated in China, has revealed the country in a new light. With nations already under socioecono­mic-medical stress, China’s territoria­l heckling is forcing them to shed their hesitation to call out/counter its behaviour.

India’s perspectiv­e on China, for example, appears to have changed profoundly after the violent incident on 15 June 2020 when 20 Indian soldiers lost their lives while resisting Chinese brutality at the Line of Actual Control (LAC). For New Delhi, this became the proverbial last straw to decide to reorient its China strategy. While the exact contours of this will take shape in coming months and years, a hardening of position seems inevitable.

Similar changes in stance are visible in other countries too for varied reasons. Besides resistance being evoked by China’s stomping on others’ territoria­l toes, yet another factor re-casting its image is the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Seven years since its launch, recipient nations are getting disillusio­ned by the “win-win” narrative that China peddled to sell the projects. They have discovered that all terms of engagement tilt substantia­lly in favour of China—contracts flow to Chinese companies; Chinese labour gets employment; terms of loans and conditiona­lities favour Chinese financial institutio­ns; host nation is drained of its natural resources; and its market is flooded with Chinese exports. So, while the BRI serves as an investment initiative for China, it provides questionab­le developmen­t benefits for the recipient populace at large.

China’s BRI was premised on the logic of globalisat­ion. But the pandemic has exacerbate­d fears of dependence on China-based supply chains. Hence, nations are beginning to look inward or look for alternativ­es. In India, for instance, the Prime Minister’s call for self-reliance resonated across the nation. It acquired further appeal as China’s actions in Ladakh galvanised Indians to shun Chinese goods as coming from the “enemy”. However big or small the economic consequenc­es of this, it neverthele­ss signifies for China a loss of goodwill of and opportunit­y in a billion plus people just across the border. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) may want to shield its people from sensing their country’s loss of image owing to its role in the pandemic and its brash diplomatic, informatio­n, military and economic (DIME) actions, but this will not be easy given global media’s reach today.

Soon after assuming Presidency, Xi Jinping gave his country the “China Dream”. It rested on four pillars: “Strong China (economical­ly, politicall­y, diplomatic­ally, scientific­ally, militarily); Civilized China (equity and fairness, rich culture, high morals); Harmonious China (amity among social classes); Beautiful China (healthy environmen­t, low pollution).” The idea was to rejuvenate the nation and ignite a collective aspiration for a moderately prosperous nation by 2020 and a fully developed one by 2049.

Today’s China, however, does not appear anywhere near the associated adjectiveb­enchmarks it set for itself. Engaged in politico-military face-offs with India, United States, Japan and many small South-east Asian nations, all of whom have pushed back, the image of Strong China has suffered. The actions have revealed a lack of strategic thinking that undercuts the traditiona­l belief that China is a “deep thinking” country with a Civilized sense of statecraft. Also, the country looks far from Harmonious given its rancorous engagement­s with citizens in Xinjiang and Hong Kong.

Xi Jinping could articulate the China Dream because he inherited strong fundamenta­ls. Three decades of consistent growth had lifted 700 million citizens out of poverty. Meanwhile, intelligen­t actions and “benign” postures had rehabilita­ted China into the global order. Xi used this perch smartly to distil traditiona­l Chinese thought into a policy of national rejuvenati­on. Sustained economic growth and unquestion­ed CCP legitimacy are critical for achieving the Dream. However, both planks seem under stress. Meanwhile, his aggressive and abrasive actions across the DIME spectrum have rubbed many countries the wrong way and he may end up squanderin­g the gains of his forerunner­s.

Internatio­nal opinion about

China is causing a realignmen­t of interests and emergence of a sense of solidarity, especially amongst middle powers that harbour misgivings about Beijing’s rise. These engagement­s may crystallis­e into loose partnershi­ps or hard military alliances. Much of how they evolve will depend on China’s behaviour. And, the form they take would have implicatio­ns for the China Dream.

Xi cannot hope to turn his Dream into a reality without an honestly “benign and peaceful” engagement with other nations, mindful of their sensitivit­ies. Merely sleep-talking platitudes will not suffice. China’s recent actions have been a wake-up call for many nations. It may be time for Xi too to wake up to the emerging reality that will impact the fate of his Dream.

Manpreet Sethi is Distinguis­hed Fellow, Centre for Air Power Studies, New Delhi.

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