Otago Daily Times

The West must come to grips with the question of China

Xi Jinping’s expansioni­st policies abroad and dictatorsh­ip at home make pressing the need for new geopolitic­al strategies, writes The Observer.

-

HOW to deal with China is the biggest geopolitic­al challenge facing Britain and the Western democracie­s in 2021 — and one to which they have, as yet, supplied no coherent answer. China’s influence is growing rapidly around the world. It is predicted to overtake the United States as the biggest economy by 2028. Its politician­s, diplomats and military chiefs exhibit the bullish assertiven­ess of a new imperial superpower. This, they believe, is China’s moment.

At the same time, China is increasing­ly distrusted and disliked. A recent Pew global attitudes survey found negative views to be at an alltime high in Germany, South Korea and other advanced economies. Nearly threequart­ers of Americans and Britons view China unfavourab­ly, up from 35% and 16% respective­ly in 2002. Trust in China’s president, Xi Jinping, ‘‘to do the right thing in world affairs’’ has plummeted.

China’s overweenin­g ambition and this concomitan­t rise in hostility are both relatively new. In Britain’s case, it is only five years since David

Cameron hailed the dawn of a ‘‘golden era’’. Back then, it seemed China’s strength, measured in hitech, investment and trade, could be safely harnessed to the UK’s advantage. Such collaborat­ion, it was fondly believed, would ultimately hasten China’s transition from oneparty state to democracy.

The bursting of this bubble in 2020 was swift and painful. The sheer horror of the pandemic inevitably harmed China’s reputation. Yet the inimical actions of the Chinese Communist party (CCP) in playing down the initial outbreak in Wuhan, thwarting legitimate WHO investigat­ions, penalising Australia for demanding an independen­t inquiry and exploiting the crisis commercial­ly and politicall­y were more damaging still.

Grieving citizens in Wuhan have been intimidate­d and threatened by police for questionin­g official handling of the Covid crisis. Zhang Zhan, a citizen journalist who reported on the early stages of the Wuhan outbreak, was jailed last week for four years for ‘‘picking quarrels and provoking trouble’’. Statecontr­olled media continue to ensure inconvenie­nt facts are suppressed.

A second phenomenon was central to China’s 2020 fall from grace: the CCP’s ever more open contempt for democratic freedoms and human rights. Each day seemed to bring fresh evidence of its arrogant insoucianc­e, whether it was unbelievab­le denials of torture and forced sterilisat­ion in labour camps in Xinjiang, renewed repression in Tibet or the persecutio­n of Hongkonger­s opposed to oppressive security laws.

Xi’s ruthless consolidat­ion of power around himself has thrown an unforgivin­g spotlight on the state’s Orwellian intrusions into the domestic lives of its citizens. One example is the way the ubiquitous messaging app Weixin (WeChat) is used to monitor private conversati­ons, censor key words or phrases and report suspect users to the police. In Xi’s cowardly new world, even the most innocent Winstons are guilty until the party deems otherwise.

Such developmen­ts also induced a growing realisatio­n that the behaviour of this nouveau riche superpower is not so very different from that of the empires that preceded it. Putupon neighbours such as Taiwan, Vietnam and the Philippine­s can testify to Beijing’s bullying. China almost started a border war with India last year. It still might. Its gunboats routinely flout internatio­nal law in the South China Sea.

Nonaligned developing countries that traditiona­lly viewed China as a benign ally now have reasons to reconsider. Xi’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative, a $US1 trillion ($NZ1.375 trillion) global infrastruc­ture and investment project, is reportedly caught in a cash crunch. American researcher­s say lending by two Chinese statecontr­olled banks plunged from

$75 billion in 2016 to $4 billion in 2019. Pandemichi­t countries in Africa and elsewhere are scrambling to renegotiat­e Chinese debt.

In 2020, Donald Trump tried hard to blame China for everything from Covid to factory closures. His scapegoati­ng was cynical and unfair. Likewise, Boris Johnson, bending to US pressure, abruptly turned against tech giant Huawei, supposedly on security grounds. Some analysts say there is more than a whiff of calculated Cold War ‘‘reds under the bed’’ scaremonge­ring in Western behaviour. They have a point.

Yet there is little doubt 2021 will see concerted Western pushback. Measures under discussion range from sanctions on individual­s to bans on Chinese investment in strategic industries and new laws linking twoway trade to human rights. Joe Biden, who deems China a ‘‘strategic competitor’’, is proposing an alliance of democracie­s to counter its global influence. Like Britain, the US plans another policy ‘‘tilt’’ towards the IndoPacifi­c.

Much of the Western opprobrium heaped on Beijing stems from of its own actions and is thoroughly deserved. A potentiall­y dangerous crisis can be avoided if Xi steps back. It is in his interests to do so. More than other factors, Xi’s aggressive­ly nationalis­t, expansive policies abroad and Maolike dictatorsh­ip at home have fuelled the deteriorat­ion in relations. The ‘‘performanc­e legitimacy’’ calculatio­ns that keep the CCP in power suggest he think again.

Xi has overreache­d. He should drop the big man act and dial things down.

But Britain and its partners must be similarly clearheade­d. The West simply cannot afford a second cold war. It must find ways to work with China, not fight it. — Guardian News and Media

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping.
PHOTO: REUTERS Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand