Houston Chronicle

Czechs give a lesson on dealing with China

- By Dalibor Rohac Rohac is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. This op-ed was originally published by the Washington Post.

This week, a senior Czech politician, Milos Vystrcil, visited Taiwan and delivered a powerful speech to the parliament in Taipei, echoing John F. Kennedy’s “Ich bin ein Berliner” — or, as Vystrcil put it, “I am Taiwanese.”

The reaction of Chinese state media and the government was instant. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, on a visit to Germany, threatened to make Vystrcil, the speaker of the upper house of the Czech parliament, “pay a heavy price for his shortsight­ed behavior and political opportunis­m.”

The affair, which has turned the Czech Republic into the European Union’s most outspoken critic of Chinese hegemony, is refreshing at a time when many reflexivel­y associate post-communist Central Europe with “illiberal democracy” and a flagging commitment to Western alliances.

Vystrcil’s sojourn in Taiwan follows an extraordin­ary reversal of the ChineseCze­ch relationsh­ip. The Czech Republic’s current president, Milos Zeman, has visited China five times. When Xi Jinping arrived in Prague for a state visit in March 2016, he received a grander and more deferentia­l welcome than any head of state in the Czech Republic’s post-1993 history. That made for a stark contrast with the stance set by the Czech Republic’s first president, Vaclav Havel, who died in 2011 and whose frequent displays of friendship with Tibet’s Dalai Lama left Chinese officials apoplectic.

Czech critics of China, who pointed out the regime’s poor human rights record and treatment of religious minorities, were long dismissed as naive. Moral posturing should not stand in the way of the coming investment and trade boom led by China, the pragmatic argument went. Spearheade­d by the investment conglomera­te CEFC Group, whose chairman Ye Jianming even served as Zeman’s economic adviser, the Chinese heavily advertised their economic presence in the country.

Yet the promised cornucopia of business opportunit­ies never materializ­ed. CEFC might have made conspicuou­s investment­s into football clubs and breweries, but Taiwan-based companies alone have invested 14 times as much in Czech manufactur­ing than China. It turns out the naive ones weren’t the followers of Havel’s principled approach to China but those who trusted Chinese promises.

Ye’s fall from grace with the Beijing regime in 2018 weakened the network of business interests around Zeman. Czech public opinion has been critical of China, too. In a poll conducted last November, China’s favorabili­ty among Czechs trailed that of E.U. member states, the United States, Turkey and even Russia. Seventyone percent of Czechs blame Beijing’s secretiven­ess for the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The disillusio­nment with China started at the city level. In early 2019, the mayor of Prague, Zdenek Hrib, refused to “disinvite” a Taiwanese representa­tive from a meeting with the diplomatic corps, ignoring escalating Chinese pressure. Later that year, he ended Prague’s partnershi­p with Beijing over a dispute on the one-China policy, which the agreement between the two cities included and Beijing refused to drop. In response, the Chinese threatened to withhold funds for a Prague soccer club they had purchased in 2015. In January 2020, Hrib signed a partnershi­p agreement between Prague and Taipei.

Vystrcil’s trip to Taiwan was originally supposed to be taken earlier this year by his predecesso­r, Jaroslav Kubera. The reaction of the Chinese embassy and of China-friendly politician­s to Kubera’s decision bordered on extortion. Shortly after, Kubera died of a heart attack, which his family blames on Chinese pressure.

China’s ham-handed diplomacy has now led to exactly the opposite of what Beijing intended. The foreign ministry dismissed Chinese pleas to bring Hrib and Kubera in line. Instead, the Czechs were among the first to stop issuing Schengen visas in China after the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s. In May, the Czech government and the Trump administra­tion signed a joint declaratio­n on the security of 5G networks — implicitly aimed at Chinese tech giants Huawei and ZTE. Other than a lot of huffing and puffing, there has been no retaliatio­n.

The Czech Republic proves that the costs of a principled, values-based posture toward China are much smaller than the proponents of Europe’s current waffling between talk of “partnershi­p” and “systemic” rivalry. E.U.-wide, Chinese investment accounts for less than 1 percent of total foreign direct investment, trailing Hong Kong and Singapore. Czechs are waking up. How long will it take the rest of Europe to do the same?

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