Las Vegas Review-Journal

China doesn’t respect America anymore — for good reason

- Thomas Friedman Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.

Sometimes a comedian cuts through foreign policy issues better than any diplomat. Bill Maher did that recently with an epic rant on U.s.-china relations, nailing the most troubling contrast between the two countries: China can still get big things done. America, not so much.

For many of our political leaders, governing has become sports, entertainm­ent or just mindless tribal warfare. No wonder China’s leaders see us as a nation in imperial decline, living off the leftover fumes of American “exceptiona­lism.” I wish I could say they were all wrong.

“New Rule: You’re not going to win the battle for the 21st century if you are a ‘silly people.’ And Americans are a silly people,” Maher said. “That’s the classic phrase from ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ — when Lawrence tells his Bedouin allies that as long as they stay a bunch of squabbling tribes, they will remain ‘a silly people.’ …

“We all know China does bad stuff. They break promises about Hong Kong autonomy; they put Uyghurs in camps and punish dissent. And we don’t want to be that. But it’s got to be something between authoritar­ian government that tells everyone what to do and a representa­tive government that can’t do anything at all.”

Maher added: “On a national level, we’ve been having Infrastruc­ture Week every week since 2009, but we never do anything. Half the country is having a never-ending ‘woke’ competitio­n. … The other half believes we have to stop the lizard people, because they’re eating babies. … China sees a problem and they fix it. They build a dam. We debate what to rename it.”

Yes, China has huge problems. Its leaders are not 10 feet tall, but they are focused on real metrics of success. “China’s leaders are fierce but fragile,” argues James Mcgregor, the chairman of the consultanc­y APCO Worldwide, Greater China. “Precisely because they were not elected, they wake up every day scared of their own people, and that makes them very focused on performanc­e” — particular­ly around jobs, housing and clean air.

By contrast, many U.S. politician­s these days are elected from safe, gerrymande­red districts and seek to stay in power by just “performing” for their base with populist theatrics.

Whenever I point this out, critics on the far right or far left ridiculous­ly respond, “Oh, so you love China.” Actually, I am not interested in China. I care about America. My goal is to frighten us out of our complacenc­y by getting more Americans to understand that China can be really evil and really focused on educating its people and building its infrastruc­ture and adopting best practices in business and science and promoting government bureaucrat­s on merit — all at the same time. Condemning China for the former will have zero impact if we’re not its equal in all of the latter.

At last week’s Alaska meeting between the United States’ and China’s top diplomats, Chinese officials made it quite clear that they no longer fear our criticism, because they don’t respect us as they once did, and they don’t think the rest of the world does, either. Or as Yang Jiechi, China’s top foreign affairs policymake­r, baldly told his U.S. counterpar­ts: “The United States does not have the qualificat­ion … to speak to China from a position of strength.”

Surprised? Did you think the Chinese didn’t notice that our last president inspired his followers to ransack our Capitol; that a majority of his party did not recognize the results of our democratic election; that a member of our Congress believes that Jewish-run space lasers cause forest fires; that left-wing anarchists were allowed to take over a section of downtown Portland, creating havoc for months; that during the pandemic the U.S. printed money to help its consumers keep spending — much of it on Chinese-made goods — while China printed money to invest in even more infrastruc­ture, and that gun violence in America is out control?

You think they didn’t notice?

Which brings me to the 2022 Winter Olympics, scheduled for China.

A rising number of voices are beginning to suggest that we boycott the China Games. I have sympathy with that call, as we watch China crush the infrastruc­ture of democracy in Hong Kong and use internment camps to brutally suppress Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang with utter indifferen­ce to world opinion. How do we just ignore all that and focus on ice skating?

But here’s the thing: The competitio­n that we really need to focus on winning is not the 2022 Olympics but the 2025 Olympics.

Oh, you haven’t heard of the 2025 Olympics? They are not on your NBC calendar? Well, they are on Chinese President Xi Jinping’s calendar. Xi unilateral­ly declared the 2025 Olympics in 2015 and suggested that there would be only two competitor­s: China and America. It was an initiative that Xi’s government called “Made in China 2025.”

It was a 10-year plan to modernize China’s manufactur­ing base by massively investing government resources to dominate what Xi defined as the 10 key hightech industries of the 21st century, and he was implicitly daring America to go headto-head.

The industries include artificial intelligen­ce; electric cars and other new energy vehicles; 5G telecommun­ications; robotics; new agricultur­al technologi­es; aerospace and maritime engineerin­g; synthetic materials; and biomedicin­e.

And just a few weeks ago, when China issued its 14th five-year plan, to run through 2025, Xi basically doubled down on his government’s investment in “innovation-driven developmen­t.” Message to America: We will try to beat you at your own game so we will never, ever again be dependent on you for high-tech goods.

My message to China is: Be careful. Some of your diplomats sound awfully arrogant. As the proverb says: “Pride goeth before destructio­n, and a haughty spirit before a fall.” America still excels in a lot of areas.

But my message to my fellow Americans is: We now have to return to and commit even more to what was our formula for success.

And that is: educating our workforce up to and beyond whatever technology demands; building the world’s best infrastruc­ture of ports, roads and telecommun­ications; attracting the world’s most energetic and high-iq immigrants to enrich our universiti­es and start new businesses; legislatin­g the best regulation­s to incentiviz­e risk-taking while curbing recklessne­ss; and steadily increasing government-funded research to push out the boundaries of science so our entreprene­urs can turn the most promising new ideas into startups.

On this front there is some hope, noted Mcgregor: “Congress has begun sorting through the hundreds of China bills introduced in the last Congress to forge bipartisan legislatio­n to invest in science and technology, R&D and U.S. leadership in the same technologi­es that China has declared as the next frontiers.” And President Joe Biden is talking about spending trillions!

Nothing could be more important. Because good ideas — respect for human rights, democracy, an independen­t judiciary, free markets, protection for minorities — don’t just win in the world because they are good ideas. They diffuse and are embraced because others see them producing justice, power, wealth, opportunit­y and stability in countries that practice them.

American ideals infused every global institutio­n in the 20th century because we were powerful, and we were powerful because more often than not we implemente­d our ideals.

But, if we as a country continue to act as we have of late — “dumb as we want to be” — then our power will be diminished and with it the power of our ideals. We will have steadily less influence on China and on the world at large no matter how loudly we chant “USA, USA, USA.” So, let’s make sure we win the Olympics that count.

 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN / POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Secretary of State Antony Blinken, second from right, is joined by national security adviser Jake Sullivan, right, to speak with Chinese Communist Party foreign affairs chief Yang Jiechi, second from left, and China’s State Councilor Wang Yi, left, March 18 at the opening session of U.s.-china talks at the Captain Cook Hotel in Anchorage, Alaska.
FREDERIC J. BROWN / POOL PHOTO VIA AP Secretary of State Antony Blinken, second from right, is joined by national security adviser Jake Sullivan, right, to speak with Chinese Communist Party foreign affairs chief Yang Jiechi, second from left, and China’s State Councilor Wang Yi, left, March 18 at the opening session of U.s.-china talks at the Captain Cook Hotel in Anchorage, Alaska.

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