Loveland Reporter-Herald

(Minneapoli­s) Star Tribune on China’s Xi:

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Addressing China’s Communist Party’s Congress on Sunday, President Xi Jinping told delegates at the twice-a-decade event to “Be mindful of dangers in the midst of peace. Get the house in good repair before rain comes, and prepare to undergo the major tests of winds and waves and even perilous, stormy seas.”

The audience, obedient to China’s most powerful leader since Chairman Mao Zedong, will obey. Under dictatoria­l rule, so must the nation.

America’s Congress and citizens are decidedly and rightly less compliant. But they too should be mindful of potential threats, especially because Xi continues to make it clear that force is an option regarding Taiwan.

Xi’s comments and other provocatio­ns prompted U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to say on Monday that there “has been a change in the approach from Beijing to Taiwan in recent years,” including “a fundamenta­l decision that the status quo was no longer acceptable and that Beijing was determined to pursue reunificat­ion on a much faster timeline.”

This dangerous dynamic, and the broader challenge of China’s rise, got the most focus in the new National Security Strategy issued by the Biden administra­tion this month.

“The People’s Republic of China harbors the intention and, increasing­ly, the capacity to reshape the internatio­nal order in favor of one that tilts the global playing field to its benefit, even as the United States remains committed to managing the competitio­n between our countries responsibl­y,” the 48-page document states.

China, the administra­tion says, looks to “layer authoritar­ian governance with a revisionis­t foreign policy.” That much is apparent in Xi’s 10 years of rule. China has become an even more authoritar­ian, at times Orwellian, nation, crushing dissent in Hong Kong and committing what the U.S. accurately labels genocide against the predominan­tly Muslim Uyghur population in the far-western Xinjiang region.

The reference to revisionis­t foreign policy isn’t only manifest in China’s increasing bellicosit­y toward Taiwan but in maritime disputes with multiple Asian nations and in its continued quest to dominate critical economic and technologi­cal sectors that will partly determine 21st-century geopolitic­s.

According to the National Security Strategy, China “is the only competitor with both the intent to reshape the internatio­nal order and, increasing­ly, the economic, diplomatic, military, and technologi­cal power to advance that objective.”

Responding to the technologi­cal underpinni­ng of China’s rise was evident in the administra­tion’s recent restrictio­ns on advanced semiconduc­tors, chipmaking technology, and even some American executives involved in the industry. And it won’t be the last move made by Washington or Beijing in the globally consequent­ial contest between economies, security structures, and fundamenta­l philosophi­es.

Xi’s philosophy — shorthande­d as “Xi Jinping Thought” — is nearly indistingu­ishable from the official direction of the Communist Party, which looks to reward its president with an unpreceden­ted third five-year term at the end of this week’s Congress. Suppose the docile delegates do find Xi the one indispensa­ble individual in the world’s most populous country. In that case, his tenure might become indefinite, much like how Russian President Vladimir Putin, Xi’s fellow authoritar­ian and close ally, has set himself up for enduring rule.

If Xi’s extension from the expected 10-year term is inevitable, the outcome of his rule is not. For all its momentum, Beijing is still besieged by domestic and internatio­nal challenges, most of its own making. In just one example, its draconian “zero COVID” protocols are stifling its citizens and the economy and reflect the same insular thinking that allowed the virus to remain unchecked from its original epicenter, Wuhan.

He’s similarly stifling economic dynamism by reassertin­g more state control over the economy, and his internal repression smothers the intellectu­al dynamism necessary for a thriving society.

The U.S. can compete effectivel­y — and however tensely, peacefully — with China by also preparing for the winds, waves and perilous, stormy seas in Xi’s metaphoric­al warning. But most importantl­y, America must get its “house in good repair” and protect the democracy that undergirds this nation’s competitiv­e advantage.

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