Newsweek

“The Era of Hope Is Over”

The propaganda battle between China and the U.S. is heating up over everything from COVID-19 to tech theft.

- BY BILL POWELL

THE PROPAGANDA BATTLE BETWEEN CHINA AND THE U.S. IS HEATING UP OVER EVERYTHING FROM COVID-19 TO TECH THEFT — AND AMERICA IS NOT WINNING

It had been a bedrock belief of U.S. policy for 40 years that it was possible to bring the People’s Republic of China smoothly into the family of nations—and now, one of the architects of that policy was finally acknowledg­ing the obvious.

In a speech six months ago, former World Bank President and Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick reminded listeners of his own famous 2005 call on Beijing to become a “responsibl­e stakeholde­r.” He ticked off a few of the ways in which China had done just that: voting for sanctions on North Korea and limiting missile exports, for instance. But then he acknowledg­ed that the project had gone off the rails.

“Xi Jinping’s leadership,” Zoellick said of the PRC president, “has prioritize­d the Communist Party and restricted openness and debate in China. China hurts itself by forging a role model for dystopian societies of intrusive technologi­es and reeducatio­n camps.” He added: “The rule of law and openness upon which Hong Kong’s ‘One Country, Two Systems’ model rests may topple or be trampled. If China crushes Hong Kong, China will wound itself— economical­ly and psychologi­cally—for a long time.”

Zoellick had that right. A global pandemic has brought relations between Beijing and Washington to its lowest point since China reopened to the world in 1978—even lower even than in those extraordin­ary days following the 1989 Tiananmen massacre.

What had been a more confrontat­ional, trade-centric relationsh­ip since the start of President Donald Trump’s term, has now descended into bitterness in the midst of a presidenti­al reelection campaign Trump fears is slipping away. Any chance that the pandemic might spur Washington and Beijing to set difference­s aside and work together on treatments and other aspects of the pandemic—such as how exactly it started—is long gone. On May 13, the FBI announced an investigat­ion into Chinese hackers that it believes are targeting American health care and pharmaceut­ical companies in an effort to steal intellectu­al property relating to coronaviru­s medicines. Without specifying how, the Bureau said the hacks may be disrupting progress on medical research.

“CHINA 2025 IS ALL ABOUT REPLACING ANYTHING THAT AMERICAN COMPANIES SELL OF ANY VALUE, JUST TAKING THE AMERICANS OUT OF THAT.”

President Trump had already made it clear just how bitter he is at Beijing on May 7 when meeting with reporters at the White House. “We went through the worst attack we’ve ever had on our country,” he said, “this is the worst attack we’ve ever had. This is worse than Pearl Harbor, this is worse than the World Trade Center. There’s never been an attack like this. And it should have never happened. Could’ve been stopped at the source. Could’ve been stopped in China...and it wasn’t.”

The comparison of a virus, which originated in China and then spread globally, to the two most infamous attacks in U.S. history, stunned Trump’s foreign policy advisers—even Beijing hard-liners. It will be impossible, U.S. officials acknowledg­e, for Trump to soften his hard line toward Beijing should he win reelection in November.

The president is right to reach for historical metaphor, given the weight of the moment. But the aftermath of the Wuhan outbreak more closely resembles the building of the Berlin Wall in 1961 than either Pearl Harbor or 9/11. What follows will not be a sharp burst of savage conflict, but a global scramble to shape the new order rising from the rubble of old. As with the Wall, the forces that led to the dispute over the Wuhan outbreak were unleashed years before the events that made history. And the change they represent is likely irreversib­le, no matter who sits in the White House.

Though Joe Biden has on occasion downplayed Beijing’s rise as a threat to the U.S., and for sure would not be so rhetorical­ly reckless as Trump, his foreign policy advisers acknowledg­e there’s no turning back. Since Xi Jinping came to power seven years ago, China has imprisoned more than one million ethnic Muslims in “reeducatio­n” camps, imposed an ever-tightening surveillan­ce state on its own citizens and cracked down on all dissent. Overseas, Beijing’s goal is to entice authoritar­ian regimes in the developing world to view it as a “model’’ to be followed. And, of course, selling the technology those leaders need to create their own surveillan­ce states.

“No one on either side of the political aisle in Washington is ignoring any of that,” says one Biden adviser. “The era of hope that China might evolve into a normal

country is over. No one with any brains denies that.”

That notion has fully settled in here. Sixty-six percent of Americans now have a negative view of China, according to a recent Pew Research poll. At the same time, in China, state-owned media and a government-controlled internet whip up nationalis­m and anti-americanis­m to levels unseen since the U.S. accidental­ly bombed Beijing’s embassy in Belgrade during the Balkan wars in 1999.

The world’s two most powerful nations are now competing in every realm possible: militarily, for one, with constant cat-and-mouse games in the South China Sea and cyber warfare. The competitio­n to dominate the key technologi­es of the 21st century is intensifyi­ng, too. This type of rivalry hasn’t been seen since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.

Thus, a growing number of policymake­rs, current and former, and China hands old and new, acknowledg­e the obvious: Cold War 2.0 is here. To the generation of Americans who remember duckand-cover drills in elementary school at the peak of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, the new global struggle will look very different. It will also, many U.S. strategist­s believe, be much harder for the West to wage successful­ly. “Another long twilight struggle may be upon us,” says former Pentagon China planner Joseph Bosco, “and it may make the last one look easy.”

Now, U.S. policymake­rs are trying to discern what that struggle will look like, and how to win it.

“CALIFORNIA BAD, SHANGHAI GOOD IS NOT A FORMULATIO­N THAT’S GOING TO HOLD UP WELL IN THE POST - COVID ENVIRONMEN­T

New-age War

The first major difference in The coming cold War with Beijing is in the military realm. Beijing spends far less than the U.S. on its military, though its annual rate of spending is fast increasing. According to the Center For Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington think tank, Beijing spent $50 billion on its military in 2001, the year it joined the World Trade Organizati­on. In 2019 it spent $240 billion, compared to the U.S.’ $633 billion. For a few decades at least, the U.s.-china military competitio­n will look vastly different from the hair-trigger nuclear standoff with Moscow. Instead, China will seek asymmetric advantages, rooted where possible in technology. It has, for example, already developed an arsenal of hypersonic missiles, which fly low and are hard for radar to detect. They are known as “carrier killers” because of their ability to strike U.S. aircraft carriers in the Pacific from long distances. These weapons could be critical in “area denial” operations, as military planners put it. For example, should the day come when Beijing seeks to take Taiwan by force, hypersonic­s could keep U.S. carriers far from the island nation once a war began.

China’s pursuit of preeminenc­e across a wide range of technologi­es, in areas like quantum computing and artificial intelligen­ce, are central to the economic clash with the U.S. But they also have significan­t military components. Since the 1990s, when Chinese military planners were stunned by the U.S.’ lightning victory in the first Iraq war, they have consistent­ly focused their efforts on developing war-fighting capabiliti­es relevant to their immediate strategic goals—taiwan is an example—while creating the ability to one day leapfrog U.S. military technologi­es.

That may be drawing nearer. Quantum computing is an example. In an era in which digital networks underpin virtually every aspect of war, “quantum is king,” says Elsa Kania, a former DOD official who is now a Senior Fellow at the Center for a New American Security. Take cyber warfare— the ability to protect against an enemy disrupting your own networks, while maintainin­g the ability to disrupt the adversary’s. Quantum networks are far more secure against cyber espionage, and Kania believes China’s “future quantum capacity has the potential to leapfrog U.S. cyber capabiliti­es.”

That’s not the only advantage of quantum technology. Beijing is also exploring the potential for quantum-based radar systems that can defeat stealth

technology, a critical U.S. war-fighting advantage. “These disruptive technologi­es—quantum communicat­ions, quantum computing and potentiall­y quantum radar—may have the potential to undermine cornerston­es of U.S. technologi­cal dominance in informatio­n-age warfare, its sophistica­ted intelligen­ce apparatus, satellites and secure communicat­ions networks and stealth technologi­es,” says Kania. “China’s concentrat­ed pursuit of quantum technologi­es could have much more far-reaching impacts than the asymmetric approach to defense that has characteri­zed its strategic posture thus far.” That is a big reason why Pan Jianwei, the father of China’s quantum computing research effort, has said the nation’s goal is nothing less than “quantum supremacy.”

Washington, and its allies in East Asia and Europe, are paying attention. In a just-published book—the Dragons and the Snakes: How the Rest Learned to Fight the West—david Kilcullen, a former Australian military officer who served as special adviser to U.S. General David Petraeus in Iraq, writes that “our enemies have caught up or overtaken us in critical technologi­es, or have expanded their concept of war beyond the narrow boundaries within which our traditiona­l approach can be brought to bear. They have adapted, and unless we too adapt, our decline is only a matter of time.” The book is being widely read in U.S. national security circles.

China is not yet a “peer power,” as U.S. national defense analysts put it. But the steadily aggressive pursuit of quantum technologi­es—and a wide array of others that also have dual-use applicatio­ns— increasing­ly convince Pentagon planners that Beijing will one day be one. China, says Michael Pillsbury, one of Trump’s key informal advisers on relations with Beijing, “is nothing if not patient.” The year 2049 will mark the Chinese Communist Party’s 100th anniversar­y of taking power in Beijing. That’s the year Chinese propaganda outlets have said will see the completion of China’s rise to the dominant power on earth.

An Economic Divorce?

The most significan­t difference in The emerging geopolitic­al standoff between Washington and Beijing is obvious: China is economical­ly powerful, and deeply integrated with both the developed and developing worlds. That was never the case with the former Soviet Union, which was largely isolated

economical­ly, trading only with its east bloc neighbors. China, by contrast, trades with everyone, and it continues to grow richer. It is sophistica­ted across a wide range of critical technologi­es, including telecommun­ications and artificial intelligen­ce. It has set as a national goal—in its so-called Made in China 2025 plan—preeminenc­e not just in quantum computing and AI, but in biotech, advanced telecommun­ications, green energy and a host of others.

But the U.S. and the rest of the world have problems in the present as well. The pandemic has exposed the vulnerabil­ity of locating supply chains for personal protective equipment as well as pharmaceut­ical supplies in China. That’s a significan­t strategic vulnerabil­ity. If China shut the door on exports of medicines and their key ingredient­s and raw material, U.S. hospitals, military hospitals and clinics would cease to function within months if not days, says Rosemary Gibson, author of a book on the subject, China Rx. Late last month, Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton introduced legislatio­n mandating that U.S. pharmaceut­ical companies bring production back from China to the U.S.

China’s explicit desire to dominate the industries of the future is bad news for foreign multinatio­nal companies that have staked so much on the allure of the China market. If China’s steep rise up the technology ladder continues, American and other foreign multinatio­nals are likely to get turfed out of the market entirely. “China 2025 is all about replacing anything that American companies sell of any value, just taking the Americans out of that,” says Stewart Paterson, author of China, Trade and Power, Why the West’s Economic Engagement Has Failed.

Donald Trump’s tariffs, and China’s public desire to dominate key industries, have pushed American multinatio­nal and U.S. policymake­rs to ask: should the U.S. get an economic divorce from Beijing? And

if so, what would that look like?

The COVID-19 outbreak and China’s response to it has greatly intensifie­d that debate. Trump’s trade war had triggered a slow-motion move toward an economic “decoupling,” as companies in low-tech, lowmargin industries began to move production out of China to avoid tariffs. The textile, footwear and furniture business have all seen significan­t movement out of China so far. But pre-pandemic, there was no mad rush for the exits and there was no reason to expect one anytime soon. As recently as last October, 66 percent of American companies operating in China surveyed by the American Chamber of Commerce in Beijing said “decoupling” would be impossible, so interlinke­d are the world’s two largest economies.

Things have changed. The number who now believe decoupling is impossible, according to the same survey, has dropped to 44 percent. If reelected, Trump’s advisers say, the president will likely pressure other industries beyond pharmaceut­icals and medical equipment to bring back production. How he would actually do that is unclear, but aides are looking at the example of Japan. The Japanese legislatur­e recently approved a program in which the government will offer subsidies—up to $2.25 billion worth—to any company that brings its supply chain back home.

As negative perception­s of China harden in the U.S., executives are faced with a stark choice: as Paterson puts it, “do you really want to be seen doing business with an adversary?”

The answer isn’t that easy. In the U.S., a lot of companies simply do not want to reduce their exposure to China. They spent years—and billions—building up supply lines and are loath to give them up. Consider the semiconduc­tor industry, a critical area in which the U.S. is still technologi­cally more advanced than China. A complete cessation of semiconduc­tor sales to China would mean U.S. firms lose about 18 percent of their global market share—and an estimated 37 percent of overall revenues. That in turn would likely force reductions in research and developmen­t. The U.S. spent $312 billion on R&D over the last decade, more than double the amount spent by its foreign competitor­s—and it’s that R&D which allows them to stay ahead of competitor­s.

Paterson argues that the costs of total divorce from China is often overstated. He calculates that about 2 percent of U.S. corporate profits come from sales in the Chinese market, mostly from companies that manufactur­e there in order to sell there. Corporate profits overall are 10 percent of U.S. GDP. Eliminatin­g the China portion of that “is a rounding error,” he says.

But getting companies such as Caterpilla­r Inc., which operates 30 factories in China and gets 10

“DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGI­ES—QUANTUM COMMUNICAT­IONS, QUANTUM COMPUTING AND POTENTIALL­Y QUANTUM RADAR—MAY HAVE THE POTENTIAL TO UNDERMINE CORNERSTON­ES OF U.S. TECHNOLOGI­CAL DOMINANCE”

percent of its annual revenue from sales there, is an uphill lift. There are scores of companies like Caterpilla­r, who have no intention of leaving China, even if relations between Washington and Beijing are at new lows. And there are also scores of companies like Starbucks, which operates 42,000 stores across China, or Walmart, whose revenue in the country is more than $10 billion annually. Those companies don’t have critical technology to steal and may be little worry to the U.S. if they continue to operate in China.

But other companies do. Tesla, to take one example, is a company whose advanced technology should be protected at all costs. Which is why some in Washington are scratching their heads at both

Elon Musk and the Trump administra­tion. Musk said on May 10th that he was so angry at the shutdown orders in the state of California, he might move the Tesla factory in Fremont to Texas. Meanwhile, he manufactur­es his cars in Shanghai, which is an obvious target for intellectu­al property theft and industrial espionage, given that electric vehicles are one of the industries targeted in the China 2025 plan. “California bad, Shanghai good is not a formulatio­n that’s going to hold up well in the POST-COVID environmen­t,” says Paterson.

A smarter U.S. strategy than “divorce” is “economic distancing,” says John Lee, a Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute, a Washington think tank. The goal of U.S. industrial policy should be “ensuring that China is not in a position to dominate key technologi­es and assume the leading role in dominating supply and value chains for these emerging technologi­es,” he says. Rationing access to large and advanced markets is critical. “It becomes much more challengin­g [for Beijing] if China’s access to markets in the U.S. Europe and East Asia is restricted, and it is denied key inputs from those areas.”

That presumes coordinati­on with allies, which has not been a Trump administra­tion strong suit. But that would change under a President Joe Biden. Even before the pandemic, key European and Asian allies were souring on their relations with China. That includes Canada as well. A former senior Canadian official said Ottawa wanted to work with Trump and the Europeans to map out a tougher, united front on trade. The only problem? “You were sanctionin­g our steel exports on ‘national security grounds,’” this official says. “We are a NATO ally, for godssake!”

The opportunit­y to work more closely to form a united front versus Beijing is something Biden advisers are intent on doing. A reconfigur­ed Trans Pacific Partnershi­p, which Barack Obama pushed, is likely

“OUR ENEMIES HAVE CAUGHT UP OR OVERTAKEN US IN CRITICAL TECHNOLOGI­ES ... THEY HAVE ADAPTED, AND UNLESS WE TOO ADAPT, OUR DECLINE IS ONLY A MATTER OF TIME.”

the first order of business in a Biden administra­tion—this time more explicitly targeted at excluding Beijing from free trade deals among U.S. allies.

That is, if there is a Biden administra­tion.

What’s Next

in The context of The new cold war, The move toward a smart economic distancing, as Hudson’s Lee and others call for, will gain momentum. “Washington put too much faith in its power to shape China’s trajectory. All sides of the policy debate [in the U.S.] erred,” says Kurt Campbell, former assistant secretary of state under Obama. Biden’s people are already spreading the word that there will be no return to the laissez faire attitudes that governed Washington’s approach to China. The U.S. may also have to overtly subsidize companies in the Made in China 2025 industries that Beijing has targeted.

Beijing had resisted suspending its own industrial subsidies to state-owned industries in the Trump trade negotiatio­ns and had shown few signs of backing off from the goals expressed in Made in China 2025. In the wake of the global fury kicked up by the coronaviru­s, an economic rapprochem­ent appears unthinkabl­e.

Militarily and geopolitic­ally, no matter who wins the next election, the U.S. will work hard to bring India, which has hedged its bets between Washington and Beijing as China rose, more closely into the fold of a “free and open Indo-pacific,” as the Trump administra­tion has called its policy toward Asia. The ability to work more closely with allies, both in East Asia and in Europe, in creating a united front against Beijing has never been stronger. “No one that we talk to is happy,” says Rand Corporatio­n’s Scott Harold.

What many look for is steadier and clearer public messaging from Washington. As Harold puts it, as the ideologica­l competitio­n with Beijing intensifie­s, “the defenders of the liberal internatio­nal order, like-minded democracie­s, should grow more active in defense of their interests and values.’’

In the wake of the pandemic, the U.S. is suffering a defeat that should be unthinkabl­e: it is losing the propaganda war, particular­ly in the developing world. Both internally and abroad, the Chinese Communist party’s propaganda outlets, digital and broadcast, are trumpeting Xi Jinping’s handling of COVID-19, and contrastin­g it with the Trump administra­tion’s shambolic efforts to deal with the virus. State media outlets chronicled how badly the U.S. and others have managed the crisis. Their message: Those countries should copy China’s model.

As competitio­n between the United States and China grows, the informatio­n wars will be critical. In this, the “America First” Trump administra­tion has been mostly AWOL—THE President has not been able to rouse himself to support pro-democracy demonstrat­ors in Hong Kong, so desperate was he for a trade deal with Xi Jinping. But, Trump and Biden have some good role models and, thus, there’s hope. U.S. presidents have defended the country’s values quite well, and steadily, throughout the last Cold War, none more ably than Ronald Reagan, who left office a year before the Berlin Wall came down.

We will see, of course, if the next administra­tion is up for the fight. Washington has at least recognized, as Kurt Campbell observes, that it overvalued its ability to influence China’s developmen­t” Presumably it won’t make that mistake again. Instead, Washington and its allies need to focus more on how to cope effectivel­y with a powerful rival.

The mission: Wage the 21st century’s Cold War, while ensuring it never turns hot.

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Left to right: President Donald Trump at a China “Phase-one” trade pact ceremony in Washington, D.C.; Robert Zoellick’s hopes for Beijing have been derailed; spraying disinfecta­nt and making masks on the mainland.
BETTER DAYS? Left to right: President Donald Trump at a China “Phase-one” trade pact ceremony in Washington, D.C.; Robert Zoellick’s hopes for Beijing have been derailed; spraying disinfecta­nt and making masks on the mainland.
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 ??  ?? WAR OF THE WORLDS Counterclo­ckwise from top: Surveillan­ce cameras symbolize China’s security apparatus; Uyghurs at prayer in western China; protesters in Toronto in 1999 up in arms against the bombing of China’s Belgrade Embassy.
WAR OF THE WORLDS Counterclo­ckwise from top: Surveillan­ce cameras symbolize China’s security apparatus; Uyghurs at prayer in western China; protesters in Toronto in 1999 up in arms against the bombing of China’s Belgrade Embassy.
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POWER PLAY China has upped its game militarily; ashow of force in Beijing in 2019.
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Clockwise from below: A Tesla fresh off a Shanghai assembly line; an IBM “X-force” command center in London; and a RF Micro Devices semiconduc­ting wafer in Greensboro, North Carolina.
TECH THEFT? Clockwise from below: A Tesla fresh off a Shanghai assembly line; an IBM “X-force” command center in London; and a RF Micro Devices semiconduc­ting wafer in Greensboro, North Carolina.
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 ??  ?? NEW DIRECTION Above: Would a President Joe Biden take a harder line toward China, which hopes to reduce dependance on American firms? Opposite: a Starbucks in Hong Kong and an ingots maker in Wuxi.
NEW DIRECTION Above: Would a President Joe Biden take a harder line toward China, which hopes to reduce dependance on American firms? Opposite: a Starbucks in Hong Kong and an ingots maker in Wuxi.

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