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China and Appeasement
By
Henry
C.K. Liu
Part I: Beyond Munich
This
article appeared in AToL on
April 27, 2007
The
Munich Pact of September 30, 1938 has become an icon of the
failure of appeasement. What is generally
left unmentioned by many Anglo-US historians is the fact that the
Munich Pact,
in addition to allowing Germany to annex the Sudetenland, an
area
of Czechoslovakia heavily populated by ethnic Germans, also allowed Poland and
Hungary, eventual victims of German expansionism, to seize respectively
the
Teschen district and parts of Slovakia. Munich is mainly viewed in the
West as a symbol of the lack of resolve on the part of the two great
powers of Western
Europe,
namely Britain and France, to resist German expansionism
which later led to the outbreak of a European war that quickly became a
world
war. Most Western historians subscribe to the view that had the Western
European
Allies drawn a firm line in the sand backed by credible threat of
force, Germany
might not have been tempted by Franco-British appeasement to push
beyond the
line of peaceful co-existence. Yet the historical facts behind Munich do not support the
simplification of it as a case of pure appeasement. Geopolitical
calculations
played a large role in Munich decisions.
Appeasement
by
one nation in international relations is a policy of accepting, rather
than
resisting, the illegitimate imposition by another nation of aggressive
geopolitical
expansion or interference or intrusion in the appeasing nation’s
internal
affairs or in the development of its indigenous socioeconomic and
political
system in ways that sacrifice indigenous cultural values, ideological
principles, or national interests. In the case of Munich,
appeasement was accomplished not by sacrificing the national interests
of the
appeasing powers but by sacrificing a helpless third nation whose
opinion was
never sought.
The compromise in appeasement is usually rationalized by an
allegedly higher principle of a non-violent means of avoiding war. As
Henry
Kissinger, arguably the greatest statesman in Cold War realpolitik,
famously said of the policy of Détente, which some
criticized as appeasement: “Peace too is a moral imperative.”
Notwithstanding post
Cold War distortion of the meaning of the term by neo-conservative
ideologue
hawks in the second Bush administration, a willingness to negotiate
does not in
itself constitute a loss of “moral clarity” or appeasement, which is
the unwarranted
and counterproductive capitulation before or during negotiation.
Yale historian Paul Kennedy (Strategy
and Diplomacy - 1983) defines appeasement as “the policy
of settling international quarrels by admitting and satisfying
grievances
through rational negotiation and compromise, thereby avoiding the
resort to an
armed conflict which would be expensive, bloody and possibly
dangerous.” While
appeasement had at times led to successful outcomes as in the
Anglo-Irish
Treaty of 1921, albeit not without the tragedy of igniting a civil war,
war hawks
have used Munich to
reinforce the negative
notion of appeasement as a policy of failure. Since Munich,
the term appeasement has gained a disparaging overtone in US
political discourse, as a code word for moral weakness and political
cowardice in
the face of evil and strategic self-deception that would eventual fail
the
peace.
Nevertheless, Munich
is deemed strategically successful by some historians of geopolitics
for
yielding critically valuable months (1938-39) for British rearmament. Munich
also relieved pressure on Western Europe by
channeling
German expansion eastward. The sacrifice of Czechoslovakia
to German geopolitical ambition, a development which the Franco-British
alliance was not in a timely position to prevent anyway, had been
rationalized
by its effect on the strengthening of the subsequent defense of the British
Isles.
Yet Germany
was able to also significantly boost its offensive power in the time
thus
granted, and quite possibly to a greater extent than the Allies, since Germany
had no illusion about Munich
being
a path to “peace for our time”. More significantly, the annexation of Czechoslovakia
provided German militarism with much needed validation in German
domestic
politics. Munich also gave
the German
war machine access to well-developed Czech industrial resources and
significantly improved German strategic standing, avoiding an otherwise
costly
conflict presented by the heavily fortified terrain of the Czech-German
border.
German occupation of Czechoslovakia
also lengthened Poland’s
border with Germany,
making Polish defense more vulnerable.
Munich took place in an anti-war atmosphere in Western Europe
in reaction to the mass slaughter of World War I. Fear of otherwise
avoidable
war with France and Britain also motivated the German high command,
being
apprehensive of Hitler’s reckless overrating of German military
strength, to try
at several points to move towards removing the adventurous little
corporal Feurer from power to put a stop to his
overreaching
foreign policy. Forty days after Munich,
buoyant in domestic popular support by its surprised success, the Nazis
staged
a massive, coordinated attack on German citizens of Jewish ethnicity
throughout
the Third Reich on the night of November 9, 1938 into the next day, which has
come to be known as Kristallnacht or The Night of
Broken
Glass. Kristallnacht was the opening
salvo of Nazi methodical persecution of the Jews of Europe.
Great Powers Maneuvered for War
Yet Munich was
motivated by more than mere war avoidance. Geopolitical maneuvering on
the part
of Britain
and France
was clearly also a key factor. The Munich Pact followed Franco-British
rejection
of two successive Soviet offers (in 1934 and 1937) to form an alliance
against Germany
in Europe and Japan
in Asia, thus pushing the USSR
to enter into the Soviet-German Nonaggression Pact of August 23, 1939, less than a
year after Munich.
From the Soviet perspective, Munich
was a Western scheme to turn Nazi aggression eastward to use German
fascism to
counter Soviet communism. The Soviet-German Nonaggression Pact was an
attempt
to turn the table against capitalism by freeing up fascism against it.
Munich
convinced
the USSR
that
the Western powers were pursuing a policy of selective appeasement only
toward
German eastward expansion and were not interested in joining the Soviet
Union in an anti-Fascist alliance promoted through a
popular
front. In addition, there was concern about the possibility that Britain
and France
would stay neutral in a war initiated by Germany
against the USSR,
hoping that the two warring Eastern powers would wear each other out
and put an
end to both Bolshevik Soviet Union and Nazis Germany. In this sense, Munich
was less a strategy of appeasement to secure peace than Western
capitalist
democracy’s strategy of directing war eastward between fascism and
communism.
Not withstanding Japan’s
signing of the Anti-Comintern pact with Germany
in 1936, the prospect of fighting the Soviet Union in
addition to
the US and Britain over the East-Asian Co-prosperity sphere
convinced many in
the Japanese government and officer corps to seek a neutrality pact
with Moscow.
On April 13, 1941,
eight months
before Pearl Harbor, the neutrality pact
between the Soviet Union and Japan
was signed in Moscow which
lasted
until the August 8, 1945.
There is also historiographical evidence of internationally
acclaim on the Munich
appeasement at
the time of the pact’s signing. Munich
was praised by practically all Western leaders, including Pope Pius XI,
defender of the true faith, and US
President Franklin D Roosevelt, defender of liberal democracy.
Chamberlain was applauded
by the British public for having cleverly avoided another war in the
West at
the expense of the East. It was viewed as another shining example of
the
triumph of high-minded British foreign policy rewarded by a bonus of
collateral
practical payoff of instigating war between fascism and communism.
France
Paralyzed by Democracy
France
had fallen into foreign policy paralysis through chaotic multiparty
democracy.
During the decade leading up to Munich,
cabinets in France
fell with maddening frequency. One government lasted but a single day;
another
only two days. Léon Blum became France’s
first Socialist and Jewish premier on June 4, 1936 and immediately became the prime
object of hate to the
Catholic and the anti-Semitic right. On February 13, 1936, shortly before becoming
Prime Minister, Blum was dragged from
a car and beaten to near death by the members of the Camelots
du Roi, a group of anti-Semite royalists. Blum formed a
Popular Front Government that lasted an unprecedented period of over a
year
during which time it introduced the 40-hour week, paid holidays,
collective
bargaining and other socialist reforms for worker rights. It also
nationalized
the Bank of France and the armaments industry into service to the
French nation
rather than for the benefit of private capital.
With no effective capital control, the result was capital flight
from France at such alarming pace that the Bank of France, striving to
halt the
exodus, had to raise the French central bank’s already-high discount
rate of 4%
to a “panic rate” of 6%. The Blum Cabinet was desperately short of cash
throughout its tenure, leaving most socialist programs unfunded.
Finance
Minister Vincent Auriol devalued the franc by 40% and borrowed eight
billion
francs to deal with the liquidity crisis. The government’s Exchange
Equalization Fund had been exhausted and only support from Washington
and London kept the
exchange rate
of the franc from slipping further. The need for foreign financial
support kept
Blum’s socialist government from moving further to the left.
The French Popular Front had a majority in the Chamber
composed of a coalition of Radical Socialists, Socialists and
Communists. The
Communists alone had no cabinet appointments. Nominal meanings
notwithstanding,
the Radical Socialists were literally less radical than the Socialists
in French
politics. At the emergency session, the Radical Socialists and
Socialists quarreled
over anti-labor tax policy. To deal with the financial crisis, the
Cabinet
asked National Assembly for dictatorial powers over the French economy
and
finance markets for six weeks, despite the fact that the left had
always
decried such power “as the opening wedge to Fascist Dictatorship!” The
Communists,
with 72 swing votes indispensable to the Blum Cabinet, at first refused
to go
along and finally fell in line after securing the government promise to
aid the
Spanish Popular Front. By a vote of
346-to-247 the Chamber voted "full powers" for six weeks to the Blum
Cabinet, but the bill was rejected by the Senate. Blum took his bill
back to
the Chamber, got it approved again before midnight
by a margin of 346-to-248, but was rebuffed again by the Senate
168-to-96. The
Blum Cabinet then resigned the next day, on June 23, 1936, after only 19 days in
office.
Stalin’s political purge of the Red Army was confirmed in France
by news of the execution of Soviet Marshal Mikhail
Tukhachevsky
and seven generals in Moscow
on June
11, 1937. The news
profoundly affected French political
opinion, greatly weakening the French Communists. It revived France’s
long-standing doubt on whether the Red Army was good enough to make the
Franco-Soviet
military alliance an effective check on Germany,
France’s
eternal enemy. With the Red Army weakened by political purge of its
ablest professional
leaders, Paris was forced
towards
conciliation with Berlin,
and under
pressure from Stanley Baldwin and Anthony Eden of Britain,
rejected Communist demands to help the Spanish Popular Front and
adopted a
policy of neutrality, which had the practical effect of being
pro-German.
A few days after news of the Red Army purge, for the first
time since before World War I, a high-ranking German Staff Officer,
General
Ludwig Beck, was in Paris
to confer
with General Marie Gustave Gamelin of the French General Staff, to
share with
him the German Secret Service dossier on political developments in Moscow.
Veteran Paris Correspondent John Elliott of the Herald Tribune
reported: “There
can be no doubt that the [German] General’s visit was inspired by the
British
Foreign Office, anxious to break up the Rome-Berlin axis and establish
co-operation between Britain, France and Germany.”
As opposition leader, Blum campaigned
for France to end its nonintervention policy towards the
Spanish
civil war. On March 13, 1938,
Blum was returned to power as prime minister. He immediately reopened
the
frontier with Spain to allow military aid from France. Blum then came under heavy pressure from the
right-wing
press and politicians. On April 10, 1938,
the Blum government fell for the last time and he was replaced as prime
minister by Edouard Daladier, a Radical Socialist leader, with
a centrist
“national government”, supposedly above party politics and speaking for
the
nation as a whole. Without help, the Spanish left was smashed by Franco.
The French national government came into being shortly after
the Nazi annexation of Austria.
It capitulated to British leadership on the Munich crisis, swallowed
the
betrayal of Czechoslovakia, oversaw the outbreak of a “phony war” over
German
invasion of Poland, and fell in March 1940, nearly two years after its
formation, due to Daladier’s failure to aid Finland during its Winter
War with
the USSR with lasted from November 30, 1939 to March 12, 1940. Poor
Soviet performance
in the Winter War damaged Soviet international image, putting the
fighting
ability of the Red Army into open question, a fact that some argue
contributed
to Hitler’s decision to launch Operation Barbarossa against the USSR
on June 22, 1941.
When Germany
invaded France
on May 10, 1940,
Daladier
fled with other members of the government to Morocco
under the mis-impression that the government would continue in French
North
Africa. He was arrested after France
capitulated on June 25, 1940
and tried for treason by the Vichy
government, handed over to the Germans and deported to Buchenwald
concentration camp until the end of WWII.
Munich
thus was
less an example of Franco-British appeasement to preserve the peace
than an
example of devious geopolitical maneuvering by scheming great powers
for war.
Pre-Munich Meaning of Appeasement
The Encyclopedia of US
Foreign Relations defines appeasement as the term was used before Munich
as “primarily referred to timely concessions to disgruntled nations
whose
grievances had some legitimacy, in the hope of defusing difficulties
and
promoting peace and goodwill. Acting from a position of strength, the
appeasing
power was motivated not by fear or weakness but by a sense of
statesmanship and
a perception that limited concessions would not endanger its vital
national
interests.”
The key words for an effective appeasement policy are
“acting from position of strength; not motivated by fear or weakness;
that
limited concession would not endanger its vital national interests.”
Without
such pre-conditions, appeasement toward an insatiable belligerent will
unfailingly be a policy of failure.
China’s
History of Positive Appeasement
China
has a history of effective positive appeasement in its diplomatic
dealings with
small neighboring states through the ages, bringing long periods of
peace and
prosperity to the Sinic world. Yet the fall of every Chinese dynasty
can be
traced to earlier appeasement policies. Appeasement by dynastic China
was based on an outlook of hope and confidence, Confucian in its
optimism on innate
human goodness, in its belief that societies evolved from savagery to
civilization,
and that inclusiveness is a path to peace under heaven. Throughout its
long history,
Chinese appeasement has been a movement to open up the center of
civilization
to less developed nations which aspired to join the advanced Chinese
system,
not to change or destroy it or to rid it of its backwardness. The
Mongol and
the Manchu tribes conquered Han China not to change Chinese
civilization but to
preserve Chinese political, socio-economic and cultural institutions
because
those were the coveted prizes of conquest. They quickly became Sinizied
through cultural
assimilation.
Western Imperialism in China
Western imperialism in China
took on a fundamentally different, destructive character. Europeans
came to China
with an unwarranted superiority complex derived narrowly from its
advanced militaristic
technology. Western political and economic imperialism was imposed at
gun point,
rationalized by presumptuous cultural imperialism, not by innate moral
superiority.
It was an intercontinental spread of the dark triumph of militarist
Spartan
over civilized Athens.
Notwithstanding
that Western imperialism sought not just to economically exploit China,
but also to enslave the Chinese race, the West assumed a moral pretext
of
saving China
from
its alleged backwardness by seeking to change it, even though China
has a longer continuous civilization than the expansionist West.
Unlike the West, China
has been predominantly defensive throughout most of its history, trying
to keep
out barbarian invaders who clamored to join a more advanced
civilization,
whereas the West since the Age of Imperialism that began in the 17th
century has acted as aggressive invaders that conquered, suppressed and
destroyed
indigenous civilizations and religions. While Christianity encountered
resistance from Islam, it met no resistance from Buddhism, a religion
of
detachment. Modernization was abducted to mean Westernization, not only
for China,
but for the whole non-Western world, as described in my Asia Times on
Line series
on The
Abduction of Modernization. This insidious attitude was made even
more obscene by the
rise of racism in 19th century Europe.
Chinese Appeasement in the Age of Western Imperialism
Unlike historical Chinese magnanimous appeasement of
culturally deferential neighboring states, the new Chinese appeasement
towards 19th
century Western barbaric encroachment was based on a new mood of fear,
not moral
strength, Confucian in its untenable self satisfaction, blind denial of
reality
and refusal of self criticism based on false pride, Buddhist in its
insistence
upon secular detachment to justify swallowing unjust oppression in the
hope
that even Western barbarians must have some redeeming quality of human
decency,
pessimistic in its belief that ephemeral Western technological
superiority would
remain interminable, and fatalistic in its conclusion that militant
imperialism,
the highest stage of capitalism, despicable as it is, should be
accepted as a new
socio-economic order for lack of moral alternatives. The only rational
salvation
then was to copy Western imperialist ways, for the victim to out ape
the oppressor.
Survival of the fittest is twisted to mean survival of the morally
unfit. This
was Japan’s
answer to the Western threat, by a return to moral barbarism. Many
thinkers and
leaders in Asia, perverted by Western cultural
imperialism continue to this day to firmly believe that what went wrong
with Japan
was not that it embarked on a Westernization path that inevitably led
to
imperialist expansion, but that it lost the war of imperialist rivalry
to
imperialism.
The
dean
of
Chinese studies in the US, John K.
Fairbank of Harvard, wrote in an article, “The Manchu Appeasement Policy of 1843”
in the Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 59, No.
4,
December 1939, pp. 469-484: “Those who delight in the study of pre-Tang
China
are commonly observed to scorn the ignoble senescence of the late
Ch’ing [Qing]
period. But the political pathology of nineteenth century China
affords insights into Chinese civilization just as surely as medical
pathology
aids medicine. A century ago the Manchu dynasty was debilitated by
corruption
and all but bankrupt, lacking both the men and the ideas necessary for
a
creative response to the western impact. But in its weakness it
retained the
Confucian tradition, and the bureaucrats who negotiated with the
British
invaders after 1840 still thought in Confucian terms, - so much as, in
fact,
that unless the modern historian does likewise, their diplomatic
maneuvers will
remain as baffling to him as they were to the first residents of the
treaty
ports. It is both instructive and pathetic to see the Manchus taking
their last
refuge in an ancient system of human relationships which held no
meaning for
the British barbarians and so failed completely to subdue them.”
Chinese Appeasement on US Belligerence towards China
There are disturbing signs that Chinese relation with the US
has been moving again in the direction of a failing appeasement policy
on the
part of China, making concessions to a unendingly disgruntled US whose
ideological
grievances have no legitimacy, with China not acting from a position of
moral strength
but motivated by needless fear of losing the US market, by ideological
weakness
devoid of self confidence and by the delusion that unprincipled
concessions
would not endanger vital Chinese national interests. Worse of all,
similar to
the failed Qing dynasty appeasement blunders, Chinese appeasement
toward
unreasonable US
demands will only encourage more outrageous US
belligerence. With such unsound pre-conditions, Chinese appeasement
will
unfailingly be a policy of failure that will lead not to peace between China
and the US,
but
to otherwise avoidable future conflicts, since both sides may well be
buying
temporary peace with preparing for future war.
Taiwan
and Peaceful Evolution of China
Two fundamental issues highlight Chinese appeasement as a
policy doomed to failure. The first and more immediate issue is Chinese
appeasement to escalating US
violation of Chinese sovereignty by interfering in Chinese internal
affairs in
the matter of Taiwan.
The second and longer term issue is Chinese appeasement on US
strategy to change China from
a socialist system towards a capitalistic market economy through
“peaceful
evolution”. On both issues, China has repeatedly made appeasement
concessions
to illegitimate US demands that endanger Chinese national interests.
Such
appeasement will inevitably lead to conflict, even war. The two issues
on which
no appeasement can be tolerated are: 1) protecting the territorial
integrity of China
and 2)
preserving the socialist system in China.
More
than two decades,
since 1950, of hostile US containment policy towards China through
diplomatic isolation
and economic embargo of the new socialist republic by a Western block
dominated
by US superpower, a new page on US-China relation had been
turned
on the basis of a milestone bilateral documents: the Shanghai
Communiqué of
1972, amended by the Normalization Communiqué of 1978 and the
August 17, 1982 Communiqué.
The recognition of and respect for bilateral differences
between China
and the US
was enshrined in the Shanghai Communiqué of 1972 which states:
“There are essential differences between China
and the United States
in their social systems and foreign policies. However, the two sides
agreed that
countries, regardless of their social systems, should conduct their
relations
on the principles of respect for the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of
all states, non-aggression against other states, non-interference in
the
internal affairs of other states, equality and mutual benefit, and
peaceful
coexistence. International disputes should be settled on this basis,
without
resorting to the use or threat of force. The United
States and the People’s Republic of China
are prepared to apply these principles to their mutual relations.”
US
policy on Taiwan
has consistently and unceasingly violated the principles of respect for
the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of China,
and has interfered in its internal affairs.
The Cold War Geopolitical Basis of US-China Rapprochement
For the US,
rapprochement toward China
was a geopolitical expediency in its containment of Soviet expansion in
a Cold
War context. Few in US policy circles in 1972 had anticipated the
dissolution
of the USSR.
Advances in US-China relations prior to the end of the Cold War were
directly
related to progress in US-Soviet détente. Yet
progress in détente also increased
the incentive and prospect of
Soviet pre-emptive military action against China.
This prospect in turn was deterred by US warnings to the USSR
about determined US
response against such attacks. The
prospect of imminent Sino-Soviet military confrontation enabled
fundamental ideological
differences between the US
and ChinaChina
independent of Soviet influence was considered to be in the US
national interest.
The realpolitik in
Kissinger’s geopolitical concept of international order required a
strong and
independent China
to prevent Soviet expansionism from isolating the US
into an unwitting garrison state: “Fortress America”,
as the US
had
done twice in this century that resulted in two world wars. Nixon was convinced that after the Cultural
Revolution (1966-76), China
was no longer an ideological threat to the US
and that the need to isolate China
from international forums in fear of it as being an enticing model of
world
revolution would be overshadowed by the need for balance-of-power
geopolitics.
The need of Western capitalism for a new huge Chinese market was not
the
central objective. US-China
rapprochement and US warning against preemptive Soviet attack on China
were also viewed as necessary to relieve other countries in Asia
from concerns about US-Soviet détente turning into a bilateral
superpower
global condominium, with a US-Soviet cabal against China
as a centerpiece.
Thus, the warming of US-China
relations in the last phase of
the Cold War had been primarily externally motivated, as the current
warming of
US-China relations is externally motivated by the US War on Terrorism. Historically, John Hay’s “Open Door Policy”,
designed against European powers partitioning China
into spheres of influence in the 19thUS
policy towards China
with regard to Soviet intentions in late 20th century. China
was part of the continuation of the Great Game rivalry between Russia
and the West that dated to before WWI. It
was to US
national interest to neutralize any prospect of a China
being dominated by a European power, such as the USSR.
In short, US
policy
towards China
had merely been a bargaining chip in US
geopolitical grand design in the Cold War. It is clear that China
will re-emerge as US enemy number one as soon as the US War on
Terrorism winds
down, as long as Russia
fails to regain its superpower status.
Declassified US
documents reveal that Nixon secretly made specific concessions to Mao
Zedong on
the question of Taiwan
beyond the text of the Shanghai Communiqué of February 28, 1972. Nixon
pledged to “actively work toward”
and complete “full normalization” of US-PRC diplomatic
relations by 1976. He also promised not to
support any Taiwan
military action against the mainland or any Taiwan
independence movement and to prevent Japan
or any other third country from moving in on Taiwan
as US
presence
was reduced. Nixon failed to deliver on his geopolitical concessions to
Mao when
he was forced to resign to avoid impeachment over the Watergate scandal
which
was not unrelated to domestic opposition to his rapprochement to China.
According to a declassified top-secret US
memo of a conversation held on February
18, 1973 in Zhongnanhai with Chairman Mao, Kissinger said to
Mao: “Our
interest in trade with China
is not commercial. It is to establish a
relationship that is necessary for the political relations we both
have.” Mao accepted this candid confession
as
accurate. Thus trade from the beginning of US-China rapprochement was
viewed as
a lubricant of geopolitical objectives. After the end of the Cold War,
the
causal relationship has been reversed. Geopolitics is now viewed as a
foundation for enhancing free trade objectives in a new neo-liberal
globalized
regime dominated by the US.
This is what Bush means when he asserts in a May 7, 2001 speech that “Open trade is
not just an
economic opportunity, it is a moral imperative. … And when we promote
open
trade, we are promoting political freedom.”
Thus it is not surprising that with the dissolution of the USSR
in 1991, US-China relations, devoid of its geopolitical underpin, have
floundered aimlessly until the emergence of neo-liberal globalization.
The
relationship that began in 1972 out of a common strategic concern with
Soviet expansionism
based on geopolitical conditions had been altered fundamentally with
the
dissolution of the USSR.
US Transformational Foreign Policy
Us policy on China
has since taken on the objective of transformational foreign policy,
aiming to
transform socialist China
by using capitalist Taiwan
as a model. The US
envisions the eventual return of Taiwan
to China
as a
peaceful way of replacing socialism with capitalism on the Chinese
mainland,
and of transforming the ruling Chinese Communist Party by fragmenting
it into
several European-style social democrat parties. All the talk about the
need to strengthen
the rule of law through the establishment of an independent judiciary,
carrying
out monetary reform through a politically independent central bank and
the need
for an independent military implies independence from party control. It
is all
part of the USthe Central Party School of the Communist Party of
China.
US Violations of the Shanghai
Communiqué
The
key bases of normal relationship between the US and China as stipulated
in the
Shanghai Communiqué, namely the principles of
respect for the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states, and
non-interference in
the internal affairs of other states, have not been observed by the US
over the
issue of Taiwan.
Far from leading to peace, Chinese appeasement on the Taiwan issue will inevitably lead
to war, as no government in China can survive politically the
protracted separation of Taiwan that solidifies into a
perpetual status quo from foreign interference. And a government which
tolerates the endless extension of the status quo on Taiwan does so at its own peril.
For a detailed account of such US violations of Chinese
sovereignty and bilateral agreements, see my Asia Times on Line 10-part
series
on US-China:
the Quest for Peace.
Trade
Doves versus Security Hawks
The confrontation in the US-China-Taiwan triangular arena has
become a conflict between the trade doves and the security hawks on all
three
sides. In reality, no amount of USTaiwan,
quantitative or qualitative, can enhance the island’s long-term
security. Trade
has never prevented war. The US
traded with Japan
and Germany
up
to the day of Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
What
makes China
think twice about recovering Taiwan
by force is the cost-benefit analysis of the prospect of a direct
military
conflict with the US
over Taiwan.
If US
strategy in Asia
requires the perpetuation of the status quo on Taiwan,
then a Chinese military offensive to achieve the reincorporation of Taiwan
would simply be a matter of forsworn conclusion.
Neo-liberal Distortion of the “One Country Two Systems”
Principle
The “One Country, Two Systems” (OCTS) policy, originally
framed by the Chinese leadership during the final phase of the Cold War
for the
terms of reincorporation of Taiwan, has since become a centerpiece of
Chinese
appeasement. OCTS was conveniently applied to Hong Kong
in 1997 as a formula for its return to China
from British colonial rule. For Hong Kong, OCTS
has a
time limit of 50 years. For Taiwan,
OCTS has no time limit. The two systems in OCTS refer to the socialist
and
capitalist systems in a strictly economic sense, although allowances
are
tolerated in Hong Kong for a neo-liberal
socio-political-legal infrastructure deemed necessary for viable
functioning of
a market economy.
OCTS assumes a non-adversary relationship between the two economic
systems separated by geography. It is a precarious assumption. Under
OCTS, Hong Kong is not expected to be an
anti-China political base nor is
market capitalism expected to work for the demise of socialism on the
mainland.
Neither of these expectations has been fulfilled flawlessly in the
decade since Hong Kong was returned to China
in 1997.
One aspect of the OCTS policy that has been conveniently
underemphasized by neo-liberals is that the “two systems” arrangement
implies
that socialism will remain the operative system on the mainland, and
that
Chinese policies of reform and open-to-the-outside do not include
anti-socialist objectives. Many neo-liberal supporters of OCTS are in
fact
quietly and openly working for “One Country, One System” – the
capitalist
system, with direct US
support. This is the prerequisite condition under which the US
will allow ChinaTaiwan.
It is not at all clear that
appeasement on the distortion of
the OCTS principle has redeeming positive impacts on the sustainable
development
of the economy in China,
or on the reincorporation of Taiwan
into Chinese sovereignty. The Taiwan
regime has consistently rejected the OCTS principle as a basis for
reincorporation back into China.
On the other hand, OCTS has been twisted by the US to legitimize the
Hong Kong
Relations Act and the Taiwan Relations Act, two pieces of US
legislation that
the US relies on to interfere openly in China’s internal affairs. The
Taiwan Relations
Act further provides the legal basis for provocative US
arms sales to Taiwan.
Despite the fact that the OCTS principle allows Taiwan to
keep its political and economic system, even its military as a local
defense
unit, Taiwan has exploited the rise of US moral imperialism to cement
US
commitment to help defend a democratic and capitalistic Taiwan in the
event
that its political offensive toward perpetual de facto
separation, or worse, formal de jure independence,
should provoke military conflict with the mainland.
Officially, there is no such US commitment, but the current regime in
Taipei
banks on post-Cold War US hegemony to carry out Taipei’s own pursuit of
separatist objectives that the US may not officially endorse, but that
tacitly
also does not disapprove as long as it serves US geopolitical interest
in
curbing potential extension of Chinese power into the Pacific Ocean.
The Taiwan
Relations Act
The Taiwan Relations Act (TRA), US Public Law 96-8 of April 10, 1979, which came
into being as an
anti-China counterweight to US
normalization with the PRC, is a USChina
in US domestic politics. As a US
law, it carries a legal authority exceeding the three diplomatic
communiqués,
which are diplomatic expressions of understanding between two states
that carry
no domestic legal authority - only diplomatic obligations. Successive USChina
and Taiwan
as defined
by the three bilateral Communiqués, modified by the Taiwan
Relations Act. There
was a time when ChinaTaiwan
regime, and trade relations with companies that traded with Taiwan.
Such policies of principle have all but abandoned by Chinese
appeasement. The US
celebrates the spectacular rise of Taiwan
investment on the mainland as a positive sign that the strategy of
transforming
Chinese socialism into Taiwan
capitalism is successful.
The TRA, with a legal guarantee
of future arms sales to Taiwan, was passed by a
veto-proof margin by both houses of Congress. The TRA is concrete
evidence that
anti-China attitude in Congress is solid and obstinate, despite
relative geopolitical
flexibility on the part of the successive executive branches of the US
government, not withstanding that the president is supposed to be the
commander-in-chief in US foreign policy. The language in the TRA on the
defense
of Taiwan
contradicts US
positions declared in the three Communiqués. The TRA mandates in
a legal
framework a much closer security relationship with Taiwan
than has been contemplated by the three communiqués.
The TRA establishes a continuing relationship between the US
and Taiwan
on a
quasi-official basis in order to “preserve and promote extensive close
and
friendly commercial, cultural and other relations” - short of official
recognition. Even the exchange of visits by high government officials
between Taiwan
and the US
is
now routinely tolerated by Chinese appeasement, coupled by meaningless
protests.
The TRA also states that the US
considers that “any effort to determine the future of Taiwan
by other than peaceful means including boycotts and embargoes is a
threat to
the peace and security of the Western Pacific area and of grave concern
to the United States.”
However, domestic laws are not
applicable beyond US
jurisdiction. To China,
the TRA is a US
law that illegally imposes extra-territoriality on Chinese territory
and a
direct challenge to Chinese sovereignty. Yet the OCTS principle gives
the US
a twisted pretext to uphold official Chinese commitment of “two
systems” in Hong Kong and Taiwan,
weakening the charge of US
interference in Chinese internal affairs. The cost of US
challenge to Chinese sovereignty definitely outweighs the economic
benefits of
OCTS to China.
Locked on a Long-Term Collision Track
The national interests of the US
and China
are
locked on a long-term collision track by enduring US
hostile belligerence towards communism, despite temporary relief from
the US
War on Terrorism. Continued US
antagonism towards socialist China
in general and anti-China policy on the Taiwan
issue in particular will reinforce the prospect of ChinaUS
is ultimately unavoidable. Escalating official government and military
contacts
between the US
and Taiwan
are
viewed by China
as direct violations of the three Communiqués. President Bush’s
reference to Taiwan
as the “Republic of China” in a televised press conference soon after
his
inauguration in 2001 was undeniably and decidedly provocative.
On the other hand, excessive appeasement on the part of the Chinese
leadership toward US
belligerence only reinforced former US
secretary of state George Shultz’s notion of a helpless China
without options, causing the US
to push its lingering anti-China policies even harder. The danger of
miscalculation in both capitals continues to be very real, and made
more so by
continuing Chinese appeasement. No Chinese government can survive the
independence of Taiwan,
nor can peace in Asia or even the world. Should TaipeiChina’s
newly enacted Anti-Secession Law and the US Taiwan-Relations Act would
collide
head-on, forcing the two governments to resort to military solutions as
a
matter of domestic law.
Just as Washington
ignored, to
the detriment of all, repeated messages from China
about its intention to enter the Korean War in 1950 should US forces
approach
the Chinese border, the Taiwan
issue is shaping up to be a potential tragedy of miscalculation. The
prospect
of miscalculation is increased by Chinese appeasement that encourages
escalating US
belligerence.
The ideal solution is a peaceful solution which cannot occur without US
withdrawal from interfering with Chinese internal affairs. But there is
no
doubt that should military conflict become necessary because of US
miscalculation, China
will use
it, regardless of cost.
US
policy on Taiwan
has been based on an adventurism in defiance of this prospect,
encouraged by
Chinese appeasement pronouncements of patience, such as past Chinese
public
pronouncement that China
could patiently wait 50 years for the final recovery of Taiwan,
a pronouncement that could easily turn into a self-fulfilling
prediction. Such
appeasement-based miscalculation would lead to a military conflict with
no
winners. The Chinese Communist Party cannot survive a separate Taiwan
for another 50 years. China,
in dealing with escalating US
provocation, can learn lessons from the way President John F Kennedy
handled
the Cuban missile crisis with unmistakable resolve, rather than
appeasement, to
preempt an unnecessary nuclear confrontation with the Soviet
Union.
Preventing US Miscalculation over Taiwan
The
way to prevent US
miscalculation over Taiwan
is through credible Chinese resolve away from dangerous appeasement
toward continued US
interference
on Chinese internal affair and US
violation of Chinese territorial integrity. China
needs to make it clear that it harbors no offensive intention towards
the US
and will not use force to challenge US interests in Asia
and elsewhere in the world. But China
must make it clear to the US
that it will not tolerate continued violation of Chinese territorial
integrity
under any pretext.
The new Chinese leadership’s peaceful diplomatic offensive is
strengthening bilateral ties with the European Union, Japan,
Australia,
Russia,
Egypt,
Saudi Arabia,
Iran,
Venezuela,
India,
Latin American and African nations. US policymakers need to realize
that their
anti-China policies are losing support from most of the world, even
among
long-time US
allies. China
should
take the high road to improve bilateral ties with Japan
and India,
its
two major neighbors in Asia, with magnanimous
appeasement if necessary. Particularly in the case of Japan,
allowing lingering dispute over historical grievances to prevent the
positive
strengthening of bilateral relationship and strategy partnership is
counterproductive. The recent thaw in Sino-Japanese relations is a
positive
trend that needs to be kept on track. The new approach adopted by
President Hu
Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao in response to Prime Minster Shinzo Abe’s
friendly overtures is highly encouraging.
Similarly, allowing the historical conditions of Taiwan
and outdated US
policies to hamper a constructive relationship between China
and the US
is
to lose the future in pursuit of the past. For China
to pursue a course of domestic economic development and adopt a policy
of
promoting peace and stability, the Taiwan
issue has to be settled first. Further delay will only raise the final
cost and
make peaceful resolution more unlikely.
Taiwan
and North Korea
The Taiwan
and
the North Korea
situations are two dangerous military flashpoints in the complex and
challenging foreign and defense policy issues facing the US
in the Asia-Pacific region. The North
Korea
nuclear issue cannot be solved without Chinese cooperation. While it is
obvious
that the denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula
is in the interest of
all, both the Korean and Taiwan
issues had their origin in US
intervention in the Korean civil war. He who tied the knot should be
the one to
untie it. Intransigence on Taiwan
will yield intransigence on North Korea.
US Military Encirclement of China
Militarily, extensive deployments of US
forces in Asia
are strategically encircling China.
US
bases in South Korea,
Okinawa, Guam,
Diego Garcia, US
troops in Afghanistan
and other Central Asian countries form a ring of US
military presence along all but China’s
northern flank. This pattern of US
encirclement will push China
to seek security alliance with Russia
which is reportedly preparing its own military response to
controversial US
plans to build a new missile defense system in former Soviet states in Eastern
Europe that can spark a new arms race. US plan to mount a
missile
defense alliance with Japan,
South Korea
and Taiwan
will
strengthen incentive for new Sino-Russian defense cooperation.
The powerful US naval task forces in international waters
around China
allow the US
to
cut off vital shipments of oil and gas to China
at will, as it once did to Japan
that led to Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. To
counter
this threat, China
has been expanding its arsenal of increasingly accurate ballistic and
cruise
missiles and long-range strike aircraft, to complicate potential US
intervention in Chinese territorial seas. The US-India nuclear
agreement in 2005
is openly aimed at containing China
and will predictably elicit a Chinese countervailing response.
The Issue of Transparency
There is incessant US
complaint about China’s
alleged lack of “transparency” in its defense modernization. Yet annual
reports
on China’s
military posture and capability issued by the US Department of Defense
have
clearly laid out all possible scenario of conflict with China,
several bordering on fantasy. China’s
defense posture is in reality quite simple and transparent and can be
summed up
in a few words. It aims to defend China’s
territorial integrity, with special focus on Taiwan,
and threats of embargo by any foreign power, and to possess a credible
deterrence against nuclear first strikes. In contrast to the US,
China
does not
have a global network of offensive military bases.
US-China Cooperation on War on Terrorism
The US
claims that China
can cooperate more with the US
in the global fight against terrorism. Yet the type of terrorism faced
by each
country is different. Terrorism faced by China
is mostly related to minority secessionism, once sponsored and
supported by the US
until after
the terrorist attacks on the US
homeland on September 11, 2001,
while terrorism faced by the US
is related to decades of US
hegemonic abuse far from its own homeland. China
pledged $150 million in reconstruction assistance to Afghanistan,
and $25 million to Iraq.
These pledges were welcome by the US.
And the US
is
pressuring China
to forgive $7 billion in Iraqi debt owed to Chinese state companies
before USUS
war on terrorism enhances China’s
own national security, or China’s
stake in a new world order. In fact, it will only expose China
to new unneeded threats.
The Danger of “Peaceful Evolution”
Although
US military containment of China is still growing through continuing
advances
in military technology and US machination of anti-China regional
alliances, the
real danger to China and to peace in Asia is not military invasion by
the US,
but US engineered peaceful evolution of socialist China into capitalism.
Historical
facts and cultural conditioning confirm that China cannot enjoy peace,
prosperity and harmony without a socialist society. The new Chinese
policy to
build a harmonious society is predicated on the preservation of
socialist
justice and equality. The political fall of the 50-year-old Guomindang
(GMD) regime
in 1949, despite victory in war against Japan imperialism and massive post-war
support from the US in the form of both money
and arms, is the latest evidence of this age-old truism. The GMD failed
because
it abandoned its revolutionary socialist root after control of the
party was
co-opted by the capitalistic right wing, adopting for the nation an
economic
system of free market capitalism centered in Shanghai, very similar to
what the
US is again promoting for China today. If the Communist Party of China
(CPC)
follows the same path as the GMD, it will inevitable lose the support
of the
masses and end up with the same fate. The
revolution is not a dinner party to allow
a small group of people
get rich at the expense of the majority.
The
legitimacy of the political leadership of the People’s Republic of China by the CPC rests on the
CPC’s commitment to socialist principles to protect and enhance the
interests
of the Chinese peasants who constitute over 80% of the population.
Socialist
democracy is a political system that forbids as unconstitutional any
electoral
outcome that violates socialist principles, such as the revival of
capitalism, just
as republican democracy forbids the electoral revival of absolute
monarchy.
The
“Stakeholder” Trap
Former US Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick proposed
in a speech in New York on September 21, 2005 before the National
Committee on US-China Relations that the US steps up efforts to
make China a “responsible stakeholder” in the international system. He
reported
from Beijing on January 25, 2006 that the “stakeholder” concept he
initiated
has provided a “sense of direction” for the development of US-China
relations
and that he was pleased to see his concept generating lively discussion
in Chinese
policy circles, setting a new standard for the two nations to work
together on
global issues on a wide range of topics including bilateral ties, trade
and the
economy, energy cooperation and the Korean Peninsula and Iran nuclear
issues.
The National Committee on US-China
Relations is a US
organization that has transformed itself since the end of the Cold War
from a
liberal one advocating dealing with socialist China
by accepting it as it was, to a neo-liberal command center of “peaceful
evolution” advocates to transform China
into a market democracy. Its former president, David M Lampton, defines
“stakeholder” as implying that the US
views China
as
an equal and important member in the current international system that
should
share an interest in maintaining that system. Only a fool will believe
that the
US and China
hold equal stake in the existing international system.
The current chairman of the National Committee is Carla
Hills,
former US Trade
Representative under Bush sr. Hills co-chairs a newly released report
sponsored
by the Council on Foreign Relations, an independent private research
group
based in New York. The
other
co-chair is retired 4-star admiral Dennis Blair, former commander of
the US
Pacific Fleet, and former president and CEO of the Institute for
Defense
Analyses, a federally funded research center, a fervent supporter of
the Taiwan
military.
The report concludes that China “can only take and hold Taiwan if it
can win
and sustain control of the space, air and waters around Taiwan - a
difficult
task without US intervention, and nearly impossible should the United
States intervene
in a China-Taiwan war,” and that “China is also developing strategies
to
protect its growing global interests, the mere existence of which pose
challenges for the US.” The report ignores repeated Chinese warnings
that US
intervention in a renewed Chinese civil war over Taiwan
would not remain a limited war.
The current president of the National Committee since May 1, 2005 is Steve Orlin, a
former
investment banker with extensive financial interest in China
and Chairman of a broadband communications company in Taiwan.
The National Committee’s agenda of “peaceful evolution” of China
is vividly transparent.
The Clinton China foreign policy team, led in the first term
by secretary of state Warren Christopher, was proactive about promoting
human
rights and democracy for China,
while Clinton was
preoccupied with
domestic issues. In Christopher’s confirmation hearing, he formally
declared US
policy as seeking to facilitate “peaceful evolution” in China
from communism to capitalistic democracy, in direct violation of the
Shanghai
Communiqué of non-interference in the domestic affairs of
another country. Winston
Lord, as assistant secretary for East Asia and
the
Pacific, went even further and advocated a policy of linking
human-rights
progress in China
to US
restraint
on Taiwan.
Clinton and national security adviser Anthony
Lake, in
response to US domestic
politics, reintroduced what some critics labeled as moral imperialism
in US
foreign policy.
US Accepts No Equal Partners
The US
does not view any of its strategic allies as equal partners, not the UK,
not Japan,
not Germany,
let alone South Korea.
Those who expect an appeasing China
to be treated as an equal strategic partner by the US
are suffering from narcissistic illusion of grandeur.
Thomas
J. Christensen, Deputy Assistant Secretary for East Asian and
Pacific Affairs in the second Bush administration,
testified
before the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission on August 3, 2006 that “it is
important
to note that former Deputy Secretary Zoellick did not say China
currently is the responsible global stakeholder that he envisions.
Rather,
Zoellick emphasized that US
policy should focus on urging China
to become such a responsible global stakeholder. This is in fact the
crux of US
policy toward China
today, a policy that combines active engagement to maximize areas of
common
interest and cooperation, along with a recognition that the US
needs to maintain strong regional capabilities in case China
does not eventually move down a path consistent with US interests.”
In other words, play according to US rules or face war.
Yet as US relationship with China continues to expand, the
US seeks to encourage China to join it in actions that are designed to
strengthen and support the US global system that has failed to provide
peace,
security and prosperity to much of the world. By betting its future on
run-amok
globalization and the collapsing global system of maximum exploitation,
China
runs the risk of being a rat boarding a sinking ship.
April 23, 2007
Next: China’s
Appeasement Faction
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