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China and Appeasement
By
Henry
C.K. Liu
Part I: Beyond Munich -
Geostrategy and Betrayal
Part
II: China's Appeasement Faction
Part III: China’s Misguided Experts on the US
This article appeared in AToL on
May 1, 2007
Wang
Jisi, director of the Institute
of American Studies, is known in the West as China’s foremost expert on the US, a major “America
handler” who is “always giving guest lectures in the US
and very, very plugged-in with the senior leadership.”
He
reportedly spent a whole day briefing President Hu for his April 2006
US visit
which turned out to be a perfunctory summit with no milestone
diplomatic breakthroughs.
It was obvious that President Hu had not been adequately warned by his
expert
on the US
about
not-so-latent US
hostility. The most memorable moment of the summit was a televised
heckling by
a Falung Gong fanatic during the official welcoming ceremony on the
White House
lawn. Many Chinese think that the heckling was deliberately staged by
anti-China forces to publicly embarrass the leader of the world’s most
populous
nation, Wang Jisi’s well-known upbeat views of US
friendship notwithstanding.
Wang, dean of the School of
International Studies at Peking University and
Director of the Institute of International Strategic Studies at the
Central
Party School of the Communist Party of China, also had an article
published in
September/October 2005 issue of Foreign
Affairs to set a positive tone for President Hu’s April 2006 visit to the US,
with the
title: China’s Search for
Stability With America.
The
article is an expanded and revised version originally published in
Zhongguo
Dangzheng Ganbu Luntan, a journal of the Central Party School. Thus its views are not
merely diplomatic spin designed to persuade a skeptical US audience before a
difficult summit.
In his article, Wang argues for the need of China
to maintain friendly relations with the US,
as the US
is
expected to remain a superpower for a long time. Wang reasons that
“only a US
economic decline would reduce Washington’s
strength (including its military muscle) and ease the strategic
pressure on Beijing.
Such a slide, however, would also harm China’s
economy. In addition, the increased US
sense of insecurity that might result could have other consequences
that would
not necessarily benefit China.
If, for example, Washington’s
influence in the Middle East diminished, this
could lead
to instability there that might threaten China’s
oil supplies. Similarly, increased religious fundamentalism and
terrorism in
Central and South Asia could threaten China’s
own security, especially along its western borders, where ethnic
relations have
become tense and separatist tendencies remain a danger.”
This view of power geopolitics is deficient in analytical
clarity, even simple logic, let alone ideological correctness and
contradictory
to China’s
long-standing policy of rejecting power geopolitics. The need for
friendly
relations with another country is not based on that country’s economic
and
military strength, but on its peaceful attitude and just policies.
US-China
friendship cannot be based on US
power. It can only be based on a relationship of mutual respect and
equality,
and a commitment to peaceful co-existence.
Because of the already massive foreign exchange reserves
held by China,
a slowdown of the US
economy will not cause an unmanageable financial crisis for China.
If China
shifts
its economy toward domestic development rather than continues to rely
excessively on export for dollars, an economic decline in the US
would have only minor effect on the Chinese economy. In fact, it may
well be
the necessary medicine to force China
to shift toward domestic development over obstinate special-interest
objections
from the now excessively influential export sector.
Further, it is pure self deception to
think that Chinese
economic policy can exert any fundamental effect on the US
economy which in 2006 was still 10 times larger in GDP ($13 trillion)
than the
Chinese economy ($1.3 trillion). Total US-China trade in 2006 was $323
billion,
behind US-Canada trade of $533 billion and almost the same as US-Mexico
trade
of $332 billion. Recurring financial crises are structural for
financial
globalization under a dysfunctional finance architecture based on
dollar
hegemony. Such financial crises would allow the printer of dollars to
regularly
rob the exporting nations of their financial gains earned with low
wages. China
can only be a victim, never the instigator of such crises because it
cannot
print US dollars. US
economic decline will be the result of flawed US
policy and nothing else.
China’s
need for Mid-East oil is not threatened by US
withdrawal from the region as big producers, such as Saudi
Arabia and small Gulf
States as well as Iran,
are independently shifting the oil trade to China
away from the US.
It’s a toss up between continuing US
presence and withdrawal as to which will cause more stability in the Middle
East. While China
has no incentive or even the power to force a US
withdrawal from the Middle Ease, it can add its voice and influence to
urge the US
to adopt a
more balanced Middle East policy. It is not
necessary
for China
to
blindly support US
policy in the region because of China’s
need for oil. In fact the reverse is true. China
will put its oil supply in jeopardy by aligning too closely with a
flawed US
policy on the Middle East.
As for threats from terrorism, China
faces terrorist threats from separatist political grievances, quite
different
from the US
which faces terrorist threats from Islamic extremism out of religious
conflicts
and anti-imperialist grievances. In fact, China
cannot possibly hope to solve its own unique terrorism problem by
siding with
the controversial US War on Terrorism. Quite the opposite, a US-China
alliance
on global terrorism will add unneeded and unwanted complexity to the
single-dimensional terrorist threats faced by China
today. While terrorism-fighting
technology shares universality, the socio-political causes behind
terrorism are
unique in every nation, making international cooperation in any global
war on
terrorism highly problematic. Until 9:11,
the US
was an
open sponsor of separatist terrorism against China.
Wang writes that “history has already proved that the United
States is not China's
permanent enemy.” Such a claim is contrary to fact. The US
considers all communist governments permanent enemies. US
hostility towards China
is both racial and ideological, with the racial side running back two
centuries
to the founding of the US
as an independent nation and the ideological side beginning since the
founding
of the People’s Republic of China. This hostility is not limited to nation-state
geopolitics. Its missionary root goes to deep-seated public attitude
which
remains ready for demagogue politicians to exploit at any time. There
is a big
archive of racially-based anti-Chinese legislation in US
history.
A recent survey by WorldPublicOpinion.org (WPO) on US General
Attitudes Towards China shows that “Americans
lean toward negative views of China’s
role in the world, its government,
economic system, leadership, and its human rights record. There is
little
optimism that the human rights record will improve or that China
will become more democratic. Trust in China
is fairly low.”
Between January 2005 and April
2006, BBC/GlobeScan/PIPA and
WPO asked on three occasions Americans whether China
is having a mostly positive or mostly negative influence in the world.
In each
case a slight majority or plurality said it was having a negative
influence - January
2005 (46%), November 2005 (53%), and April 2006 (49%). Furthermore,
three out
of four Americans have an unfavorable view of “how China
uses military power and the threat of force.” Not
withstanding that this attitude is based
on perception misled by US
propaganda, not on historical facts, public opinion translates directly
into
votes that affect official policy in the US
political system.
Attitudes about the Chinese government and economic system are also
quite
unfavorable. In the April 2006 WPO poll, 80% said they have an
unfavorable
opinion of China’s
system of government (40% very unfavorable), while 66% had an
unfavorable view
of China’s
economic system.
Chinese president Hu Jintao also gets low approval ratings from
Americans.
Sixty-three percent have an unfavorable view of Hu, while just 27% have
a
favorable view of the Chinese leader. Attitudes about Hu are also more
unfavorable than those of Russian president Vladimir Putin, a former
high KGB
officer, who was rated in the same poll.
Asked in April 2006 whether China
has become more or less “democratic and responsive to its people,” only
24%
said it has become more democratic, while 49% believe it has “stayed
about the
same” and 18% said it has gotten less democratic. In the past, several
Pew
studies consistently found that a majority of Americans did not believe
“China's
government is becoming more democratic and is allowing more freedoms
for
Chinese citizens.” In May 2001, 62% expressed this view. Skepticism
about China’s
progress towards democracy is closely related to greater doubts about
improvements in its human rights practices.
Americans are also skeptical about China’s
movement towards the free-market system. In the May 2001 Pew poll, a
47% plurality
said they did not believe “China’s
economy is becoming more like the kind of free-market system found the United
States.” This was virtually unchanged
from
early 1999.
Americans have also shown pessimism about US
policies influencing China
to change, and about China
and the US
finding common ground. In a May 2001 Pew survey, a majority (56%) said
it did
not think it “possible for the US,
through its policies, to have much of an effect on making China
more democratic.” When asked in a March 1999 Louis Harris poll if “the US
and China
will
be able to work together to adopt the same common values about
democracy and a
market economy,” just 29% thought that would happen. Nearly two-thirds
(65%)
rejected the possibility.
Trust in China
continues to be fairly low. In February 2006 in the midst of the
controversy
over the management of US seaports by foreign companies, respondents
were asked
whether companies from different countries should be allowed to own
cargo
operations at US seaports. A majority (65%) believed that companies
from China or
Hong Kong should not be allowed to own these operations, more than
those who
opposed ownership by companies from Arab Countries friendly to the US
(56%
should not) and France (50% should not). In a January 2000 Hart
Research poll
nearly half (48%) said “compared with other countries that the US
trades with,” China
was seen as below average in “living up to the agreements it makes with
the United States.”
Just 32% thought that China
was average (25%) or above average (7%) in this regard.
Americans are more apt to view the US-China relationship as unfriendly
other
than friendly, but only a small minority views China as an outright enemy.
Americans are divided as to whether China is cooperating with the US in the war on terrorism.
A strong majority views relations with China as being important to US
interests
and growing more important, though problems posed by China are not
considered
pressing. While not
viewed directly as an enemy of the United
States,
perceptions of China’s
foreign policy influence on the US
are predominantly negative. Asked in April 2006 about how they view
“the effect
of Chinese foreign policy on the United
States
and its interests,” a majority of 54% said it has been very or somewhat
negative, while only 36% say it has been positive.
For decades, Harris polls have asked whether Americans think China
is “an ally of the US,
is friendly but not an ally, is not friendly but not an enemy, or is
unfriendly
and is an enemy of the US.”
Gallup, the Los Angeles Times, CBS News and others have used
similar
questions. Over the last few years, with just a few exceptions, a
plurality to
fairly strong majority has said that China
is either “not friendly” or an enemy. Recently (August 2005) Harris
found a 53%
saying China
was either “not friendly, but not an enemy” (38%) or “unfriendly and…an
enemy
of the US
(15%), while 41% called it either a “close ally” (5%) or “friendly but
not a
close ally” (36%). US-China friendship does not have a solid anchor and
is
affected in big swings by current events, meaning a sudden
confrontation can
activate public war cries against China.
When forced to choose between just two options of
characterizing China--as
either an adversary or an ally--a strong majority chooses adversary. As
recently as July 2005, a NBC/Wall Street Journal poll found
49% that
thought of China as more of an adversary “in general”, while just 26%
saw it as
more of an ally. An NBC/Wall Street Journal poll found that
about 3 in
4 considered China
to be “an adversary and competitor” on “diplomatic and military issues”
(77%)
as well as “economic issues” (73%). When asked in a May 1999 Pew poll,
51% disagreed
with the assertion that “China
is basically friendly toward the United
States.”
Thus When President Bush characterized China
as a “strategic competitor,” he was voicing US
public opinion.
Of course, how the US
public thinks of China
does not reflect an accurate picture of what China
actually is. It only reflects US
attitude. Yet it is not useful to dismiss such opinion as based on
ignorance
because in politics, perception is all. US
public opinion does influence US
policy by determining the composition and policies of the US
government. Wang Jisi, as China’s
foremost expert on the US,
would do well to pay close attention to such public opinion polls to
avoid
being misled by propaganda from his expert counterparts in US think
tanks.
Wang also writes: “Nor does China
want the United States
to see it as a foe.” Unfortunately, what China
wants of the US
is not what the US
government will automatically grant or even in a position to grant
without
public support. The US
will continue to see China
as a foe as long as public opinion on China
remains predominantly negative. To improve relations between the two
countries,
more than strategic dialogues between experts and policymakers are
needed.
Transparent spins by official experts are close to useless. What China needs to do, as Japan has
successfully done since the end of World War II, is to invest heavily
in people
to people contacts and exchanges with the US public, increase support
for
educational and cultural exchanges and promote a network of
non-governmental,
non-commercial friendship organizations in every states in the US to
give the
US public a better understanding of China. For
example, while there are frequent
exchanges of trade delegations,
there is yet no “Year of China” events in the US,
as it was in France
in 2003-4 and in Russia
now.
Experts like Wang Jisi usually spend a couple years at
prestigious US universities as pampered foreign VIP scholars and are
spoon-fed
well-rehearsed academic spins by their hosts who are China experts
whose
perspective on China are often detached from US mass opinion. Exchange
scholars
from China
are
frequently cocooned in an insulated environment of respect and
friendship from
their US
colleagues, never having a chance to personally experience directly the
reality
of racial discrimination and ideological intolerance in US
society. The positive perception of the US
these experts carry home with them is distorted by their insular
experience.
This explains why while China
can interact effective with the executive branch of the US
government, it does not have a good understanding of the raw political
dynamics
that drive the US Congress.
These US-trained Chinese scholars then return home as
experts on the US
to act as high-level advisors to the Chinese leadership. Their
understanding of
the US
is often
superficial and elitist, limited by the rules of discourse prevalent in
US
universities and policy think tanks they visited. Policy experts are a
tight
little fraternity and even if they are from different countries, they
tend to
adhere to thinking processes that are congruent while representing
official views of
their
different governments. They communicate through formal dialogue of
high-sounding policy and diplomatic jargons to seek convergence through
the
choreography of foreign policy negotiation. Together, these experts
fashion
agreements that cannot be implemented by the contracting governments
because
the agreements they make are often unrelated to reality on the ground
or the
domestic political weather in either country.
In democratic politics, the lowest common
denominator
frequently carries the day into policy. For the US,
that lowest common denominator is decidedly anti-China. For China,
the lowest common denominator is a fantasy on natural US
amity, a common defect of Chinese national narcissism.
Elitist Chinese experts on the US
like Wang Jisi would improve their understanding of the US
by heeding the advice of Mao Zedong to stay close to the voice of the
people.
As for Wang’s claim that “history has already proved that
the United States is not China's permanent enemy,” one can only surmise
that
Wang is unfamiliar with the views of Aaron L Friedberg, a professor of
politics
and international affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton
University,
who joined US Vice President Dick Cheney’s staff as a deputy national
security
advisor and director of policy planning on June 1, 2003 for a term of
one year,
taking a public-service leave from the WWS. The appointment caused
widespread speculation
about neo-conservative cooption of US
foreign policy in general and China
policy in particular. It is noteworthy that the appointment of
Friedberg
occurred almost two years after the terrorist attack of 9:11 in 2001, two months after
“catastrophic victory” in Iraq,
after
which US-China relations was supposedly improved by US
attention on a more pressing enemy.
In an article in the November 2000 issue of Commentary, an influential
neo-conservative
monthly, titled “The Struggle for Mastery in Asia”, Friedberg puts
forth the
proposition that “the United States will find itself engaged in an open
and
intense geopolitical rivalry with the People's Republic of China
(PRC)”, and
that “there are reasons to believe it is already under way”. This
article was
written at the time of the presidential election of 2000, and the
victory of
George W Bush since has given it policy significance. While the article
was
written almost a year before the attacks of September 11, 2001, the US
response
to which has affected its subsequent tactical posture toward China, the
neo-conservative theme of China being a strategic competitor to US
hegemony remains
operative for long-range policy. Friedberg’s appointment to Cheney’s
staff
after the second war in Iraq
as deputy national security advisor and director of policy planning
reinforces
this view.
Friedberg’s proposition is based on his openly stated assumption that
the US,
while seeking to satisfy China’s
legitimate ambitions, will not be willing to abandon its own present
position
of preponderance in Asia or to surrender “pride
of place”
to China.
To
permit a potentially hostile power to dominate East Asia
would not only be out of line with current US
policy, it would also mark a deviation from the fundamental pattern of
the US
grand strategy since at least the latter part of the 19th century.
These are the
necessary preconditions of a “struggle for mastery” in Asia,
Friedberg concludes. Wang would do well to temper his complacency about
“the US
not Being China’s permanent enemy” by paying attention to the likes of
Friedberg. See my June 14, 2003 AToL article: THE STRUGGLE FOR HARMONY
Part 2:
Imagined danger
Robert Dreyfuss in his article Vice
Squad about the Office of the Vice
President in The American Prospect
lists Vice President Dick Cheney’s leading China specialist, Stephen
Yates, and
several other key staffers as having worked for California Congressman
Christopher Cox in the 1990s during the Congressional investigation
into Chinese
political influence in the US that followed allegations of Beijing’s
contributions to the Clinton-Gore presidential campaign. The long
resultant
report characterizes China as a looming threat and rival, with rapacious
need for Middle East
oil and “designs” on Taiwan. Charles W. Freeman, a former U.S. ambassador
to China who
has known Yates many years says that Yates, as well as neocons Paul
Wolfowitz
and Douglas Feith, formerly top officials in Donald Rumsfeld’s Defense
Department, all see China as the solution to a US “enemy deprivation
syndrome.”
Dreyfuss’ article suggests that the
Cheney-dominated Bush administration sees China as the most serious long-term threat to US
global
interests. If conflict with China is inevitable, then the US needs bases in Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, Iraq and maybe even Iran and Syria. If China is dependent on Middle East oil, then the US must be able to control how and where the oil
flows from
the Caspian Sea and Persian Gulf oil fields. To contain China, the US needs to cultivate an alliance with India, even risking the accusation of nuclear
hypocrisy in doing
so. It is to US interest to reverse Clinton policy, raise tension on the Korean Peninsula, by linking North Korea to Iran and Iraq as “an axis of evil”, dismissing South Korea’s “sunshine diplomacy” efforts and encouraging Japan to take a hard line towards Pyongyang. The Bush administration managed to get Tokyo to declare, for the first time in history, that
the
security of the Taiwan Straits is of common concern to Japan and the US. In the name of the War on Terror, the US has regained a strategic toehold in the Philippines to malign the growing Filipino Maoist movement.
The Cheney neocons have a vision
of a new transformed world order built on two pillars: 1) a new
“democratic” Middle East
and 2) a long-range containment of China even if it should turn capitalist.
The Middle East vision since
the invasion of Iraq has fallen apart, but the long-range
containment of China may well be the redeeming war cry that will
save the
flawed vision. The neo-con anti-China cancer is now in remission, but
far from
being cured. Reforming and containing China is the one long-term issue that the Republicans
and
Democrats agree on, despite nuances of partisan politics, with each
party
operating with separate agenda.
The June 2005 issue of The
Atlantic Monthly featured Robert D. Kaplan’s How We
Would Fight China: The Next Cold War, as an inevitable war
that “will link China
and the United States
in a future [conflict] that may stretch over several generations.” By
comparison, “the Middle East is just a blip,”
according
to Kaplan. New York Times Columnist Thomas Friedman of The
Earth is Flat calls Kaplan among the “most widely read” authors
defining the post-Cold War world, along with Francis Fukuyama of End of History and Samuel Huntington of Clash
of Civilization. Huntington
fantasizes an “Islamic-Confucian world” in Eurasia, from the Middle
East to
China, as “an arc of crisis” overrun by evil enemies in an
“Islamic-Sinic
alliances” that must be tamed by the good forces of the West, and
prophesized that
a war between the US and China will break out by 2010, centering on the
oil
lanes of the South China Sea. Huntington’s
timing may be off, but his message is loud and clear to the US informed
public.
Thomas Donnelly, a senior fellow at the
Project for a New American Century (PNAC), a member of the China
Economic and Security Review Commission from February 10, 2005 to
December 31,
2006, writes in an article in the May 2003 issue of
American Enterprise
Institute’s National Security Outlook, that the US now needs to use its
two-month-old victory in the Iraq War to keep and enlarge the the
Pax Americana and to further institutionalizing
superpower unipolarity by “rolling back”
radical
Islamism while “containing” the People's Republic of China, that is,
“hedging
against its rise to great-power status”. While this view has
since been
tempered by US “catastrophic success” in war turning unexpectedly into
unmitigated failure in peace in Iraq,
the strategic design on containing China
remains unaltered.
Not all in the US
are war mongering fanatics, but even pacifists recognize US
belligerence towards China.
Joseph Gerson of the American Friends Service Committee, a pacifist
Quakers
group committed to the principles of non-violence and justice and
recipient of
the 1947 Nobel Peace Prize, warns in US
Asia-Pacific Hegemony and Possibilities of Popular Solidarity
delivered at
a conference in Seoul, South Korea in June 1999: “In the Asia-Pacific
region,
the US is enforcing its 21st century ‘Open Door’ policy by
means of
the IMF, the World Bank, APEC, bases and forward deployments, the
Seventh Fleet
and its nuclear arsenal; as it seeks to simultaneously contain and
engage
China, to dominate the sea lanes and straits through which the region’s
trade
and supplies of oil must travel (the ‘jugular vein’ of Asia Pacific
economies),
and to ‘cap’ Japanese militarism and nationalism.”
How deep does Wang Jisi have to bury his head in the sand to
not hear these loud predictions of inevitable war between the US
and China?
A review of Wang’s published work on his understanding of US
political culture shows that Chinese leaders are as much victims of
their experts
on the US
as US
leaders are of their experts on China.
It explains why the two nations interact like ships passing each other
in the
night.
For example, in a December 10, 2003
article in The Study Times (Xuexi Shibao),
entitled: The Logic of the American Hegemony, Wang
as
director of the Institute of the American
Studies in the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, writes in the lead
sentence:
“The development and changes of America’s domestic democracy have
strengthened
the status of the United States as a hegemon, and have also enriched
its
hegemonic thoughts.” He follows up by an analysis of US race and diversity politics and its
relationship to US hegemonic foreign policy.
But Wang’s analysis of racism in
US politics is naïvely conventional, showing a lack of deep
understanding
beyond that touted by the US mainstream media. In fact, US moral imperialism has not risen from its civil
rights
achievements or its commitment to racial and ethnic diversity as Wang
claims.
Rather the age of US
moral imperialism coincides with a period of backsliding in domestic
progress
on these issues. Wang cites Henry Kissinger, Zbignew Brzezinski,
Madeleine
Albright and Colin Powers as evidence of US diversity. Yet anyone familiar with US
sociological
development knows that minority members frequently complain about
tokenism with
the observation that “these prominent appointees only look like us;
they don’t
think like us or speak for us.” To this day, for a minority member to
succeed
in the US, he or she must purge deep-rooted minority
mentality.
There is a well-known joke that when US-born Israeli Prime
Minister Golda Meir tried to persuade Henry Kissinger, an Jewish
American, to
make Israel a top priority in US Mid-East policy, he reportedly sent
her a
note: “I would like to inform you that I’m first an American citizen;
second,
US Secretary of State; and third, a Jew,” to which she responded, “In
Israel,
we read from right to left.” On
Kissinger’s shuttle diplomacy between
Eqypt and Israel, he was often met by Meir at the airport. One
time, after
being kissed by Kissinger, Meir quipped in front of television: “I
didn’t know
you kiss women also,” in a good nature reference to Kissinger’s alleged
pro-Arab stance.
Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice is a visible case in point. Almost a year before Wang wrote his
article, The
Washington Post on January
18, 2003
credited then National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice, an African-America, with taking a key role in
helping
to shape the Bush administration’s decision to challenge the
affirmative action
admissions policy at the University
of Michigan, a position
widely
regarded as anti-minority and anti-diversity.
Wang writes: “The
Americans were
forced to withdraw from Vietnam in 1973, ultimately leading to a defeat that
has brought
tremendous shame and humiliation to the American nation. The end of the
Vietnam
War was primarily a consequence of international factors, but the
anti-war
movement in the backdrop of the civil-rights movement was also a major
reason
why President Johnson declined to run for re-election and why the Nixon
Administration decided to withdraw the U.S. forces from Vietnam. Nixon once helplessly remarked, ‘The Vietnam
War was not
lost in the battle fields in Vietnam, but in the halls of the Congress,
in the
offices of major newspapers and television editors, and in the
classrooms of
outstanding universities and colleges.’ Indeed, at the time when Nixon
made
these remarks, he still had power to continue this war, but he had lost
the
political basis and moral authority for doing so.”
If Wang had done
his research, he
would have found out from publicly available declassified documents
that by
1973 the US had already accepted defeated in Vietnam. The Tet Offensive between January and June
1968 was the
turning point that forced the US to recognize that the war could not be won
strategically,
even though the offensive itself was a tactical defeat for the Viet
Cong. In
the 1968 campaign, candidate Nixon asserted in virtually every speech
that the
goal of his administration would be to “end the war and win the peace
in Vietnam.”
Nixon worked to withdraw
from Vietnam soon after he entered the White House on January 20,
1969 as part of his
policy of détente with the USSR and opening to China. He faced a divided nation and had to
resist the
left which wanted an immediate withdrawal, as well as the right which
wanted a
further escalation of the war. The Nixon
remark
quoted by Wang above was only Nixon’s maneuver to assign blame for the Vietnam defeat conveniently to war protestors at home.
The historical fact was that the US had realized by the time Johnson refused to
face a second
term election in 1968 that the war was lost and the problem was how to
withdraw
gracefully from an un-winnable quagmire against the forces of
Vietnamese national
liberation. If the war were successful on the ground, no amount of
domestic
protest would be able to stop it short of total victory. It was the
same trick
as the post-1949 Republican charge of “who lost China” on the Democrats, as if China was the US’ to lose. China came under communism because of unstoppable
historical
current, not because the US State Department was infested with disloyal
communists as Senator Joe McCarthy claimed.
Again, Wang wrote: “In September
2002, the US National Security Strategy Report announced the
“preemptive
strike” strategy, causing strong criticisms from many countries. But if
the US
decides to launch a preemptive strike against another country, it has
to issue
a public military threat to that country before the actual strike takes
place,
only then will the US take advantage of the crisis, setting the bottom
lines of
concessions, creating waves of propaganda domestically and abroad, and
consulting its allies. The US will not launch blitzkriegs as did during the
invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany, Japan’s attacks on Pearl Harbor, the 1968 Soviet invasion
of Czechoslovakia, and the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Yet this does not by any means demonstrate the
“good
will” of the American hegemony. Instead, it tells us that the
complexity of the US decision-making process provides our countries
with
opportunities to figure out responses to the crisis, and to find out
ways to
influence the US decision-making process lest the situation gets
totally
out of control.”
The historical facts of German
invasion of Poland, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia and Soviet invasion of Afghanistan are at variance with what Wang presents. The
German
invasion of Poland began September 1, 1939, one week after the signing
of the
secret Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact which came into being as a result of
Western
maneuver at Munich a year earlier, giving plenty of time to prepare for
war or
to defuse it.
British historian A J P Taylor’s The Origins of the
Second World War, written between 1957 and 1961, challenged the
then-accepted view that Adolf Hitler had been a uniquely evil plotter
of war by
presenting a view of Hitler as an opportunist who had enjoyed much
popular
support in Germany
and Austria.
Hitler pushed for reform of the Versailles Treaty to secure concessions
that
would placate Germanic sentiment. The unraveling of the absurdities of
the
Versailles Treaty could have been managed rationally, as in the early
stages of
British and French appeasement over the Rhineland
and Germany’s
anschluss of Austria.
After Munich, in 1938,
having
appeased Berlin over
more
contestable territorial issues over the Sudetenland,
the
British changed their stance because of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and
decided
to fight over Danzig and the Polish
Corridor,
where the German case for revision was stronger than in Czechoslovakia.
Great Britain
and France
had up to that point vacillated between policies of appeasement and
resistance,
hoping to turn Germany
east against the USSR.
The result, Taylor
maintained, was
a war in Europe that nobody wanted and that
personally
dismayed Hitler. The European phase of World War II began simply as an
unintended
accident of miscalculation. Hitler never imagined that the European
Democracies
would actually go to war over Poland,
especially because London
and Paris
could do almost nothing to defend the Poles. And in 1773, Poland
had been the first nation in the European system to be partitioned out
of
existence without a war, a source of great satisfaction to the
participating
powers: Russia,
Austria
and Prussia.
In 1966, Czechoslovakia,
following the lead of Romania,
rejected the Soviet Union’s call for more
military
integration within the Warsaw Pact and sought greater input in planning
and
strategy for the Warsaw Pact’s non-Soviet members. At the same time,
plans to
effect great structural changes in Czechoslovak military organizations
were
under discussion. All these debates heated up in 1968 during the Prague
Spring
of political liberalization when CSLA commanders put forward plans to
democratize the armed forces, limiting the role of the party. National
military
doctrine became an issue with the release of two important documents:
the
Action Program of the Ministry of Defense and the Memorandum of the Klement
Gottwald Military
Political Academy,
stating that Czechoslovakia
should base its defense strategy on its own geopolitical interests and
that the
threat from the West had been overstated. Although the regime of
Alexander
Dubcek was careful to reassure the Soviet Union
that Czechoslovakia
would remain committed to the Warsaw Pact, Moscow
felt challenged by these developments, which undoubtedly played a major
role in
the final decision to invade in August 1968.
Wang confuses blitzkrieg,
a war prosecuting doctrine, with the general pre-war build-up of
political
tensions that lead finally to war. US
military doctrine since Vietnam
has been all blitzkrieg with
overwhelming force to end the fighting within weeks as in the two Gulf
wars. War
preparation by the US
military is a continuing undertaking to achieve continuous readiness,
with
war-inducing political scenarios projected years in advance and war
games
played repeatedly to prepare for future actions years in the future. It
is part
of the post WWII Cold War strategy of the militarization of the peace.
There is
no reason to expect US military action against China
would be different when it comes.
War-making power in the US
government has shifted entirely to the White House since the end of
World War
II, after which all US
wars have been undeclared wars launched by executive authority, with
Congressional input only after the fact. The political tension that can
lead to
war can fluctuate for decades yet never totally dissipating entirely.
But when
the shooting starts, it will be by blitzkrieg
tactic because no military wants a long drawn-out war. The US and China
are currently playing out a game of war or peace through strategic
dialogues.
The key to deterring an unwanted US
war against China
will be to convince the US
that such a war will not end quickly.
Again, Wang writes: “Due to the
diversity in politics, culture, and religion, the US government has no way of monopolizing moral
resources. It
cannot proclaim itself as the ultimate judge of justice.”
How then did the hijacking of US foreign policy by the Bush neo-cons with their
“moral
clarity” come to pass? Bush’s “transformationalist” agenda
embraced by
Condoleezza Rice, then as national security adviser, who in August 2003
set out
US ambitions to remake the Middle East along
neo-conservatives lines by using US
military power to advance democracy and free markets. It is a policy
for
political transformation of Arab society deemed vital to victory in the
“war on
terrorism”. The US
has long ago rejected cultural relativism in favor of moral
imperialism. That
has been the ideological foundation of the neo-conservative Project for
the New
American Century which declares a fundamental challenge in its
Statement of
Principles: “to shape a new century favorable to American principles
and
interests.”
The signers of the PNAC Statement - Elliott Abrams, Gary Bauer, William
J
Bennett, Jeb Bush, Dick Cheney, Eliot A Cohen, Midge Decter, Paula
Dobriansky,
Steve Forbes, Aaron Friedberg, Francis Fukuyama, Frank Gaffney, Fred C
Ikle,
Donald Kagan, Zalmay Khalilzad, I Lewis Libby, Norman Podhoretz, Dan
Quayle, Peter
W Rodman, Stephen P Rosen, Henry S Rowen, Donald Rumsfeld, Vin Weber,
George
Weigel and Paul Wolfowitz, all luminaries of the US political right -
seek “to
accept responsibility for America's unique role in preserving and
extending an
international order friendly to our security, our prosperity, and our
principles ... a Reaganite policy of military strength and moral
clarity.”
With such naïve views as those
held by Wang Jisi passing as sound analysis by China’s foremost expert
on the
US, the Chinese leadership will be hard put to make intelligent
decisions on
US-China relations.
The coalition of neo-cons and neo-liberals in US
foreign policy and economic agenda does not just want to prevent China
from achieving the reincorporation of Taiwan.
The coalition does not just want full opening of Chinese markets to
complete
neo-liberal globalization. It does not just want to impose US
democratic values
in China.
It
wants to “preserved and extend an international order friendly to US
security, US
prosperity, and US principles through military strength and moral
clarity”, with
proxy regimes led by native comprador capitalists who will gain power
through
bourgeois democracy financed by dollars. This
is the US
transformation strategy of regime change, by peaceful means if
possible, by
force if necessary. The US
has set itself up as a global monopoly of justice, with the right to
act as
judge, jury and executioner by virtue of its superior moral values.
Wang writes: “[China]
must maintain a close relationship with the United
States if its modernization efforts
are to
succeed, ... Indeed, a cooperative partnership with Washington
is of primary importance to Beijing.”
A more convincing case can be made that China
should maintain a correct and non-confrontational relationship with the
US
while building friendly cooperative relationships with all peaceful
nations of
the world. Until the US abandons its role as a superpower hegemon,
stops
interfering in China’s internal affair on the issue of Taiwan and
ceases and
desists in its aggressive push to transform China’s socialist system
into
market capitalism, a close relationship with the US at the expense of
Chinese
independence is not to China’s national interest, nor is it appropriate
for the
world most populous nation with one of the longest continuous history
to
support an exploitative US empire. China
should not accept a “cooperative partnership” with the US
in its strategy of turning China
again into a semi-colony by neo-imperialism.
China
can reach its goal of developing itself once again as a benevolent
great power
worthy of the spirit of its people, culture and history without
depending on
any one foreign nation. There is no need to rely on the “cooperation”
of a US
whose policy aims at a “struggle for mastery” in Asia.
Such a policy is by definition imperialistic as the US
is only a Pacific power by geography, and not an Asian power by either
geography or culture.
The US
has the capacity to be a great nation that can contribute to the
peaceful
development of a just world order. Unfortunately, the peaceful forces
in US
society has been largely marginalized in US politics, a process that
began with
Theodore Roosevelt’s Manifest Destiny imperialism, reversed during the
New Deal
era under Franklin D. Roosevelt and revived during the witch hunts of
the
McCarthy era and subsequent Cold War hysteria. The rise of neo-liberal
fundamentalism in the Reagan era has since legitimize greed and
exploitation. China
would do well for itself and for world peace to re-establish
cooperative
contacts with these peaceful forces in US politics.
China’s
economic relations with the US
are heavily tilted toward catering to capital and management, granting
visiting
executives of US transnational corporations the protocol equivalent of
visiting
heads of state. The result is that US
labor, both unionized and independent, has become passionately
anti-China.
Until China
improves its relationship with and understanding of US labor through
direct
dialogue and solidarity, a trade war of protectionism between the two
economies
is unavoidable.
Many US
non-governmental organizations which promoted friendship with China
during the long Cold War decades of official US
hostility towards China
have been unceremoniously jettisoned by the Chinese government since
the
establishment of diplomatic relations between the two governments. The
Chinese
government has pursued short-sighted power politics by catering only to
those
currently in power in the US
and ignoring long-time friends and supporters. Such behavior is
unbecoming for
a culture rooted in Confucian ethics. It is also the reason why China
scores so negatively in US
public opinion. Exchanges of scholars and experts in the last decade
have been
mostly reserved for neo-liberals and right-of-center ideologues who
basically
see socialist China
as a terminal case. As a result, China
has no true friends and supporters in the US
body politics or among the general public, only fair weather
opportunists in
finance and business, and missionaries with transparent agenda in
politics and
government. Until China
begins to rebuild grass-root friendship and support among the American
people,
there will be no sustainable harmony in US-China relations.
By favoring enemies
and neglecting friends, one seldom ends up with more friends. |
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