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Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

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sexta-feira, 6 de dezembro de 2019

Chinese Oppression of the Uighurs - Bernhard Zand

Persecution of the Uighurs The West Must Respond to Chinese Oppression

There are many disturbing aspects to modern-day China, but its treatment of the Uighurs is the most despicable. The West must come up with a response to the inhuman persecution.

Working as a reporter in the Xinjiang region of China is an experience both exhilarating and depressing. From the vast expanse of the Taklamakan Desert to the majestic peaks of the Pamir range, the panoramas are overwhelming, the landscapes straight out of a painting. Fully two hours are needed to fly across China's largest province from east to west. On the ground, it can take days.
But few are interested in talking -- neither the man sitting next to you on the airplane nor the family sharing your compartment on the high-speed train. After a while, you grow hesitant about addressing anyone at all. Every encounter could have consequences: unpleasant ones for the reporter, but potentially dreadful ones for his counterpart.
Living in Xinjiang, after all, is dangerous. Those who talk to the wrong people or take the risk of speaking with foreigners, those who read the wrong books, visit the wrong websites or express the wrong thoughts: They all risk being interrogated or locked up that same night. Hundreds of thousands of people, and likely more than a million, have suffered that fate. Beijing has set up a surveillance state in the homeland of the Muslim Uighurs of a kind that the world has never seen before.
People across the globe have been broadly aware of the situation for years. But in the last few weeks, the New York Times and an international collective of investigative journalists have published details that had remained secret until now. They provide an in-depth look at how the camp system was conceived and how the state put it into practice. The documents include procedures for answering the questions of children whose parents are locked away in a camp. They include an instruction manual for running hundreds of penal and re-education camps, which Beijing euphemistically refers to as "vocational training centers." It makes it clear that it is of utmost importance to "prevent escapes," and states that inmates must be strictly monitored "while they are at class, dining, using the toilet, washing, receiving medical care or meeting with family."
Of all the disturbing aspects of the Chinese regime, it is what it is doing in Xinjiang that is the most disturbing. It reveals the true nature of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and may shape modern China's global image more lastingly than any event since the brutal crushing of the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. It remains doubtful whether Beijing understands the intensity of the shock that the recent reports have triggered around the world.
The problem now facing the West is that of coming up with an adequate response to these hundreds of thousands of violations of basic human rights. Of breaking the silence about the fate of the Uighurs, a silence that is still there despite the recent revelations. Of determining what can actually be done for Muslims in China beyond empty statements of solidarity, given the tight political and economic relations the United States and Europe have with Beijing.

A Conflict over Values
The West finds itself involved in a number of conflicts with the burgeoning global power, from the U.S. trade war to the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong, from Beijing's industrial policies to its influence along the New Silk Road, from the bickering over telecommunications company Huawei to the territorial disputes in the South China Sea. Some of these clashes are the inevitable consequence of an emerging China stepping on the toes of an insecure West that is worried that its days of supremacy may be fading. On most issues, there are interests and arguments on both side, but compromise is fundamentally possible.
Xinjiang is different. There are, to be sure, interests at stake here as well: the Chinese population's legitimate need for security along with the equally legitimate concerns of the many countries to which thousands of oppressed Uighurs have fled. But at its core, the Xinjiang conflict is one over values. The degree of discrimination combined with the severity with which Beijing is persecuting its Muslim minority, represents a violation of fundamental values that are not up for negotiation. Rather, they are anchored in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which China also signed when it joined the United Nations -- and which Beijing isn't shy about invoking when it feels the rights of Chinese citizens have been violated abroad.
This conflict of values has been exacerbated by the technological aspect. In Xinjiang, China is relying on digital tools for mass surveillance to an unprecedented degree. DNA-profiling, compulsory installation of spying apps, algorithm-driven facial recognition, identifying citizens based on ethnic characteristics: Beijing is essentially using all of the technical tools at its disposal to keep the Uighurs under tight control.
Even many Chinese harbor fears that these technological tools could soon be used elsewhere in China and even beyond the country's borders. These concerns are justified. The scale of digital surveillance being used in Xinjiang is nothing short of a civilizational rupture. For the first time, it has become conceivable that an authoritarian regime will succeed in robbing an entire population of its culture and religion using digital means.

An Aside
How should the West react to something like that?
The first step must be that of ascribing the diplomatic and political weight to the Xinjiang issue that it demands. Thus far, only the U.S. government has done so sufficiently. European heads of government, by contrast, have "addressed" the persecution of the Uighurs during their recent visits to China, but only as a side note and among other issues.
Second, European countries must insist more forcefully than they have thus far that Western diplomats be guaranteed unimpeded access to Xinjiang. It is important that they get a firsthand look at a situation that only very few journalists have thus far laid eyes on. Furthermore, such visits to the region by European diplomats are necessary to shine the spotlight on oppression. In contrast to the protest movement in Hong Kong, whose representatives have traveled the world to drum up attention for their demands, and in contrast to Tibet, whose plight is never completely ignored because of the presence of the Dalai Lama, the Uighurs have few prominent supporters abroad.
Third, the West must significantly increase both the political and economic cost for Beijing should it continue its human rights violations in Xinjiang. That could include import restrictions for companies that benefit from the tech-powered surveillance regime in Xinjiang, including firms like Dahua, Hikvision and Iflytek. Should the conflict escalate, the West could also consider targeted export bans.
Some of this may sound dated and somewhat futile given China's current economic strength. And one shouldn't have any illusions about how much influence the West has on Chinese domestic policy. It's not much. But for Beijing, the use of severe -- or even extreme -- measures in foreign policy is a matter of course. Norway learned as much in 2011 after regime critic Liu Xiaobo received that year's Nobel Peace Prize. South Korea likewise bore the brunt in 2017 after the deployment of a U.S. missile defense system in the country, and Canada was penalized by Beijing in 2018 after arresting the chief financial officer of Huawei, including the arrest of two Canadian citizens who are still behind bars to this day.
To be sure, China wouldn't be alone in bearing the costs for a more robust Xinjiang policy. Western companies would suffer as well. And Germany, because of its reliance on exports, is particularly exposed. But together with its European and American allies, Berlin does have significant influence. And because of its own history, Germany has a greater responsibility than any other country to flex its muscles.

Unacceptable
Earlier this year, the European Commission released a report in which it referred to China as a "systemic rival." That is particularly true when it comes to Xinjiang. Still, the West must resist the temptation to conflate the human-rights violations in Xinjiang with other ongoing China conflicts and turn it into an all-encompassing confrontation between two worldviews. That would neither be a fruitful approach to the Xinjiang question, nor would it contribute to finding solutions to the other disputes. On the contrary, it would constitute a relapse into a world divided along an ideological fault line. With humanity currently facing an array of problems that cannot be solved without China -- nuclear proliferation, climate change, the fight against poverty and the consequences of globalization, to name a few -- that is something we can ill afford.
What is taking place in Xinjiang is unacceptable. Even as a million Uighurs have been separated from their children for indoctrination in camps, hundreds of millions of people further to the east in this vast country are living the "Chinese dream," working hard, ensuring a good education for their children, amassing consumer goods and traveling the world. 
But sometimes, even in faraway Beijing, the reality of the surveillance state in western China makes an appearance. A few weeks after I had returned to the capital after my last trip to Xinjiang and written about the oppressive realities in the region for DER SPIEGEL, I was called in by the Foreign Ministry.
An official there lectured me about the "irresponsibility" of my coverage and about my ignorance of the true conditions in Xinjiang. "You sit in your air-conditioned office," he said, "and don't have a clue what is going on there." When I reminded him that I had just spent a week in the region, he pulled out a slip of paper and said: "Yes, and you pressured a taxi driver into talking about his family, among other things." He knew the exact place, date and time: the morning of July 7 in the oasis city of Kashgar. 
It was true. On that day, a driver in Kashgar had taken me to the airport. And we chatted along the way, about our children.

Armenian Genocide Descendants Face Another Turkish Onslaught - Amy Austin Holmes, Lerna Ekmekçioğlu

Armenian Genocide Descendants Face Another Turkish Onslaught, One Century Later

One of the deadliest sites of the Armenian genocide – Ras al-Ayn – has once again fallen under Turkish control because of a ceasefire agreement negotiated by the United States. The incursion of Turkish-backed rebels in the swath of land ceded to Turkey has forced Armenian families to flee – one century after their ancestors fled those who sought to exterminate them. When Turkish President Erdogan visited the White House on November 13, President Trump failed to mention the ethnic cleansing campaign and assault on the descendants of Armenian genocide survivors.
The U.S. President paved the way for Turkey’s military to invade northern Syria earlier this fall when he ordered the withdrawal of U.S. troops against the advice of the U.S. military, key advisors, and members of Congress from both political parties.
Now, more than 100 years after the Armenian genocide, the United States negotiated a deal that ceded a swath of land between Tel Abyad and Ras al-Ayn (Serêkaniyê in Kurdish) to Turkey, granting Erdogan’s regime de-facto occupation of additional Syrian borderlands.
In 1915, long-held fears of territorial dismemberment and anti-Armenian sentiment led the Ottoman Turkish government to launch a brutal campaign against its Armenian population, who were killed, forced into Muslim households, or deported into remote areas to perish. Ras al-Ayn became one of twenty five concentration camps where deported Armenians from Anatolia were settled temporarily.  In 1916 the Ottoman government ordered the massacre of Armenians in two major camps (the other in Deir Ezzor is known as “Armenia’s Auschwitz”). An estimated 70,000 Armenians in Ras al-Ayn alone were killed by Turks and their militias. They were buried in mass graves or just left in open fields where bones of victims can still be found today.
Those who survived put down roots in the area, which enabled a multiethnic society to develop in northeastern Syria. The current cross-border military operation, however, seeks to change these dynamics permanently. Houses owned by Armenians, as well as other Christian and Kurdish families are being looted by Turkish-backed militias. “Taken by al-Jabha al-Shamiyya” has been scrolled on the gates of their homes to signal to other Turkish-commanded militias that the properties had already been confiscated.  Since the start of the Turkish assault, known as Operation Peace Spring, more than 200 civilians have been killed and hundreds of thousands have been displaced. All 30 Armenian families living in the region recently ceded to Turkey between Tel Abyad and Ras al-Ayn/Serêkaniyê have reportedly fled. Armenians are also under attack by the Islamic State (ISIS) in other parts of Northeast Syria. Just recently, Ibrahim Hevsop Bedo, an Armenian-Catholic priest, and his father were killed by ISIS gunmen while traveling to Deir Ezzor to restore an Armenian Catholic church.
The Turkish incursion has now forcibly displaced approximately 300,000 people from the so-called “safe zone” where Turkish-backed militias operate under the umbrella of the “Syrian National Army” and include groups known for their brutality including Ahrar al-Sharqiya, Jaysh al-Islam, Sultan Murad, al-Jabha al-Shamiyya, Hamza Brigade, and others.  On October 12, Hevrin Khalaf, a Kurdish female politician and head of the Syria Future Party, was captured and executed by Ahrar al-Sharqiya. Amnesty International referred to her murder and other summary executions as war crimes. In recent testimony, Syria Envoy James Jeffrey acknowledged that the State Department was investigating crimes committed by Turkey and Turkish-backed rebels. In a leaked memo, Ambassador William Roebuck, the top American diplomat working in northern Syria, wrote: “Turkey’s military operation in northern Syria, spearheaded by armed Islamist groups on its payroll, represents an intentioned-laced effort at ethnic cleansing.” 
President Erdogan publicly announced at the United Nations General Assembly intentions to deport Syrian refugees living in Turkey into the areas now being depopulated by Turkey and its militias.  The forced return of refugees into a war zone is illegal under international human rights law, yet Erdogan’s plan has not been denounced strongly by world leaders, in part because he regularly threatens to send Syrian refugees and captured ISIS members to Europe and other countries.  
In recent days, the House of Representatives recognized the Armenian genocide and condemned the murder of about 1.5 million Armenians. On the same day, the House also passed a bill sanctioning Turkey for recent actions. While these actions are long overdue, the decision to move this legislation now signals unprecedented congressional anger at Turkey, a NATO ally that will remain mostly rhetorical as the Senate is unlikely to pass a genocide resolution or adapt meaningful sanctions.
Ignoring and rewarding Turkey’s increasingly authoritarian ruler sends a terrible message, condoning ongoing war crimes by Turkish forces and allied militias in Syria. Some of these groups actually film themselves carrying out executions of civilians.  
Turkey and Turkish-backed militias should be sanctioned, and displaced families should be allowed to return to their homes. The United States should not lend its support for the Turkish government’s goal of re-engineering the demographics of a geography already stained by genocide a century ago.  It is not too late to reverse some of the damage that has been done. 

Amy Austin Holmes is a visiting scholar at the Middle East Initiative of Harvard University, and the author of Social Unrest and American Military Bases in Turkey and Germany since 1945, (Cambridge University Press). She has carried out research in Northeast Syria since 2015, and has conducted the first survey of the Syrian Democratic Forces.  Lerna Ekmekçioğlu is an Associate Professor of History at MIT and the author of Recovering Armenia: The Limits of Belonging in Post-Genocide Turkey, published by Stanford University Press. She studies and teaches about women’s experiences during and after wars.
*** To watch a clip from Amy Austin Holmes' video interview on this subject, click here. 
Statements and views expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author and do not imply endorsement by Harvard University, the Harvard Kennedy School, or the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.  – Via Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School.

Brasil-China-EUA-chantagem no 5G: como anda essa relação especial?

A relação muito especial do olavo-bolsonarismo diplomático, e delirante, com o trumpismo ainda mais delirante, mas maldoso e chantagista, está cada vez mais especial, no sentido em que se exige, como diria o capitão, fidelidade matrimonial, sem qualquer aventura com amantes asiáticas.
O pior é que esse "matrimônio" submisso é absolutamente vergonhoso, pois o mandante grandalhão quer deixar a noiva trancada em sua jaula.
Que recompensa os sabujos estão obtendo pelo seu americanismo servil?
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

EUA ameaçam cancelar acordo de Alcântara se Brasil mantiver China no leilão 5G

Recado chegou após mútuas sinalizações de Bolsonaro e Xi Jinping na cúpula do Brics. Americanos temem espionagem de tecnologia espacial.

Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara (CLA), no Maranhão está agora no centro...
EVARISTO SA via Getty Images
Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara (CLA), no Maranhão está agora no centro da disputa EUA-China na qual o Brasil precisa se equilibrar.
O governo dos Estados Unidos fez chegar ao presidente Jair Bolsonaro um recado que pode ser considerado uma retaliação muito maior que taxar o aço: o Acordo de Salvaguardas Tecnológicas para uso da base de Alcântara, no Maranhão, está ameaçado caso o Brasil mantenha os chineses no leilão 5G — que está previsto para o segundo semestre de 2020. Os americanos temem espionagem e alegam que não vão utilizar sua tecnologia espacial em um país no qual as redes de tecnologia da informação são controladas por seu rival comercial, a China. 
O AST permite o uso comercial da base de Alcântara para o lançamento de satélites, mísseis e foguetes americanos. Em contrapartida, o Ministério da Defesa estima um faturamento de até US$ 10 bilhões (cerca de R$ 41 bilhões) por ano com o aluguel do Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara (CLA).
Ao HuffPost, o brigadeiro do ar Rogério Veríssimo, que coordena o grupo de trabalho brasileiro formado para implementar o acordo, nega a informação, a qual classificou como “fake news”. “Não há a menor chance de o AST ser prejudicado por conta da China. Fake news. AST já está aprovado por lei”, afirmou o brigadeiro Veríssimo em troca de WhatsApp. A reportagem confirmou a advertência recebida dos EUA com diplomatas e interlocutores do governo. 
Apesar da alegação do brigadeiro Veríssimo, que dá a entender que não há como voltar atrás no acordo, há trechos no texto do próprio AST que abrem espaço para os EUA colocá-lo em suspeição, em especial sobre a questão de troca de tecnologia. É o caso do artigo IX, que trata da implementação:
“As Partes deverão entrar em consultas, por solicitação de uma das Partes, para avaliar a implementação deste Acordo, com particular ênfase na identificação de qualquer ajuste que possa ser necessário para manter a efetividade dos controles sobre a transferência de tecnologia.” 
O Acordo de Salvaguardas Tecnológico de Alcântara foi aprovado no Senado em 12 de novembro, e existe um grupo que reúne 13 ministérios trabalhando para sua implementação. Desde o governo Fernando Henrique Cardoso o Executivo tentava tirar o AST do papel e o Palácio do Planalto tem se vangloriado de que foi a relação próxima da família Bolsonaro com Trump que propiciou sua assinatura em Washington, em março deste ano.
Na tarde desta quarta-feira (4), a Embaixada dos Estados Unidos no Brasil refutou a reportagem do HuffPost, classificando-a de “falsa”. A assessoria negou qualquer disposição do governo americano em cancelar o acordo. Ao longo desta quarta, o HuffPost conversou com novas fontes, também de Washington, e mantém a versão originalmente publicada. 

Brasil vira alvo

A mensagem com a ameaça da suspensão foi enviada de maneira informal pela diplomacia dos EUA à brasileira dias após a realização da cúpula dos Brics (Brasil, Rússia, Índia, China e África do Sul), realizada em Brasília em meados de novembro.
O evento, monitorado de perto pelo governo americano, contou com várias sinalizações de Bolsonaro aos chineses. A princípio crítico da China, o mandatário brasileiro disse que o país “cada vez mais faz parte do futuro do Brasil”. 
O Brasil tem objetivos claros na relação com a China. Aumentar o valor agregado das exportações brasileiras, atualmente concentradas em commodities é um deles. Há uma demanda crescente pela carne suína, bovina e de frango brasileira — motivada pela febre aftosa africana, que reduziu os rebanhos. De janeiro a outubro de 2019, o País exportou 3,86 milhões de toneladas do produto, aumento de 44% na comparação com o mesmo período do ano passado. 
Outro foco é atrair investimentos em infraestrutura, fato sinalizado pelo presidente chinês Xi Jinping durante a cúpula dos Brics. A China colocou à disposição do governo Bolsonaro mais de US$ 100 bilhões de ao menos cinco fundos estatais. 
O movimento desta segunda-feira (2) de Donald Trump de anunciar sobretaxa sobre o aço brasileiro e argentino, acusando os países de manipular o câmbio, foi interpretado internamente por alguns palacianos como estratégia eleitoral do presidente dos EUA. Pode, porém, resultar num movimento de aproximação de Bolsonaro com a China, embora muito esteja em jogo agora, com a ameaça americana da vez.
Sala de controle do Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara
EVARISTO SA via Getty Images
Sala de controle do Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara (CLA). 
Apesar de já ter chegado a Brasília há cerca de duas semanas, o recado de Trump ainda não tinha sido levado a sério até o tuíte do presidente dos Estados Unidos de segunda sobre aço. Os bolsonaristas não acreditavam que o mandatário, considerado “amigo” pelo presidente brasileiro — que chegou a falar até que ligaria para ele e o faria repensar a medida —, seria capaz de algo drástico a esse ponto. É deste grupo que parte a insistência por um alinhamento automático com os Estados Unidos. 
O núcleo mais pragmático, que reconhece a necessidade de intensificar a relação comercial e estratégica com a China, correu para acalmar Jair Bolsonaro na segunda e aproveitou o momento de “chateação” para abordar temáticas sobre desconfiança e a importância de não se poder entregar tanto aos EUA. 

Saia justa

Na mesma ocasião em que assinou o acordo com os Estados Unidos, em uma visita que Bolsonaro fez aos Estados Unidos, em março, o Brasil também retirou a obrigatoriedade de visto para os americanos, canadenses, australianos e japoneses. Abriu mão ainda de tratamento especial na OMC (Organização Mundial do Comércio) em troca de apoio de Donald Trump na entrada na OCDE (Organização para Cooperação e Desenvolvimento Econômico), o que não se concretizou mais à frente.
Por outro lado, são dos chineses os pacotes mais baratos em 5G quando se compara com os concorrentes, como Ericsson e Samsung. Os EUA, porém, já proibiram a empresa chinesa Huawei de operar por lá — o veto total deve entrar em vigor em fevereiro de 2020.
Acontece que a China também pode retaliar o Brasil caso seja excluída do leilão do ano que vem sem justificativas claras. Até o momento, apenas Austrália, Nova Zelândia, Japão e Vietnã se renderam às pressões norteamericanas de boicote aos chineses.  
Com tantos passos atrás dos EUA, a diplomacia brasileira agora foi colocada em teste de fogo. Jair Bolsonaro está, desde ontem, em cima de seus subordinados em busca de soluções. Até o momento, não recebeu resposta com a qual tenha se contentado. Quem olha de fora e já foi “chutado” do governo avalia que a ideologia foi colocada acima dos interesses do País e trouxer a política externa até o atual impasse.

Relações China-EUA: finalmente uma postura equilibrada - Robert Zoellick

Can America and China Be Stakeholders?

This is adapted from a from a speech given by former World Bank President, and Carnegie Endowment Trustee Robert B. Zoellick at the U.S. – China Business Council on December 4, 2019.

The daily news about China reports deals on and off, sales off and on, more and steeper tariffs on and off…and who knows what’s next?
It’s not easy to tell what’s going on—although costs are mounting and real results are missing. America has been wasting time and squandering international capital.
In describing effective diplomacy, Alexander Hamilton once counseled, “mildness in the manner, firmness in the thing.” “Strut is good for nothing,” advised America’s first practitioner of economic statecraft. Instead, Hamilton recommended “combin[ing] energy with moderation.” Or as James Baker, my former boss at Treasury, the State Department, and the White House would say, “Pick your shots” and “Get things done.”
This evening, I’ll step back from today’s tactics to offer a wider-lens perspective on U.S.-China relations.
Fourteen years ago, I gave a speech to the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations titled: “Whither China: From Membership to Responsibility?” That title included a question mark.
The speech grew out of the first of the 21st Century strategic dialogues, which I conducted with Mr. Dai Bingguo, who rose to become China’s State Councillor for foreign relations. I was replying to a seminal article in Foreign Affairs, “China’s Peaceful Rise to Great Power Status,” by Mr. Zheng Bijian, a senior adviser to China’s leaders, beginning with Deng Xiaoping.
By the time of my speech, seven U.S. Presidents of both parties had worked for over 30 years to integrate a poor and economically isolated China into the international system that America had designed and led.
By 2005, I pointed out, China had emerged from seclusion and joined the world—including the United Nations Security Council, the WTO, IMF, and World Bank. From agreements on ozone depletion to nuclear weapons, China had become a player at the table.
China’s leaders and its hard-working people had pursued an incredible modernization within an international system that had enabled China’s success.
But having largely accomplished the aim of integrating China, the question for the United States, I explained back then, concerned Beijing’s conduct: “How will China use its influence?”
I urged China to look beyond membership in the international system— “to become a responsible stakeholder in that system.”
The speech stressed the “norms,” not just the “forms,” of international integration.
I pointed out that many countries hoped China would pursue a “Peaceful Rise,” but that none would bet their future on it. I warned that the United States would not be able to sustain the open international economic order—and domestic support for that regime—unless China cooperated in sharing responsibilities and using its power constructively.
Some commentators later treated my call as some kind of a concession—though it’s hard to understand why the United States wouldn’t have wanted China to assume more responsibilities within a U.S.-led system, especially with the implicit signal that the United States would be the umpire of China’s choices.
I suspect that some didn’t like that I combined my urging of responsible action with a tone of respect for China. And my idea opened the door to Chinese views and suggestions for addressing common challenges.
My choice of words also led to an amusing irony: It turned out that the Chinese struggled to translate the term “stakeholder.” The uncertainty about the diplomatic implications of the word prompted a useful debate within China about the meaning of the U.S. idea—and stirring debate is a result dear to all speechwriters.
Now to make such a policy effective, U.S. officials needed to remain in close touch with developments in China and the wider region—with the help of allies and all of you in the business community. American policy needed to work the details as well as discuss strategy.
We used to call this diplomacy.
Today’s logic of constant confrontation with China rejects the approach I had outlined.
It rejects the idea that China can play a constructive role within the system that America constructed.
It rejects the idea that China can make contributions.
It even rejects the idea that China can, or even would, act in ways that complement U.S. interests.
Be aware: If U.S. policy assumes China cannot do any of those things within the system America designed, then the United States will, in effect, be prodding China into championing a parallel, separate system, with very different rules.
I understand many of today’s complaints, but we are at serious risk of losing sight of American aims and how best to achieve them.
One of the founding principles of constant confrontation is an assumption that cooperation with China failed. This is the premise that underpins the Administration’s National Security Strategy paper of 2017.
Let’s test that assumption.
China was once an outright enemy of the United States, sponsoring revolutions, spreading chaos, and backing proxies, such as North Korea and North Vietnam, which were at war with America. Today, we are strategic competitors, but China moderated and modified dangerous behaviors as Beijing worked to take part in the U.S.-order.
Consider the world’s most dangerous weapons.
Until the late 1980’s, China was the world’s leading proliferator of nuclear weapons and missiles—for example, to Pakistan and across the Middle East. Then China started to adjust to global norms governing exports of weapons of mass destruction and related technologies. It ceased nuclear tests in the 1990s and signed the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty—while waiting for U.S. action before ratifying. China joined the Biological and Chemical Weapons Conventions. China now abides by the Missile Technology Control Regime as well.
Although China once had been a partner of Iran, it worked with the United States to sanction and halt Iran’s nuclear program.
Although China fought against the United States in the Korean War, it has worked with Washington to press North Korea to freeze and reverse Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program.
Between 2000 and 2018, China supported 182 of 190 UN Security Council resolutions imposing sanctions on states violating international rules, prodded by vigorous U.S. efforts.
China is the second largest funder of the UN and UN peacekeeping missions; it has deployed 2500 peacekeepers, more than all the other Perm Five Security Council members combined. As Tom Christensen detailed in his book, The China Challenge, the United States spurred China to help end the genocide in Darfur, Sudan, a cause I identified in the 2005 speech.
China is the largest contributor to global growth. China cut its global current account surplus from about 10 percent of GDP to around zero—meaning that its demand has fueled worldwide expansion.
For the past 15 years, China has been the fastest growing destination for U.S. exports—until the Trump Administration embraced protectionism and sparked worldwide retaliation.
China no longer undervalues its exchange rate. It reduced reserves by about $1 trillion.
During the global financial crisis, China had the largest and quickest stimulus to counteract what could have been another Depression.
As former Secretary of the Treasury Hank Paulson related, when Russia allegedly approached China in 2008 about dumping dollars to harm the United States, China did not think this was a good idea.
Of course, many of these steps were in China’s self-interest, but they were helpful to others around the world, too. That’s what effective economic integration has accomplished.
When I served at the World Bank, China cooperated closely with us. It made early repayments and contributions to the Bank’s International Development Association, which funds the poorest countries. China supported our initiatives—ranging from support for the rule of law and fighting corruption to Open Data systems and plans for Climate Change.
China advanced extra monies to add to the IMF’s financial capacity. China’s new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank has embraced global standards for governance, procurement, and environmental practices; the AIIB co-finances World Bank and Asian Development Bank projects. My friends at Mercy Corps have worked with humanitarian counterparts in China to help victims of disasters.
Even the story of China in the WTO warrants balanced treatment. China’s commitments in 2001 lowered its barriers considerably below those of other major developing countries, such as India and Brazil. The United States was also able to add Taiwan to the WTO when Beijing joined.
China fairly implemented numerical commitments such as tariffs and quotas. But its record for duties that are harder to measure—such as forced technology transfer, IPR enforcement, regulatory reforms, and trade-distorting subsidies—is spotty.
The main problem is that current WTO rules don’t cover many U.S. needs. China’s Ambassador to the United States has acknowledged that his country’s suit of WTO clothes from 2001 no longer fits, and China is discussing WTO reforms with others—although haltingly-- to meet various objections.
Some Chinese reformers looked to the Trans-Pacific Partnership’s provisions for guidance—but then the United States abandoned the TPP, and China’s internal reform advocates lost ground. Still, China has lowered its average tariff for others to 6.7 percent, although many U.S. exports face retaliatory tariffs. The new Chinese IPR courts have ruled in favor of the vast majority of international complaints, although penalties are insufficient.
China, the largest emitter of greenhouse gases, now accepts that it must join in efforts to limit climate change. However, China’s plans for coal-fueled generating plants belie its interests. Melting in the Himalayas would devastate the country. On the plus side, China is a leading innovator in non-fossil fuel technology.
Conservationists applaud China’s ban on elephant ivory sales, and China’s netizens campaigned effectively against shark-fin soup. Yet China’s tiger farms and illegal traffic of tiger parts may lead to the extinction of those iconic cats in the wild.
In the late 1950’s, China shelled Taiwan’s islands. When President Richard Nixon and Secretary Henry Kissinger opened ties almost 50 years ago, the United States suggested that “history will take care of the problem.” The success of Taiwan’s democracy shines as an example of a transition from authoritarianism to freedom. The United States contributed through military deterrence and an assurance not to support independence. To best safeguard Taiwan, the United States would be wise not to take Beijing’s restraint for granted, especially after the apparent breakdown of the “one country, two systems” model of Hong Kong.
My point is definitely not that all is well with China. I will turn to serious U.S. complaints in a moment.
But those who blithely assume that U.S. cooperation with China didn’t produce results in America’s interest are flat wrong.
Those who assume that China has not acted constructively within the U.S.-guided system—who assume that China is only a disrupter—are misleading themselves, and self-deception is dangerous in diplomacy.
Results should be the aim of our diplomacy.
Furthermore, the record warns not to take benefits for granted.
We are now witnessing just the vanguard of woes for America, China—and the world—if the two major powers slide into mutual animosity and zero-sum calculations.
We need to be clear-eyed about the real strategic challenges that China presents and disciplined not to distract with blanket blasts that will likely lead to misjudgments and mistakes.
Evan Feigenbaum of the Carnegie Endowment has pointed out recently that China is in fact pursuing a two-track approach toward the changing international order.
As a member of international organizations, China seeks to nudge those regimes toward Chinese preferences and norms.
Does this really surprise us?
What is surprising is that the United States has made China’s work easier by subverting the international economic and security system that America built over 70 years.
Is this really in America’s interest?
I hope you are aware, for example, that the United States will paralyze the WTO’s dispute resolution system this month. Two of the remaining three members of the WTO appeals body have reached the end of their terms, and the Administration has blocked the appointments of any successors. The Reagan, George H.W. Bush , and Clinton Administrations fought for and negotiated to create the WTO to give U.S. companies a fair, legal process to counter trade law violations; the Trump Administration prefers to break rules and institutions.
As Feigenbaum has explained, however, China is pursuing a second, alternative track as well: China’s Belt and Road presents another international model, a modern adaptation of China’s long-standing preference for tributary ties. This effort offers economic benefits to those who join China, combined with warnings for states that fail to accommodate Beijing.
We need to compete with China within international institutions and country-by-country. Because it’s hard to beat something with nothing.
We need to compete with China by promoting better ideas and practices and through attractive partnerships, instead of by retreating and bullying.
Too often, we just seem to behave belligerently. Not just with China—but we bludgeon NATO allies, Japan and South Korea, Canada and Mexico, and democratic partners around the world. The Administration is wasting diplomatic capital built up over generations.
We also need to ask why Sino- American relations have tumbled into constant confrontation.
I believe six developments have converged.
First, frustrations boiled over for U.S. businesses on market access: a lack of reciprocal trade and investment openings; forced technology transfers; intellectual property rights (IPR) violations; regulatory hurdles and arbitrary actions; and restrictions on exports, such as rare earth minerals.
I believe the United States could address many of these items through calibrated, continuous pressure and negotiations.
Many countries—developed and developing—share U.S. concerns. They would be willing to work with us, but not as part of a campaign to disengage and decouple from China. Many are wary because they are too busy defending themselves from Administration assaults on everyone’s trade. Pick your shots.
There are also parties within China that want to fix many of these problems in order to boost reforms, support domestic innovation, improve competitive opportunities, and retain access to U.S. and other international markets. For example, China’s opening of the asset management business recognizes the need for deeper and more liquid financial and savings markets. An aging China needs better pension systems.
Of course, China’s fixes need to extend beyond words on paper.
To take another example, ending requirements for joint ventures would reduce Chinese temptations and opportunities for forced technology transfers.
The United States is most likely to get results if it works with other countries and combines arguments about China’s self-interest with targeted, not haphazard, threats of penalties or retaliations.
Second, Americans question whether China’s state capitalism permits fair competition.
President Xi Jinping has recommitted China to privileges for state-owned enterprises (SOEs), granting them a dominant role, even though SOEs impede China’s economic potential. Nick Lardy of the Peterson Institute of International Economics pointed out in his recent book, The State Strikes Back, that about 40 percent of China’s SOEs are money-losers. Yet SOE assets are growing four times faster than those of private firms, even though SOE returns are much worse. China’s private sector is complaining about its disadvantages, inability to compete, and even intrusions on corporate governance.
There are at least two ways the United States could discipline China’s state capitalism productively.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership and the U.S.-Singapore Free Trade Agreement imposed competition policy requirements that compelled state enterprises to compete like private, profit-making firms. In addition, as Chad Bown (also of the Peterson Institute for International Economics) has written, the United States could work with others in the WTO to tighten subsidy rules, subjecting them to trade penalties. But we should be aware that other countries will point to large, direct U.S. subsidies—for example, to farmers—and to indirect support through U.S. government R&D and contracts.
Third, Americans fear that China will dominate the technologies of the future. This critique targets the “Made in China 2025” plan, although Party leaders have downplayed that plan’s influence.
Not surprisingly, China wants to move up the value chain. With a declining labor force, the planners seek higher value-added businesses, increased productivity, and higher wages.
Some steps, such as better and more enforceable IPR protection, if applied to all, could be mutually beneficial. More open research and higher standards for publication in China could help, too. But other actions, ranging from stealing to protecting markets, cause big headaches.
We are already in the age of the “splinternet.” I expect to see decoupling in telecom, internet and information and communication technology (ICT) services, and 5G systems.
We will all be worse off, however, if blanket bans and barriers supplant risk assessments. For example, anxieties over the use of Big Data could lead to ending cooperative and competitive innovation in the life sciences and other cutting-edge, beneficial sectors.
The best U.S. response to China’s innovation agenda is to strengthen our own capabilities and to draw the world’s talent, ideas, entrepreneurs, and venture capital to our shores. We will succeed by facing up to our own flaws, not by blaming others.
Fourth, I pointed out in China last year that no one had explained the motivation for Belt and Road: Was it a geopolitical move? A plan to employ excess Chinese capacity to build infrastructure? A development project? My guess is all of the above. The idea that China could build out Eurasia with Chinese-style transport corridors may well be building debts, not sustainable development.
I suggested that China should apply higher standard and the global principles adopted by the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank to Belt and Road: transparency; anti-corruption; open procurement; careful environmental practices; and debt sustainability for partner countries. At this year’s Belt and Road Forum, President Xi seemed to begin embracing these ideas.
The U.S. and other governments, as well as groups like the U.S.-China Business Council, should follow up so that good intentions become better practices.
Fifth, China’s foreign and security policy has clearly moved beyond Deng Xiaoping’s adage of “Hide your strength, bide your time.”
China wants military primacy in the Western Pacific and perhaps across more-distant seas.
These goals, while disconcerting, should not be surprising. They merit a strategic, well-resourced, and consistent response.
The United States needs closer ties with allies and partners and investments in our own capabilities.
America also needs to identify its key interests—such as freedom of navigation in principal sea-lanes and the ability to defend allies. The United States should calculate means and ends more carefully than it has done in recent decades, when Americans could operate with domain dominance all around the world.
Navy Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan, writing about American strategy in the Asia-Pacific at the dawn of the 20th Century, expected power in the region to remain “debated and debatable.” In other words, the United States would need to compete, maneuver, and balance power with others. We could benefit from Mahan’s historical and geopolitical perspective in the 21st Century.
Mahan also wanted to boost U.S. trade with Asia. Tariffs, he wrote, were like “a modern ironclad that has heavy armor, but inferior engines and guns; mighty for defense, weak for offense.” Why have we adopted an ironclad trade policy?
The corollary of careful calculation of military missions and capabilities is a need for disciplined diplomacy.
Even during a highpoint of U.S. power at the end of the Cold War, President George H.W. Bush and Secretary James Baker mobilized allies, built coalitions, negotiated with partners, and communicated a restrained power that was all the more effective because others did not want to test America’s will.
Finally, my sixth point is that Xi Jinping’s leadership has prioritized the Communist Party and restricted openness and debate in China.
When Xi assumed office in 2012, he commissioned a documentary film about the end of the Soviet Union—to be shown to all Party cadres. A similar film in Europe would have hailed Mikhail Gorbachev as a hero who helped end the Cold War. Not so for the Chinese version: Gorbachev was the fool who abandoned the Communist Party, ruined his country, and led to the breakup of the Soviet Union.
The not-so-subtle message was, “It won’t happen here.” The Soviet collapse continues to haunt China’s Communist leaders.
Having first met President Xi in 2006 when he was a provincial party secretary and having worked at the World Bank on China’s economic strategies, I had an opportunity to ask about Xi’s development priorities when he rose to the top. He answered, “the 86.68 million members of the Communist Party.” Xi’s reply was revealing about the man and the regime he leads: For Xi, China’s development depends on the strengthened leadership of the Party.
At the Central Committee’s recent Fourth Plenum in October, the public message revived the language of the Cultural Revolution: “Party, government, civilian, student—east, west, south, north, and center—the Party leads in all things.” That about sums it up.
The use of technology to control society—such as through facial recognition and social credit scores—strikes Americans as, to put it bluntly-- creepy.
Crackdowns in Tibet and Xiajiang add to a wider sense of internal oppression.
China hurts itself by forging a role model for dystopian societies of intrusive technologies and reeducation camps.
The rule of law and openness upon which Hong Kong’s “One Country, Two Systems” model rests may topple or be trampled. If China crushes Hong Kong, China will wound itself—economically and psychologically—for a long time.
Americans have had a long tradition of missionary work in China—religious, educational, medical, and political. We have wanted the Chinese to be like us—through Christianity, commercialism, and republicanism. When the Chinese rejected our appeals—during the Boxer Rebellion in 1900, the victory of the Communists in 1949, the Korean War of 1950 to 53, and the violent suppression in 1989—Americans pulled back with shock and anger.
I suggest that this time we stay steady without yielding our beliefs.
Ronald Reagan championed a contest of ideas with the Soviet Union even as he sought cooperation to make the world safer.
The foundation of America’s appeal is our own story. We need to work on the America of the world’s imagination and aspiration.
I am saddened when our leaders fail to appreciate that America’s practices should be examples and models, a founding principle dating back to America’s Revolutionary generation and then Abraham Lincoln.
We would be foolish to close off America to students, dreamers, immigrants, and ideas.
We would be foolish to place all Chinese students who come to America, or even Chinese-Americans, our fellow countrymen and women, under a veil of suspicion.
The United States will not win a competition by becoming more like China.
Which brings me back to where I began, with the “Responsible Stakeholder” speech of 2005.
I closed those remarks by explaining that, “Freedom lies at the heart of what America is…” guided by our call for the “non-negotiable demands of dignity.”
I pointed out that our purpose in championing ideas and ideals was not “to weaken China.” Our goal, as President George W. Bush then stated it, has been “to help others find their own voice, attain their own freedom, make their own way.”
Then and now, I believe that “Closed politics cannot be a permanent feature of Chinese society.”
The close observer might perceive that China, like the Communist systems that preceded it, shows signs of stagnation. Its hesitations on market reforms and a more open society signal weakness, not strength.
China’s future chapters are still to be written.
The challenges of U.S.-China relations, as I’ve outlined them tonight, fit poorly with bombast and tariff barrages.
Frankly, the Administration itself seems divided.
The principal negotiators are pressing for sales to China and greater openness; if successful, they would further economic integration.
Others in the Administration issue diplomatic indictments that can only lead to decoupling with China, even if officials eschew the word.
Many in Congress and opposing candidates in our elections are eager to show they’ll be tough and will confront China, too.
“Toughness” alone fails as policy if unconnected to objectives.
The speeches of Administration principals herald rivalry, but with no sense that the United States can shape China’s international behavior—whether through diplomacy, negotiation, competition, building coalitions to pressure Beijing, or deterrence.
The Chinese have listened. President Xi has reportedly told his politburo colleagues in closed sessions that they need to prepare for 30 years of sustained struggle with the United States. “Struggle” is China’s new watchword of strategy. China will reduce its vulnerabilities by taking steps to insulate China from American pressure and by building new partnerships around the world, even as Beijing increases national self-reliance, an old Chinese tradition.
Note how China just agreed to the new Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, including with many Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation countries. I worked with Secretary Baker in 1989 to launch APEC to give the United States an economic edge in the Asia-Pacific. Now America abandons the field, with serious consequences for U.S. relations with Southeast Asia, a dynamic region that will factor importantly in the 21st Century.
As time passes, the United States loses friends and trust around the world. China maneuvers tactically with America and watches, probably with wry satisfaction, as the United States dissipates the international strengths built up over many decades.
Ask yourself: Can the United States really expect to deny China a place in the international system, with influence over rule-making?
If we acknowledge China’s role as a power at the table, shouldn’t we urge China to assume responsibilities as a systemic stakeholder?
As Jeff Bader, a U.S.-Asia expert with decades of experience observed recently, the U.S. challenge of influencing China’s behavior is no doubt harder than it was when I suggested the stakeholder approach in 2005. China is bigger, stronger, has had a good run, and sees less need to accede to standards of a West in disarray. We will have to face views we don’t like.
Nevertheless, Bader added, our diplomacy should work out a global framework within which China can make adjustments to support systemic interests—instead of leaving China to break the international system or to pursue the risky cause of trying to create a conflicting international order.
The United States is a stakeholder with interests, too. Some 250,000 Americans died in Asia in the 20th Century. To paraphrase Napoleon, the borders of a nation’s influence are marked by the graves of its soldiers.
We should not abandon our stake for shaky, short-term trade announcements or by degrading alliances into ties of convenience based upon shady accountings of troops, tribute, and trade.
I’ll conclude with a direct observation for all of you, leaders in America’s business community: The ground is shifting under your feet.
Your own concerns with China led many of you, perhaps understandably, to pull back.
You then stepped cautiously to avoid President Trump’s wrath—not to mention China’s.
The stakes are higher now. Be alert to greater risks of miscalculations and unintended consequences.
Kevin Rudd—former Prime Minister of Australia, a good friend of the United States, and a close student of China—recently warned: “A fully ‘decoupled world’ would be a deeply destabilizing place, undermining the global growth assumptions of the last 40 years, heralding the return of an iron curtain between East and West and the beginning of a new conventional and nuclear arms race with all its attendant strategic instability and risk.”
Are you ready for this?
A slide into Sino-American conflict—whether intentionally or by accident—would lead to incalculable costs and dangers. The 20th Century painted a shocking picture of industrial age destruction; do not assume that the cyber era of the 21st Century is immune to crack-ups or catastrophes of equal or even greater scale.
You need to decide whether you think the United States can still cooperate with China to mutual benefit while managing differences-- and if so, how.
You need to decide whether U.S. influence can be enhanced through long-term partnerships with allies and partners.
You need to decide whether we should save, update, and even expand the international trading system of openness, rules, and fair settlements of disputes.
You need to decide whether you wish to represent America abroad as purveyors of principles, as well as commerce, treating people from other lands with dignity and respect.
Then you need to make your case—not just with the Administration, but with Congress, Governors, and Mayors; with your employees, customers, and suppliers; with the media and opinion leaders.
When I selected the word “stakeholder” in 2005, I had in mind that stakeholders have interests in a shared enterprise. That interest is worth work, even perseverance, to preserve, adapt, and grow. Only the foolish or faint-hearted just yield or abandon the enterprise.
Cooperation as stakeholders does not mean the absence of differences. Stakeholders compete, too. The management of their differences should take place within a larger framework that offers common benefits.
This can be done.
But only with your support and activism.