How to Confront Chinese Power Peacefully
By PATRICK J. BUCHANAN
As America grew in the 1800s from a
republic of a few millions, whose frontier stopped at the Mississippi, into a
world power, there were constant collisions with the world’s greatest empire.
In 1812, we declared war on Britain, tried
to invade Canada, and got our Capitol burned. In 1818, Andrew Jackson, on an
expedition into Spanish Florida to put down renegade Indians harassing Georgia,
hanged two British subjects he had captured, creating a firestorm in Britain.
In 1838, we came close to war over
Canada’s border with Maine; in 1846, over Canada’s border with the Oregon
Territory.
After the Civil War, Fenians conducted
forays into Canada to start a U.S.-British battle that might bring Ireland’s
independence.
In 1895, we clashed over the border
between Venezuela and British Guiana.
War was avoided on each occasion, save
1812. Yet all carried the possibility of military conflict between the world’s
rising power and its reigning power. Observing the pugnacity of 21st-century
China, there appear to be parallels with the aggressiveness of 19th-century
America.
China is now quarreling with India over
borders. Beijing claims as her national territory the entire South and East
China seas and all the islands, reefs and resources therein, dismissing the
claims of half a dozen neighbors.
Beijing has bullied Japan and the
Philippines and told the U.S. Navy to stay out of the Yellow Sea and Taiwan
Strait.
In dealing with America, China has begun
to exhibit an attitude that is at times contemptuous.
Here is a partial list of the targets of
Chinese cyber-espionage:
The Wall Street Journal
The New York Times
Bloomberg
Yahoo
Dow Chemical
Lockheed Marti
Northrop Grumman
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Adm. Mike Mullen
Los Alamos and Oak Ridge nuclear-weapons labs
The classified avionics of the F-35 fighter jet
The U.S. power grid
U.S. computers are being hacked and
secrets thieved, as Beijing steals the technology of our companies and
manipulates her currency to minimize imports from the U.S.A. and maximize
exports to the U.S.A.
“The international community cannot
tolerate such activity from any country,” says National Security Adviser Tom
Donilon.
Yet the “international community” has been
tolerating this activity for years.
No one wants a war with China, and
provocative though it is, China’s conduct does not justify a war that would be
a calamity for both nations. But China’s behavior demands a reappraisal of our
China policy over the past 20 years.
Consider what we have done for China. We
granted her Most Favored Nation trade status, brought her into the World Trade
Organization, threw open the world’s largest market to Chinese goods,
encouraged U.S. companies to site plants there and allowed China to run
trillions of dollars in trade surpluses at our expense.
In 2012, China’s trade surplus with the
United States was over $300 billion, largest in history between any two nations.
What has China done with the wealth
accumulated from those trade surpluses with the United States? How has she
shown her gratitude?
She has used that wealth to lock up
resources in Third World countries, build a world-class military, confront
America’s friends in neighboring seas, engage in cyber-espionage, and thieve
our national and corporate secrets. Is this the behavior of friends or partners?
And if the Chinese airily dismiss our
protests, who can blame them?
For years they have engaged in
cyber-espionage. They know we know it, and they have seen us back off calling
them out. For years we have threatened to charge them with currency
manipulation, and for years we have backed off.
If they have concluded we are more fearful
of a confrontation than they, are they wrong? Other than fear or cowardice,
what other explanation is there for our failure to stand up to China, when its
behavior has been so egregious and insulting?
Does America fear facing down China
because a political and economic collision with Beijing would entail an
admission by the United States that our vision of a world of democratic nations
all engaged in peaceful free trade under a rules-based regime was a willful act
of self-delusion?
What China is about is as old as the
history of man. She is a rising ethno-national state doing what such powers
have always done: put their own interests ahead of all others, suppress ethnic
minorities like Tibetans and Uighurs, and crush religious dissenters like
Christians and Falun Gong.
There is no New World Order. Never was.
The old demons—chauvinism and ethno-nationalism—are not ancient history. They
are not extinct. They are with us forever. And America is not going to be able
to deny reality much longer or put off facing up to what China is all about.
Given her current size and disposition,
one day soon we are going to have to stop feeding the tiger. And start
sanctioning it.
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