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Why it is time to get tough on China

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Harsh V Pant
Harsh V PantAug 07, 2020 | 10:43

Why it is time to get tough on China

Unless world's major democracies don't come together in managing China, all of them will lose the larger ideational battle.

In a remarkably forthright speech on China last month, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on the Chinese people as well as the "free nations of the world" to change the behaviour of the Chinese Communist Party, arguing candidly that "if the free world doesn't change Communist China - [it] will surely change us."

Ideological bias?

Framing the future of Sino-US relations as a struggle between the free world and tyranny, Pompeo suggested Washington reject "blind engagement" with Beijing and empower the Chinese people against the ruling Communist Party. Beijing responded by underlining that Pompeo's speech disregarded reality and was filled with ideological bias but what was interesting was how few among Washington's policy elite challenged the fundamental premise of Pompeo's argument.

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Relations between Beijing and Washington have reached a historic low but a new consensus seems to be emerging in the US about its China policy. The Trump Administration has turned the screws on China over the past few months by taking a range of actions on various fronts - from human rights to trade and technology, from diplomatic and official disengagement to academic and scholarly exchanges. Last week, the US ordered the closure of the Chinese consulate in Houston, prompting China to take over the premises of the US consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu in retaliation.

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It is accepted that Trump has been right to challenge China on its unfair trade practices and aggressive geopolitical moves. (Photo: Reuters)

The US also decided to challenge Chinese claims more robustly on the South China Sea issue with Pompeo arguing most of China's claims in the South China Sea are "completely unlawful" calling out Beijing over its campaign of bullying in the area. Where previous US administrations were reluctant to come out in the open, the Trump Administration has drawn a line for Beijing. It has taken measures to end Hong Kong's preferential trading status with the US after China's imposition of its national security law that changes the nature of Hong Kong's relationship with mainland China by challenging the Hong Konger's right to freedom of expression. Sanctions have been imposed by Washington on a number of Chinese officials, including a senior member of the Communist Party, over China's targeting of its Muslim Uighur minority in the Xinjiang region. Even on Taiwan and Tibet, the Trump Administration managed to rattle China. It approved a US$180 million arms sale to Taiwan this year and has taken measures aimed at penalising Chinese officials who try to prevent US officials and citizens from going to Tibetan areas.

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The beginning

It had started with Trump trying to take on China during his election campaign four years ago. It has now led to one of the most serious efforts by the US towards a trade and technology decoupling. Huawei, China's largest technology company, has become emblematic of America's new resolve to take on China. Washington has led a global campaign to blacklist Huawei globally and last month won a major victory when the UK decided to go back on its earlier decision and finally banned its mobile providers from buying new Huawei 5G equipment after the end of this year. More recently, after suggesting he was planning to ban TikTok amid concerns that its Chinese ownership represents a national security risk, he has given around six weeks to Microsoft to finalise its acquisition of TikTok's US operations. Even as the US-China ties touched their nadir in recently, and more is likely to come, there seems to be an emerging consensus that America's China policy has turned a corner. Even in the case of Trump's election defeat, little of substance is likely to change in the US-China bilateral dynamic. An almost five-decade-long bipartisan consensus across six US presidencies seems to be coming to an end. The conviction that the US should support China's rise is being replaced with an equally powerful distrust of Chinese motives across domains - economic, political, diplomatic and even academic.

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A unified approach

It is accepted that Trump has been right to challenge China on its unfair trade practices and aggressive geopolitical moves. The Democratic nominee, Joe Biden, is not challenging the fundamentals of this Trumpian approach.

The question remains — can the US manage China on its own? In his speech, Pompeo underlined the Trump administration's strategy toward China as "getting tough" which had to be aided by like-minded nations. Calling upon democracies, he said, "we, the free nations of the world, must induce a change in the [Chinese Communist Party's] behaviour in more assertive ways because Beijing's actions threaten our people and our prosperity." Pompeo is right. Unless the world's major democracies don't come together in managing China, all of them will lose the larger ideational battle. As this churn sharpens, New Delhi's task is cut out. It has to speak up more about the fundamental values that bind it to other democracies as it seeks to manage one of the most formidable national security threats it has ever faced in the Himalayan frontier. India's reticence of yore can no longer be an option.

(Courtesy of Mail Today)

Last updated: August 07, 2020 | 10:43
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