Stumbling
Towards Catastrophe: The New Cold War With China
With tensions between the
US and China at an all-time high, experts warn the two powers are
closer to a military confrontation than ever before. A war with China should be
unthinkable in Washington since the conflict could be catastrophic to the entire world as the threat of it erupting into a full-blown nuclear war is very
real. But with a deteriorating trade relationship, tension over the Covid-19
pandemic increased US Navy
activity in the Pacific, new sanctions aimed at Chinese officials, and
hostile rhetoric coming from the Trump administration, the unthinkable is
becoming more and more likely.
Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo announced new
sanctions on Friday aimed at “current and former” Chinese
Communist Party (CCP) officials, accusing them of violating Hong Kong’s
autonomy. Hong Kong has served as a stage for recent US meddling, with
Washington openly supporting the protests that rocked the city since March
2019. The Trump administration accused Beijing of violating Hong Kong’s
autonomy with a new national security law made for the city, a bill designed to
quell protests.
Some Chinese officials
justified passing the law by pointing to the
foreign interference in the demonstrations – that interference
included Congress hosting protest leaders and passing legislation to confront
Beijing over the former British colony. China’s concern with foreign
interference is clearly outlined in the
national security bill, which includes “collusion with foreign and
external forces” on a list of criminal offenses the bill aims to combat.
The Senate just passed
the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, which would sanction
“foreign individuals and entities that materially contribute to China’s failure
to preserve Hong Kong’s autonomy.” The new legislation is the Senate’s response
to the Hong Kong national security law. Congress is also keen on confronting
China militarily, with lawmakers working
out a plan to give the Pentagon funds to increase its
footprint in the region, a plan dubbed the “Indo-Pacific Deterrence
Initiative.” Secretary of Defense Mark Esper has repeatedly identified China as
the Pentagon’s number one
priority.
President Trump signed
the Uyghur Human Rights
Policy Act into law on June 17th, a bill that will
enable even more sanctions against Chinese officials over China’s treatment of
Uyghur Muslims in the Xinjiang province. The Trump administration published a document
last week that listed 20 Chinese companies and accused them of being arms of
China’s military, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). Although nothing in the
document substantiated the claim, it opens the possibility of Washington taking
actions against the companies listed, like sanctions, which have become a staple of the administration.
The telecommunications
company Huawei was included in the list of companies allegedly run by the PLA.
Huawei, a major player in 5G technologies, has been banned from the US. The
Trump administration is working hard to prevent other countries from doing
business with Huawei and continues to pressure
its allies into not accepting the company’s 5G
technology. The common accusation against Huawei is that its equipment could be
used to spy on other countries, an accusation that rings hollow coming from the US, a country that can track cell phones all over the world, as revealed by the leaks
from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.
These latest economic
provocations came after the US and China signed the Phase One trade deal in
January. According to The Wall Street Journal, when Mike Pompeo met with
China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi in Hawaii on June 18th, Yang warned
Washington’s recent meddling in Beijing’s affairs could jeopardize the trade
deal. Yang listed Hong Kong and Taiwan as areas where the US meddles and
expressed “strong dissatisfaction” with President Trump’s signing of the Uyghur
Human Rights Act.
The increase in tensions
between the US and China is due in large part to the Covid-19 pandemic. Top
officials in the White House, including the president, have accused Beijing of
a cover-up in the early days of the outbreak. In an interview with
Fox News last week, White House trade advisor Peter Navarro was asked
if the phase one trade deal was over. Navarro responded, “it’s over,” his
reasoning being the fact that the Chinses officials who signed the agreement in
Washington on January 15th did not mention the pandemic. Navarro claims the
White House first heard of the pandemic after the Chinese diplomats’ plane took
off, although Covid-19 was already in the news
days before.
Navarro quickly recanted
his statement on the trade deal and said he was taken “wildly out of context”
in the interview. “I was simply speaking to the lack of trust we now have of
the Chinese Communist Party after they lied about the origins of the China
virus and foisted a pandemic upon the world,” Navarro said. President Trump took to
Twitter to ensure that the trade deal is still “fully intact.”
In the early days of the
Trump administration, Navarro and former White House strategist Steve
Bannon fought hard to push President
Trump to put tariffs on Chinese goods, a battle they won. Bannon, a
self-described ultra-hawk when it comes to China, has been crusading against
the CCP since he left the White House. In a recent interview
with Asia Times, when asked if Washington
should pursue regime change in Beijing, Bannon said, “I don’t think Asia can be
free until we’ve had regime change in Beijing. And I am an absolute advocate
of that.”
Bannon denied rumors that
he was joining the Trump campaign for 2020 but ensured many of his friends and
colleagues will be on the president’s team. “One hundred and twenty percent of
my time right now is spent on taking down the Chinese Communist Party, with the
Committee on the Present Danger,” Bannon said. The Committee on Present Danger:
China (CPD) is an incredibly hawkish think-tank started by Bannon and
neoconservative Frank Gaffney in 2019.
On June 5th, the CPD published an essay titled “To the
Americans Who Are on Their Knees,” which Gaffney and CPD chair Brian Kennedy
called “the single most important call in a generation aimed at enabling our
countrymen and women to recognize and respond appropriately to a present
danger.” The essay addresses the protests that erupted across the US in the
wake of the killing of George Floyd. The author claims the American left
leading the movement is the “catspaw” of foreign powers. “First, the police
will be defunded; second, the Revolution will defund the US military; third,
the Chinese and Russians will bomb and invade the country,” the essay reads.
This tirade could be
dismissed as the ramblings of a crazed hawk, but a link to the essay remains in
prominence on the CPD’s front page, and the think-tank’s message gets through
to the White House. The group recently sent a letter to President Trump,
praising him for releasing the list of 20 companies that are allegedly run by
the PLA and gave the president advice on possible steps forward.
Some of the tamer rhetoric
coming from the CPD and right-wing populists like Bannon resonates with many
Americans. There are real concerns regarding US reliance on Chinese
manufacturing, something that was exposed by the Covid-19 pandemic when the US
faced shortages of personal protective equipment. The loss of American jobs to
China is another talking point that gets through to people on the right and the
left. There is a consensus among both groups that corporations sold out the
American people when they exported manufacturing to China.
Despite the rhetoric, the
fact that the US and China are each other’s largest trading partners has its
benefits. This fact is enough to discourage officials on both sides from
turning this Cold War into a hot one. But as trade relations sour, and
President Trump openly considers
completely “decoupling” from China, the risk of a shooting
war is much higher.
The prophetic Justin
Raimondo put it best in a March 2008 column titled, “Why They
Hate China.” Justin wrote:
“If goods don’t cross
borders, then armies soon will – a historical truism noted by many before me,
and with good reason. Let it be a warning to all those anti-free trade, antiwar
types of the Right as well as the Left – you’ll soon be jumping on the War
Party’s bandwagon when it comes to China’s turn to play the role of the global
bogeyman. The way things are going, that day may come soon enough.”
Justin’s words are
something to reflect on while the US and China are careening towards war and
people on the left and the right continue to demonize Beijing. While there are
real concerns to be had with China’s human rights abuses, US intervention will
undoubtedly make the situation worse. And hawks like Steve Bannon disguise
their neocon hopes of regime-change in a country of 1.4 billion people as
populist rhetoric to fool Americans into consenting to this new Cold War.
Washington has a history of stumbling into catastrophe in East Asia. From
Manila to Pyongyang, US adventurism in the region has left millions dead in its
wake, a war with China will kill millions more — a potential catastrophe that
must be avoided.
Dave DeCamp is an assistant
editor at Antiwar.com and a freelance journalist based in Brooklyn NY, focusing
on US foreign policy and wars. He
is on Twitter at @decampdave.
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