Who is surmising China launching an ‘Opium War’ against the US? Global Times editorial
By Global Times Published: Sep 18, 2024
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202409/1319937.shtml
Whenever China-US
cooperation makes actual progress, there tends to be rhetoric in the US aimed
at undermining the momentum, with the crackdown on fentanyl being the latest
example. Recently, some individuals in the US have once again begun to blame
China for the fentanyl issue, claiming that China is waging a "new Opium
War" to "hollow out" the US from within. A report by the US
Congress in April directly slandered "China as the ultimate geographic
source of the fentanyl crisis." These voices make it clear who is
undermining China-US cooperation in combating fentanyl.
The American politicians hyping up such claims appear to be suffering from
persecutory delusion. They envision China as an omnipotent, mysterious force
that controls Americans, leading them to involuntarily abuse fentanyl, which
has resulted in a large number of personal and family tragedies. They have
likely heard about the huge damage caused to China by the Opium War launched by
the West, thus they are attempting to portray themselves as victims, invoking
an old Chinese saying "give somebody a dose of his own medicine." In
their eyes, the current fentanyl crisis in the US is an act of revenge by
China. At the same time, these American politicians attempt to prove that
China's "revenge" is unjustified because "the US did not
participate in the Opium War" and "the harm caused by fentanyl to the
US far exceeds the costs of China in the Opium War."
These remarks, characterized by confusing logic and filled with historical
fallacies, are viewed as ridiculous by Chinese society. Their only function is
probably to reflect the guilty conscience of Western political elites regarding
historical issues. China is a victim of the Opium War, and these politicians
fail to understand and appreciate how deeply repulsed Chinese society, which
experienced the Opium War, feels about drugs. In a certain sense, the Opium War
is an important reason for the current antipathy and zero-tolerance attitude
toward drugs in Chinese society. When it comes to counter-narcotics, China has
the strongest determination, the most relentless policy and one of the best
records in the world. In terms of drug control, it is not an exaggeration to
say that the US should be a "student" that should humbly learn from
China.
The fentanyl issue in the US is not manufactured by China, nor is the abuse of
fentanyl a problem originating from China. The root of the problem lies in the
fact that American society's demand for narcotic and psychotropic drugs cannot
be met through legal, safe, and effective channels. The fentanyl crisis in the
US began with the over-prescription of medications, particularly opioids. An
article published by the American Addiction Centers in 2022 stated that even
patients taking fentanyl as prescribed by doctors could become addicted, yet
some doctors prescribe lethal doses of fentanyl to patients. A study on cancer
treatment indicated that up to half of American patients should not have been
prescribed fentanyl in the first place. This is just the tip of the iceberg regarding
the failures of the US in managing the fentanyl issue. As Al Jazeera said, it
is "a disaster of its own making."
In fact, illegal fentanyl entered the US market as early as the 1980s, and
multiple illegal labs have been discovered within the country, but American
politicians often avoid these historical facts. With only 5 percent of the
world's population, Americans consume 80 percent of the world's opioids,
something that any reasonable person can recognize as abnormal.
The enormous demand for fentanyl substances in the US is the root cause of the
crisis, and it is this excessively high domestic demand for these drugs that
drives the development of the illegal fentanyl market. In addition, why is the
same chemical, which is only a raw material for industrial and pharmaceutical
production in many countries, turned into a source of problem in the US? These
are issues that American politicians must face up to.
China's attitude toward supporting the US in combating the abuse of fentanyl is
sincere, and its actions are pragmatic. We are willing to strengthen drug
control cooperation with the US and actively participate in global drug
governance. This reflects China's responsibility as a major power. The drug
control mechanisms of China and the US have a history of over 30 years of
professional cooperation within both bilateral and multilateral frameworks.
Following the meeting between the two heads of state in San Francisco last
November, relevant departments from both sides have fully resumed drug control
cooperation and made substantial progress. Starting September 1, China added
three Fentanyl precursors, identified by the United Nations drug control
mechanism, to its list of controlled precursor chemicals, imposing stricter
oversight over their production. This marked a "valuable step
forward" in China-US drug control cooperation. These achievements have not
come easily, and the US should cherish them.
If the US truly wants to address the fentanyl issue, it must first respect the
cooperative efforts in drug control between China and the US, stop politicizing
the fentanyl issue, abandon the irresponsible practice of applying pressure
through public opinion, reduce its own internal conflicts regarding the
fentanyl issue, and sincerely return to pragmatic cooperation. Seeking China's
cooperation and support while simultaneously smearing and labeling it will only
make the US fentanyl problem more difficult to resolve.
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