The National - News

The US needs to recognise China’s place in the world – as a responsibl­e nation

- SHOLTO BYRNES Sholto Byrnes is a commentato­r and consultant in Kuala Lumpur and a correspond­ing fellow of the Erasmus Forum

HBoth Donald Trump and US Congress should act with care, with the first step being to end the ongoing trade war

ardly a day seems to go by without some new story appearing about rising antagonism between China and the West. Beijing ordering government and public offices to remove all foreign computer appliances within the next three years – doubtless a tit for tat against America’s freezing out of Huawei – is just the latest. There are plenty to choose from, right down to a debate about whether TikTok is a “harmless App” or an “insidious Chinese threat to America”, as the National Interest website put it earlier this week.

Everyone is aware of the bigger issues. There is a trade war between the US and China, initiated by American president Donald Trump. The US Congress has now passed the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, which allows sanctions to be applied to individual­s who undermine “fundamenta­l freedoms and autonomy in Hong Kong”, and the House of Representa­tives has passed the Uighur Human Rights Policy Act, which would require the Trump administra­tion to take action against Beijing’s re-education policy which is viewed as targeting the Muslim Uighur population in the western region of Xinjiang.

Take these issues, combined with the US’s ongoing commitment to a vigorous naval presence in the South China Sea – most of which China claims, against the protestati­ons of several countries in the region – and at one level there appears to be a strange disconnect. Perhaps because Mr Trump still refers to Mr Xi as “a friend of mine” and “an incredible guy”, there is a sense in which these clashes can be managed and kept separate. Somehow we are reassured that they do not all add up to something far bigger.

Look at it from another perspectiv­e, however, and they certainly do. It would be hard for the Chinese government not to see a wave of hostility bearing down on them and, in terms of American public opinion, they would be absolutely right. According to the latest Pew Research Center poll, 60 per cent of Americans now have an unfavourab­le view of China, the highest figure since the question was first asked in 2005.

Niall Ferguson, the US-based historian, recently wrote that there is indeed a new Cold War, and it is with China, not Russia. Mr Ferguson dates the start of this conflict to 2019 because it was then, he believes, that “Mr Trump’s hostility went from foreign policy idiosyncra­sy to convention­al wisdom”, with even the Democratic presidenti­al contender Elizabeth Warren calling for a tougher line on Beijing. Mr Ferguson’s rather chilling view is that if what he calls “Cold War II” is confined to economic and technologi­cal competitio­n – which is a suspicious­ly big “if” – “its benefits could very well outweigh its costs”. He points to the research and developmen­t spurred by the original standoff between the US and the Soviet Union and the possibly unifying effect on a polarised America if its citizens realised that they once again had a common enemy.

There are those who would welcome a Cold War II on the grounds that they are so ideologica­lly opposed to what is officially termed “Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteri­stics for a New Era” that they relish a confrontat­ion (which they hope America would win, of course).

The rest of us who shudder at the thought need to make sure that we do not drift any further towards such a cataclysm by default. Urging the US to put an end to a trade war that has cost American farmers dearly, rather than irresponsi­bly suggesting that a deal could be put off until after the next US presidenti­al election, as Mr Trump recently did, would be a start.

Another would be to ask, as the broadcaste­r and analyst Fareed Zakaria did in a recent essay in Foreign Affairs magazine: “What would be an acceptable level of influence for China to have, given its economic weight in the world?” In the essay, Mr Zakaria raises the usual criticisms of China but he also asserts that “today’s China is a remarkably responsibl­e nation on the geopolitic­al front. It has not gone to war since 1979. It has not used lethal force abroad since 1988. Nor has it funded or supported proxies or armed insurgents anywhere in the world since the early 1980s. That record of non-interventi­on is unique among the world’s great powers.”

He also mentions that China is now the second-largest financial contributo­r to the United Nations and its peacekeepi­ng programme. It has put forward an ambitious trade programme – the Belt and Road Initiative – that “could be a boon for the developing world if pursued in an open and transparen­t manner, even in cooperatio­n with western countries wherever possible”. Also, while Beijing certainly seeks to extend its influence abroad (what country doesn’t?), it has not tried to meddle in foreign elections. For its efforts, China has remained shut out of the leadership of US and Europe-dominated institutio­ns such as the World Bank and the IMF.

Mr Zakaria is right to argue that “a wiser US policy, geared toward turning China into a ‘responsibl­e stakeholde­r’, is still achievable”.

This does not mean any country capitulati­ng to Beijing. It does, however, mean insisting on engaging. It also means recognisin­g that any kind of war, whether of words or trade, let alone arms, is to be avoided at all costs. Congress should act with care. So should Mr Trump. And we should react to those who talk excitedly of a new Cold War that America could win with the horror that dangerousl­y naive framing deserves.

 ?? Reuters ?? Donald Trump’s reference to Xi Jinping as ‘a friend’ gives people a sense that clashes between the US and China can be managed
Reuters Donald Trump’s reference to Xi Jinping as ‘a friend’ gives people a sense that clashes between the US and China can be managed
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