By Kevin D. Williamson
Thursday, June 03, 2021
Chinese supremo Xi Jinping has announced a new goal
for Chinese diplomacy: that the People’s Republic of China should come to be
regarded by the rest of the world as “trustworthy, lovable, and respectable.”
Well.
Lovable is going to be a stretch for a
totalitarian police state that operates concentration camps for
religious minorities and gulags for political prisoners. When you are a
remorseless autocrat, looking like Winnie the Pooh is only going to get you so
far on the lovability front.
The other two adjectives won’t be a lot easier.
Is Beijing trustworthy? No, of course not.
The Chinese authorities lied about COVID-19 in its early days and may be lying
still about the origin of the viral epidemic. They lie about the concentration
camps and gulags. They lie about environmental disasters even as Chairman Xi works to
position China as an environmental leader in contradistinction to the United
States. One of the notable things about the Biden administration is its
genuineness: Joe Biden is a genuine fool surrounded by genuine hacks, but even
the Biden administration probably is not going to be genuinely foolish enough
to trust Beijing.
Is Beijing respectable? Only in a limited
way. But that’s enough for now, for our purposes — if we understand our
purposes. Xi and his henchmen are nothing if not serious about what they
perceive to be their national interest, and they pursue that interest with
discipline and energy, if not always with intelligence and competence. That
limited-purpose respectability is really the basis of China’s relations with
the world at the moment. You can’t count on China to keep its word, but you can
count on Beijing to keep tightly focused on its priorities and to follow
through with a plan of action. And that is worth something, as Washington has
in recent decades demonstrated superabundantly by displaying its own lack of
that particular virtue.
There are areas of potentially fruitful cooperation
between the United States and China, as long as that cooperation serves Chinese
interests — and as long as Washington understands that this calculation, and
not ideology alone or political rhetoric, is the real basis of any such
cooperation. China’s foreign policy is in the end no less captive to domestic
politics than is U.S. foreign policy, but Beijing runs on a different clock
than does Washington, and Chinese leaders risk a much higher price for failure
than do their American counterparts: If the Chinese people ever turn on it,
then the Chinese Communist Party will exit by the same door it came in through.
Cooperation, yes.
Lovable? No.
And it doesn’t have to be.
There are many ways for China to be a great power engaged
with the world on its own terms. Washington’s main diplomatic business with
China is figuring out what these are and how to encourage them — or frustrate
them — in a way that accords with American interests. Our relationship with
China is not going to be one of loving cousins, as it is with the United
Kingdom or Canada, but neither is China a country that can be isolated like
Cuba or North Korea, and our cold war with China — that is what it is — is not
going to be like the one with the Soviet Union. Nor would it serve our
interests to make the U.S.–China relationship more like the old U.S.–Soviet
relationship.
Our relationship is going to be one of negotiation,
which is normal, and it is well past time for Washington to take that reality
seriously.
There are even ways for China to become a decent, more
trustworthy, and more admirable society without its becoming a liberal
democracy, though it seems to me that Western critics who insist that Chinese
culture makes impossible the emergence of an authentically Chinese liberal
democracy are only echoing those who said the same thing about Japan and the
Republic of Korea and were wrong about it. There was a time when the same thing
was said about Germany, and it is worth remembering that within my short lifetime
such utterly normal countries as Spain, Portugal, and Greece were ruled by
military dictatorships. But while it would be better for the world — and for
the Chinese people — if China had elections, a free press, a bill of rights, an
independent judiciary, etc., American interests do not require that
this be the case.
What American interests require is representatives — both
in formal diplomatic roles and, critically, in the private sector — who
understand those interests and pursue them with intelligence and consistency.
The Biden administration is unlikely to make much progress on that front, and
the American business establishment, from Silicon Valley to Hollywood, is a
basket of kittens in a cage of tigers. The last time Republicans had a shot at
shaping that relationship, the best they could manage was the laughable antics
of the Trump administration, which damaged both U.S. economic interests and
U.S. credibility.
Washington cannot come up with a meaningful strategy for
getting what it wants out of the U.S.–China relationship until it figures out
what it wants. Currently, it doesn’t know. Beijing doesn’t have that problem.
Chairman Xi may want to be loved, but he’ll be satisfied
just to get his way.
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