Beijing
sees Trump’s hand and won’t fold
With Sinophobic hysteria reaching new heights in US,
China's counter play is a massive new economic plan
By Pepe Escobar
May 30, 2020 "Information
Clearing House"
- Stranger things have happened.
Everyone was
expecting US President Donald Trump to go nuclear by de
facto sanctioning China to death over Hong Kong. In an
environment where Twitter and the President of the
United States are now engaged in open warfare, the rule
is that there are no rules anymore.
So in the end,
what was announced against China amounted to an
anti-climax.
The US
government, as it stands, is terminating its
relationship with the World Health Organization (WHO).
The geopolitical repercussions are immense and that will
take time to sink in. In the short term, something must
be blamed for the US’ appalling Covid-19 record, so it
might as well be a UN institution.
Hong Kong’s
preferential trade status will also be terminated, but
in a hazy future in still undetermined terms.
Phase 1 of the
US-China trade deal still stands – at least for now. Yet
there’s no guarantee that Beijing itself won’t start to
doubt it.
The bottom
line: “Investors” were duly appeased, for now. Team
Trump seems not to be exactly versed in the niceties of
Hong Kong’s Basic Law, as the president stressed the
“plain violation of Beijing’s treaty obligations with
the United Kingdom.” The national security law was
blasted as “the latest” Chinese aggression against its
own special administrative region.
Now compare all
this with the Two Sessions in Beijing ending the day
before, with an intriguing, quite Keynesian performance
by Prime Minister Li Keqiang. This was compelling as
much for what Li did not say as for what he chose to put
on the public record.
Let’s
review some of the highlights. Li stressed that the NPC’s
resolution putting forth a national
security law for Hong Kong is
meant to protect “one country, two systems,” and not as
an “aggression.”
Instead of
demonizing the WHO, Beijing is committed to a serious
scientific investigation of the origins of Sars-Cov-2.
“No cover-up” will be allowed, Li said, adding that a
clear, scientific understanding should contribute to
global public health. Beijing also supports
an independent review into the WHO’s handling of
Covid-19.
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Geopolitically, China rejects a “Cold
War mentality” and
hopes China and the US will be able to cooperate. Li
stressed the relationship could be either mutually
beneficial or mutually harmful. Decoupling was
described as a very bad idea, for bilateral relations
and for the world at large. China, after all, will start
to import more and that should also profit US companies.
Domestically,
the absolute focus – 70% of the available new funding –
will be on employment, support for small and medium
enterprises and measures to encourage consumption rather
than investment in infrastructure building. In
summation, in Li’s own words: “The central government
will live on a tight budget.”
If not
completely Sisyphean in the long term, it will at least
be a “daunting task” in Li’s terminology considering the
previously stated end-of-2020 deadline would be to reach
President Xi Jinping’s goal of eliminating poverty
across China.
Li said
absolutely nothing about three key themes: the alarming
Himalayan border stand-off between China and India; the
prospects for Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) projects;
and China’s complex geopolitical and geo-economic
relationship with the European Union (EU).
The non-mention
of the last theme is especially noticeable after
Chancellor Merkel’s quite encouraging assessment earlier
this week and EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell’s
remark to a group of German ambassadors that “the end of
an American-led system and the arrival of an Asian
century” is now “happening in front of our eyes.”
Confirming
steady rumors emanating from Frankfurt, Berlin, Brussels
and Paris, China and East Asia are taking precedence as
the EU’s top trading partner. This is something that
will be extensively discussed at the upcoming EU-China
summit next autumn in Germany. The EU is going Eurasia.
Team Trump won’t be amused.
Dancing with wolves, remixed
Predictably, the Beijing leadership needs to focus on
domestic consumption and reaching the next level on
technological production so as not to fall into the
notorious “middle-income
trap.” Fine-tuning the
balance between domestic stability and a very strong and
wide global reach is another tak that brings Sisyphos to
mind.
Xi, Li and the
Politburo very well know that Covid-19 hugely affected
migrants, farmers and small-scale family entrepreneurs.
The risk of social unrest is very high. Unemployment
protection is far from Scandinavian levels. So back to
business, fast, has to be the top priority.
Enveloping this strategy is a new diplomatic offensive.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi, usually meticulously nuanced
and polite, is now increasingly
exasperated. Earlier
this week, Yi defined the demonization of China by the
US over Covid-19 as “a product of the three no’s”: no
grounds, no factual basis and no international
precedent.
Moreover, he
described attempts to blackmail China through threats as
“daydreaming.” The Global Times, for its part, has
blasted the Trump administration for “typical
international hooliganism” and additionally stressed
that “labeling Chinese diplomacy as ‘wolf warrior’
reflects an extreme ideology.”
The “wolf
warrior” plot is bound to thicken. Beijing does seem
ready to deploy its diplomatic force as wolf warriors.
One should always keep in mind General
Qiao Liang: if China is
forced to dance with wolves, it might as well set up the
rhythm.
That applies
perfectly to the Hong Kong question. Whatever Team Trump
thinks, Beijing has no interest whatsoever in disturbing
the Hong Kong financial system or collapsing the Hang
Seng index. That’s exactly what the black block
protesters last year were accomplishing.
What we saw
during this week is the result of what a task force,
sent to Shenzhen last year to examine every angle of the
protests, relayed back to the leadership in Beijing.
The sources of
financing for the hardcore black blocks have reputedly
been cut. The local 5th columnist “leaders”
have been isolated. Beijing was being very patient
tackling the whole mess. Then along came Covid-19.
The economic
consensus in Beijing is that this will be an L-shaped
recovery – actually very slow on the bottom of the L. So
the West will buy much less from and invest much less in
China.
This implies
that Hong Kong is not going to be very useful. Its best
bet has already been offered many times over: integrate
with the Greater Bay Area and be part of a booming Pearl
river delta southern cluster. Hong Kong businesses
support it.
Another
conclusion was that, whatever Beijing does, the
Sinophobic hysteria in the US – and in this case also
the UK – is unabated. So now is the right moment to go
for the national security law, which of course is
against subversion, against British-era “wigs” (judges)
acting as 5th columnists and, most of all,
against money laundering.
A Global Times
editorial cut to the chase: the national security law is
the “death knell” for US intervention in Hong Kong.
Cold War 2.0
As much as Yi
may have said, this time diplomatically, that we’re “on
the brink” of a new Cold War, the fact is the Trump
administration’s hybrid war on China – or Cold War 2.0 –
is now fully established.
US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo is openly threatening Five Eyes allies
and vassals, as well as Israel, with consequences if
they fail to ditch any projects linked to Belt and
Road.
That is
intimately linked to the avalanche of threats and
measures against Huawei and everything connected to Made
in China 2025, which proceeds at a fast pace but without
using the terminology.
The official
Trump re-election campaign strategy “China, China,
China,” detailed in a 57-page memo to Republicans, is
bound to be deployed as total hybrid warfare, including
non-stop propaganda, threats, infowar technologies,
cyber warfare and breaking news fabrications.
The ultimate
objective shared by every Sinophobic strand, whether
commercially-minded or think tank-based, is to derail
the Chinese economy – a top level competitor – by any
means necessary and thus cripple the ongoing Eurasian
integration process whose three key nodes, China, Russia
and Iran, happen to be top “threats” according to the US
national security strategy.
Once again, the
gloves are off. And Beijing won’t stop counterpunching
in kind.
It’s as if
Beijing had so far serially underestimated the Deep
State and Beltway’s larger than life obsession with
always remaining the undisputed hegemon, geopolitically
and geo-economically. Every “conflict” erupting across
the chessboard is and will continue to be directly
linked to the twin objectives of containment of Russia
and disruption of the Belt and Road.
I
previously referred to the Empire
of Chaos, where a
plutocracy progressively projects its own internal
disintegration upon the whole world. But only now is the
serious game starting, complete with Trump’s intention
to test nuclear bombs again. Not against a bunch of
low-life “terrorists,” but against a serious,
peer-competitor: the Eurasian strategic partnership.
It would
be too much to expect Team Trump to learn from Gramscian
analyses of Belt and
Road, which demonstrate how the Chinese Dream – a
Confucianist variant of neoliberalism – marks the
evolution of China into a core production zone in the
neoliberal world economy by profiting from the existing
global legal structure.
Team Trump has
vociferously announced its own strategy. Expect serial,
silent Sun Tzu counterpunches.
Pepe Escobar is
correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.
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