By Peter Symonds
July 08, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The presence of two US
aircraft carrier strike groups in the South China Sea
conducting “high end” war games starting Saturday,
involving round-the-clock aircraft launches, is just the
most graphic demonstration to date of the Trump
administration’s accelerating preparations for war
against China. The fact that the two-carrier operations
were timed to coincide with Chinese naval exercises in
the same strategic waters makes them all the more
provocative and dangerous.
The global COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically
exacerbated the crisis of global capitalism, centered in
the United States, and all of its fundamental
contradictions, leading to a further rapid rise of
geopolitical tensions. Confronting a deep social and
economic crisis at home, with growing opposition in the
working class to the reckless back-to-work drive, the
Trump administration is seeking to divert social
tensions outward at an external enemy.
Trump, backed by the Democrats and the media
establishment, is seeking to whip up a climate of war
fever through a relentless campaign of anti-China
propaganda based on lies and disinformation. Without a
shred of evidence, top officials routinely blame China
for the coronavirus pandemic and the huge American death
toll, for which the White House is directly responsible
through its criminal negligence and indifference.
The anti-China campaign goes across the board. The US
has ramped up its denunciations of Beijing over “human
rights” abuses in Hong Kong and against the Muslim
Uyghur minority in the Chinese province of Xinjiang.
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Punitive US sanctions have already been imposed over
these issues. The Trump administration’s rank hypocrisy
is underscored by its push for the military and National
Guard to be deployed, in breach of the American
Constitution, to violently suppress protests against
police killings in the US. Once again, as with its
criminal wars in the Middle East, Washington is seeking
to exploit “human rights” to pursue economic warfare and
a massive military buildup against China.
The COVID-19 pandemic is not the root cause of the US
war drive. It is rather the accelerant of longstanding
processes. The Obama administration announced its “pivot
to Asia” in 2011 directed against China, involving an
aggressive diplomatic offensive to undermine Chinese
influence throughout the Indo-Pacific and the world, to
isolate China through the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP)
and to build up and restructure the American military
presence throughout the region. Obama recklessly
inflamed dangerous regional flashpoints, including the
South China Sea and the Korean Peninsula.
The Trump administration has intensified the drive to
war against China. While he abandoned the TPP, Trump
launched a full-scale economic war against China,
imposing a raft of punitive tariffs on virtually all
Chinese goods, most of which remain in place. He
demanded not only greater US exports and investment in
China, but the country's subordination to the US in
hi-tech industries. Trump’s economic nationalism and
insistence that supply chains, especially those crucial
for the military, have to be American-based are nothing
less than the economic preparation for war.
On the pretext of protecting American intellectual
property and preventing Chinese spying, Washington has
targeted the Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei. It
has pressured allies such as Britain not to use Huawei
equipment and threatened sanctions on firms supplying
Huawei with key components. While the US makes
unsubstantiated allegations of Chinese spying and
hacking, its own intelligence agencies like the NSA, as
revealed by whistleblower Edward Snowden, spy on the
world’s population, including its own citizens, on an
industrial scale.
The Trump administration has also targeted Chinese
students and researchers in the US, imposing tough entry
restrictions. It is now threatening to deport thousands
of students if they are enrolled only in on-line college
courses due to COVID-19 measures. The White House is
widening its restrictions on Chinese media operating in
the US, with another four organisations last month
designated as “foreign missions.”
The military preparations for war are also proceeding
apace. Obama set the target of 2020 for the redeployment
of 60 percent of US warships and warplanes to the
Indo-Pacific. Under Trump, the Pentagon announced in
2018 that great power competition, not the “war on
terror,” was its top priority, with Russia and China
identified as its chief rivals. The focus on China
reflects the view in American strategic circles that
China’s extraordinary economic expansion represents the
chief threat to the continued global dominance of
American imperialism.
In preparation for military conflict, the US has been
strengthening military alliances and strategic
partnerships throughout the Indo-Pacific, in particular,
the so-called “Quad,” involving Japan, Australia and
India.
The reckless character of the US anti-China campaign is
nowhere clearer than in its encouragement of India in
recent military clashes with China over disputed
borders. In this dangerous stand-off between
nuclear-armed powers, Trump’s chief of staff, Mark
Meadows, sided unequivocally with India in comments on
Monday, declaring, “We’re not going to stand by and let
China or anyone else take the reins in terms of being
the most powerful, dominant force, whether it’s in that
region or over here.”
All the preparations for a US war against China, which
would rapidly escalate into a catastrophic conflict
involving the whole world, are very advanced. Any number
of flashpoints, whether in the South China Sea or on the
Indian borders with China, could lead to an incident,
whether accidental or deliberate, that would provide a
casus belli for a US president under siege at home.
The only social force capable of halting the precipitous
plunge towards world war is the international working
class. In 2016, the International Committee of the
Fourth International issued a statement titled,
“Socialism and the Fight against War,” calling for the
building of a unified antiwar movement of workers and
youth around the globe. The dangers identified in that
statement have only become more acute in the past four
years and thus the urgency of constructing such a
movement.
The statement outlined the fundamental principles that
must form the political basis for uniting the working
class against war:
* The struggle against war must be based on the working
class, the great revolutionary force in society, uniting
behind it all progressive elements in the population.
* The new antiwar movement must be anticapitalist and
socialist, since there can be no serious struggle
against war except in the fight to end the dictatorship
of finance capital and put an end to the economic system
that is the fundamental cause of militarism and war.
* The new antiwar movement must therefore, of necessity,
be completely and unequivocally independent of, and
hostile to, all political parties and organizations of
the capitalist class.
* The new antiwar movement must, above all, be
international, mobilizing the vast power of the working
class in a unified global struggle against imperialism.
That is the task to which workers and young people today
should turn to ensure the future of humanity.
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