US’ Cold War with China in a global economy
puts allies in crossfire & will cause SEVERE
damage
By Finian Cunningham
July 27, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo is calling for “an alliance of
democracies” to confront China. It amounts to a
new Cold War in which nations are being forced
to side either with Washington or Beijing.
It’s a classic tyrannical power-play by Washington,
yet ironically it is the Americans who are
accusing Beijing of being the
“new tyranny”
in the world.
However, such polarized demarcation
of the planet as designated by Washington is
impossible in a global economy which is highly
integrated, from consumer and financial markets to
supply chains.
A news
report this week once again underscores how even
the American military is reliant on China for
supplies of rare earth metals used in its weapon
systems.
Indeed, the entire US economy is dependent on
China which is America’s biggest trade partner. In
2019, the US ran a trade
deficit of $345 billion with China despite three
years of ‘Making America Great Again’ policy under
President Donald Trump.
The deficit with China accounts for about
half of the US’ total trade imbalance with the rest
of the world. And it’s been that way for many years. So
the high-handed notion of “cutting China off,”
as Trump says he intends doing, is facile.
That’s what makes ratcheting up the Cold War
hostility toward China so futile too. The shutting down
of consulates and issuing of indictments for alleged
espionage are only leading to a standoff which the
United States cannot really enforce or afford –
literally.
The same goes for American allies whom Washington is
pushing to join in a Cold War battle. Australia,
Britain, Canada, among others, are being caught in an
ideological crossfire which will result in severe
casualties to their economies. Australian farmers are
already paying a painful price after China canceled
export orders due to Canberra being perceived as a
proxy for Washington over provocative coronavirus claims
against Beijing.
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Pompeo was in London this week where he
urged the “free world” to stand up to
China. This followed the announcement last week by the
British government to scrap a partnership deal with
Chinese firm Huawei to modernize Britain’s telecoms.
That move was prompted by intense pressure on London
from the Trump administration to snub China on grounds
of alleged “national security risk.” But the
British authorities will likely incur damaging
repercussions for Britain’s economy. The modernization
of its telecoms infrastructure will be delayed and
costly.
Moreover, China is a
major trading partner with Britain, as it is with
most countries due to being the world’s second biggest
economy after the US. As Britain charts a new global
trading environment post-Brexit it will need the
goodwill of China more than ever.
The European Union is also dependent on China for
trade and investment. That would explain why European
leaders are
wary of Washington’s polarizing policy of fracturing
the world into a Cold War-like seizure. Such a zero-sum
depiction of the world is simply untenable and
unsustainable in an integrated global economy. Cutting
off ties with China is like cutting your nose off to
spite your face.
During the Cold War with the Soviet Union, the world
was largely isolated between the two blocs. There was
minimal economic inter-connection. An Iron Curtain was
possible to maintain because of the rigid separation
between economies and communications. That kind of
artificial isolation is impossible in today’s
increasingly networked world.
Even Pompeo admits this, albeit pejoratively. In a
keynote
speech this week, he remarked with disdain:
“Unlike the Soviet Union, China is deeply integrated
into the global economy… The USSR was closed off from
the free world. Communist China is already within our
borders.”
When even the Pentagon has to bow to realities of
global economics and its reliance on China for vital
commodities, then we should know that the new Cold War
sought by Washington with China is a pipe dream. It’s
all empty rhetoric to justify an ideology of conflict
that Washington needs to pursue for its anachronistic
pretensions of global dominance.
Unfortunately, by imposing its hostile bifurcated
view of the world many countries, including so-called
allies, will suffer economically. And all the while,
international tensions are being brought to a dangerous
boiling point.
Finian Cunningham has written
extensively on international affairs, with articles
published in several languages. He is a Master’s
graduate in Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a
scientific editor for the Royal Society of
Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a
career in newspaper journalism. He is also a
musician and songwriter. For nearly 20 years, he
worked as an editor and writer in major news media
organisations, including The Mirror, Irish Times and
Independent. - "Source"
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