March 17, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "Unz
Review" -
As American economic
power continues to decline, a division has emerged
within the U.S. political establishment as to which
of its designated adversaries is to blame for the
country’s woes — Russia, or China. The dispute came
to a head during each of the last two presidential
elections, with the Democratic Party first blaming
Moscow for Hillary Clinton’s shocking defeat in 2016
over unproven “election meddling” by the Kremlin.
After Joe Biden’s equally controversial victory over
Donald Trump this past November, the GOP has
retaliated by portraying the 46th president as “soft
on China” just as their counterparts drew critical
attention to Trump’s alleged ties to Russia — even
though both men have taken tough stances toward each
respective country. As a result of this neo-McCarthyist
political atmosphere, détente has been criminalized.
In order to understand what is driving this interwar
between factions of the Anglo-American elite amid
the rise of China and Russia on the world stage, a
revisiting of the history of relations between the
three nations is necessary.
From the first millennia
until the 19th century, China was one of the world’s
foremost economic powers. Today, the People’s
Republic has largely recaptured that position and by
the end of the decade is expected to overtake the
U.S. as the world’s largest economy, a gain that may
be
expedited by the post-pandemic U.S. recession
compared with China’s rapid recovery. Unfortunately,
the Western attitude toward China remains stuck in
the ‘century of humiliation’ where from the mid-19th
century until the Chinese Revolution in 1949, it was
successively raped and plundered by the Western,
Japanese, and Russian imperial powers. The reason
the English-speaking world clings to this backwards
view is because apart from that centennial period,
the West has always been second place to China as
the world’s most distinguished country providing the
global standard in infrastructure, technology,
governance, agriculture, and economic development.
Even at the peak of the Roman Empire, the Han
dynasty where the ancient Silk Road began was vastly
larger in territory and population.
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For two consecutive years
in the early 1930s, the best-selling fiction
book in the U.S. was Pearl S. Buck’s
The Good Earth which
depicted the extreme poverty and famine of rural
peasant life in pre-revolutionary China. In many
respects, the picture of China in the Western
mind remains a composite impression from Buck’s
Nobel Prize-winning novel. The former Chinese
Empire underwent its ‘hundred years of
humiliation’ after suffering a series of
military defeats in the Opium Wars which funded
Western industrialization, where the ceding of
territories and war reparations in unequal
treaties left China subjugated as the “sick man
of Asia.” Like Russia which lagged behind Europe
after the Industrial Revolution until the Soviet
centralized plans of the 1930s, China was able
to transform its primarily agricultural economy
into an industrial giant after its communist
revolution in 1949. However, it was only a short
time until the Sino-Soviet split in 1961 when
China began to forge its own path in one of the
most widely misunderstood geopolitical
developments of the Cold War.
In 1956, Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev gave what is commonly known as his
“Secret Speech” to the 20th Congress of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union, a report
entitled “On the Cult of
Personality and Its Consequences”, where the
Ukrainian-born politician denounced the excesses of
his deceased predecessor, Joseph Stalin. The news of
the shocking address to the Politburo did not just
further polarize an international communist movement
already divided between Trotskyists and the
Comintern but had geopolitical consequences beyond
its intended purpose of accommodating Washington to
deescalate the arms race. At first, China took a
relatively neutral stance toward the Soviet reforms
during its Hundred Flowers Campaign, even as Mao
encouraged the USSR to put down the 1956
counter-revolution in Hungary.
The real turning point in
Sino-Soviet relations came when the bureaucratic
placation of the Khrushchev Thaw began to discourage
movements in the developing world living under
Western-backed dictatorships from taking up arms in
revolutionary struggle. With the support of Enver
Hoxha and Albania, China began to fiercely criticize
de-Stalinization and accused the Soviet Union of
“revisionism” for prioritizing world peace and
preventing a nuclear war over support for national
liberation movements, becoming the de facto leader
of ‘Third Worldism’ against Western imperialism.
Moscow reciprocated by freezing aid to China which
greatly damaged its economy and relations soured
between the world’s two biggest socialist countries,
transforming the the Cold War into a tri-polar
conflict already multifaceted with the Non-Aligned
Movement led by Yugoslavia after Josep Broz Tito’s
falling out with Stalin.
As the PRC continued to break
from what Mao viewed as the USSR’s deviation from
Marxism-Leninism, China went down the primrose path
of the Cultural Revolution during the 1960s amid the
rise of the Gang of Four faction who took the
anti-Soviet policies a step further by condemning
the USSR as “social imperialist” and an even greater
threat than the West. This led to several huge
missteps in foreign policy and a complete betrayal
of internationalism, as China aligned with the U.S.
in support of UNITA against the MPLA in the Angolan
civil war, the CIA-backed Khmer Rouge genocidaires
in Cambodia against Vietnam, and the fascist Augusto
Pinochet regime in Chile. After years of
international isolation, U.S. President Richard
Nixon and his war criminal Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger were received as guests in 1972. Despite
the initial reasons for the Sino-Soviet split, it
was ironically the Soviet Union which ended up
carrying the mantle of national liberation as the
USSR backed numerous socialist revolutions in the
global south while China sided with imperialism.
In hindsight, the Cold War’s
conclusion with the demise of the USSR was arguably
an inevitable result of the Sino-Soviet split.
Ultimately, mistakes were made by both sides that
are recognized by the two countries today, as can be
seen in the Communist Party of the Russian
Federation’s negative historical view of Khrushchev
and the denunciation of the Cultural Revolution and
Gang of Four by the CPC (not “CCP”). In fact, China
has since even apologized to Angola for its support
of Jonas Savimbi. Nevertheless, the break in
political relations with Moscow also set the process
in motion for China to develop its own
interpretation of Marxism-Leninism that diverged
from the Soviet model and eventually allowed a level
of private enterprise which never occurred under the
USSR, including during the short-lived New Economic
Policy of the 1920s. If truth be told, this may have
been the very thing which prevented China from
meeting the same fate.
Starting in 1978, China began
opening its economy to domestic private enterprise
and even foreign capital, but with the ruling party
and government retaining final authority over both
the private and public sectors. The result of
implementing market-oriented reforms while
maintaining mostly state ownership of industry was
the economic marvel we see today, where China has
since become the ‘world’s factory’ and global
manufacturing powerhouse. For four decades, China’s
real gross domestic product growth has averaged
nearly ten percent every year and almost a billion
people have been lifted out of poverty, but with
capital never rising above the political authority
of the CPC. Unfortunately, the success of Deng
Xiaoping’s reform of the Chinese socialist system
was not replicated by perestroika
(“restructuring”) in the USSR under the leadership
of Mikhail Gorbachev who completely failed to revive
the Soviet economy and eventually oversaw its
dissolution in 1991.
During the 1990s, Russia
underwent total collapse as its formerly planned
enterprises were dismantled by the same neoliberal
policies to which Margaret Thatcher once phrased
“there is no alternative” (TINA). The restoration of
capitalism sharply increased poverty and
unemployment while mortality fell by an entire
decade under IMF-imposed ‘shock therapy’ which
created an obscenely wealthy new class of Russian
“oligarchs” overnight. So much so, the fortunes of
the Semibankarschina (“seven bankers”) were compared
to the boyars of tsarist nobility in previous
centuries. This comprador elite also controlled most
of the country’s media while funding the election
campaigns of pro-Western President Boris Yeltsin who
transformed the previously centralized economy into
a free market system. That was until his notorious
successor assumed power and brought the energy
sector back under control of the Russian state which
restored wages, reduced poverty, and expelled
corrupt foreign investors like Bill Browder.
Needless to say, the U.S. was not pleased by
Vladimir Putin’s successful revival of the Russian
economy because the U.S. already faced a
geopolitical contender in China.
As China has been the world’s
ascending economic superpower through its unique
mixture of private and state-owned enterprises, the
U.S. economy has shrunk as trade liberalization and
globalization de-industrialized the Rust Belt.
Simultaneously, the expense of the military budget
has grown so gargantuan that it can’t be audited
while rash imperialist wars in the Middle East
following 9/11 marked the beginning of the end for
American hegemony. In 2016, Donald Trump rose to
power railing against the political establishment
over its “endless wars” and anti-worker free trade
deals, abandoning the proposed Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) on his first day in office and
imposing protectionist tariffs which kickstarted a
U.S.-China trade war. Unfortunately, any efforts to
return U.S. productive power outsourced to China by
multinationals and scale back American
empire-building were destined to fail.
Trump was also politically
persecuted by the Democrats and the intelligence
community for daring to embrace détente with Moscow
as a candidate and spent his entire administration
trying to appease the deep state in Washington with
little result. Oddly enough, it was
reportedly none other than Henry Kissinger who
encouraged Trump to ease the strained relations with
Russia as a strategy to contain China, the
traditional enemy he once convinced Richard Nixon to
make steps toward peace with. The GOP, representing
the interests of the military-industrial complex,
has reciprocated the anti-Russia hysteria by
accusing incumbent Joe Biden of being weak on China,
even though the previous Obama-Biden administration
presided over an unprecedented military buildup in
the Pacific as part of the U.S. “pivot to Asia.” The
views of constituents from both parties also seem to
fall on partisan lines, as indicated in a
recent Gallup poll where only 16% of Democrats
held a positive view of Russia and a mere 10% of
Republicans regard China favorably.
The rise of Russia and China
on the global stage presents such a threat to
Washington’s full spectrum dominance that the head
of U.S. Strategic Command, Admiral Charles Richard,
recently
warned of the very real possibility of a nuclear
war in the future with both countries. Under the
administration of Xi Jinping, China has reshaped the
geopolitical order with its ambitious Belt and Road
Initiative (BRI) infrastructure project, also known
as the New Silk Road. At the same time, Russia has
reintegrated several of the former Soviet republics
with the formation of the Eurasian Economic Union
(EAEU). Conceivably, the return of Russia to world
politics has the potential to transform the sphere
of competition between the U.S. and China into a
multipolar plane where the balance of power can
shift toward a more stable geopolitical landscape in
the long run. Nevertheless, the challenge made by
the Xi-Putin partnership to the dominion of Western
capital is the basis for the bellicosity toward
Eurasia by the U.S., as is their joining forces to
repair the Sino-Russian political relations broken
decades ago.
When the Soviet Union
dissolved, the tentative US–China alliance
effectively ended and Sino-Russian rapprochement
began. But what prevented the PRC from going the
same route as the Eastern Bloc? Why did Deng succeed
and Gorbachev fail? After all, the 1989 Tiananmen
Square protests were concurrent with the numerous
‘Color Revolutions’ behind the Iron Curtain, even
though the Western narrative about the June Fourth
Incident omits that among the “pro-democracy”
demonstrators were many Maoists who considered
Deng’s market reforms a betrayal of Chinese
socialism. As it happens, Xi Jinping himself
correctly identified one of the main reasons why the
USSR dissolved in a 2013
speech:
“Why did the Soviet Union
disintegrate? Why did the Soviet Communist Party
fall from power? An important reason was that
the struggle in the field of ideology was
extremely intense, completely negating the
history of the Soviet Union, negating the
history of the Soviet Communist Party, negating
Lenin, negating Stalin, creating historical
nihilism and confused thinking. Party organs at
all levels had lost their functions, the
military was no longer under Party leadership.
In the end, the Soviet Communist Party, a great
party, was scattered, the Soviet Union, a great
socialist country, disintegrated. This is a
cautionary tale!”
Xi is correct in that China,
unlike the Soviet Union, never made the crucial
error of playing into the hands of the West through
the condemnation of its own history as Khrushchev
did in his “Secret Speech.” Despite the fact that
the report by the Soviet leader contained
demonstrable falsehoods such as the absurd claim
that Stalin, one of Russia’s most formidable bank
robbers as a revolutionary, was a coward deathly
afraid of the Nazi invasion as it neared Moscow
during WWII, the self-serving speech split the
international communist movement and laid the
internal groundwork for the USSR’s eventual
downfall. As for the economic reasons for the
different outcomes, the late Marxist historian
Domenico Losurdo
explained:
“If we analyse the first
15 years of Soviet Russia, we see three social
experiments. The first experiment, based on the
equal distribution of poverty, suggests the
“universal asceticism” and “rough
egalitarianism” criticised by the Communist
Manifesto. We can now understand the decision to
move to Lenin’s New Economic Policy, which was
often interpreted as a return to capitalism. The
increasing threat of war pushed Stalin into
sweeping economic collectivisation. The third
experiment produced a very advanced welfare
state but ended in failure: in the last years of
the Soviet Union, it was characterised by mass
absenteeism and disengagement in the workplace;
this stalled productivity, and it became hard to
find any application of the principle that Marx
said should preside over socialism —
remuneration according to the quantity and
quality of work delivered. The history of China
is different: Mao believed that, unlike
“political capital,” the economic capital of the
bourgeoisie should not be subject to total
expropriation, at least until it can serve the
development of the national economy. After the
tragedy of the Great Leap Forward and the
Cultural Revolution, it took Deng Xiaoping to
emphasise that socialism implies the development
of the productive forces. Chinese market
socialism has achieved extraordinary success.”
Since China’s economic
upswing has been simultaneous with the downturn of
American capitalism, it has left the U.S. with only
one option but to equate the PRC with its own
crumbling system. Sadly, in most instances it is the
Eurocentric pseudo-left which has parroted the
propaganda of Western think tanks that China is
“state capitalist” and even “imperialist.” This also
means that its unparalleled economic gains must
therefore be a result of capitalism, not state
planning, which is another fabrication. Has there
ever been a clearer case of neocolonial projection
than the baseless accusation of “debt-trap
diplomacy” hurled at China’s BRI by the West? It is
true that China seeks to profit in the global south,
but based on terms of mutual benefit for developing
nations previously plundered by Western financial
institutions which actually impose debt slavery on
low income countries. In reality, Beijing is only
guilty of offering a preferable win-win alternative
to states exploited under the yoke of imperialism.
Once upon a time, the U.S. itself envisioned a
peaceful world of mutual cooperation and trade under
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Good Neighbor Policy, a
forgotten legacy that Xi’s BRI is fulfilling.
None of this is to say China
is undeserving of any criticism. To the contrary,
its paradoxes are as deep as its achievements and it
would be naive to think that Chinese capital, if
left unchecked, doesn’t have the potential to be as
predatory as the Western variety. Free enterprise is
so inherently unstable that its destructive nature
will be impossible to contain forever even by a
party like the CPC and must be disassembled
eventually. Without the retention of a large state
sector maintaining vital infrastructure and public
services, the market relations in China would wreak
havoc as it did in post-Soviet Russia. Not to
mention, the biggest progress made by the PRC was in
the years prior to the pro-market reforms and
ultimately served as the foundation upon which
“socialism with Chinese characteristics” is able to
thrive. The lesson of the fall of the USSR is that
even a society capable of the most incredible human
advancements is not invincible to a market
environment. The Soviet Union withstood an invasion
by more than a dozen Allied nations during the
Russian Civil War and an onslaught by the Nazi war
machine in WWII, but succumbed to
perestroika. While Russia may be under the free
market, both nations are a threat to Western capital
because they represent a new win-win cooperative
model in international relations and an end to
American unipolarity.
Max Parry is an
independent journalist and geopolitical analyst. His
writing has appeared widely in alternative media.
Max may be reached at maxrparry@live.com
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