“Lots of people
don’t know what happened yesterday. To
put it simply, Biden has forced all
Americans working in China to pick
between quitting their jobs and losing
American citizenship. Every American
executive and engineer working in
China’s semiconductor manufacturing
industry resigned yesterday, paralyzing
Chinese manufacturing overnight. One
round of sanctions from Biden did more
damage than all four years of
performative sanctioning under Trump.
Although American semiconductor
exporters had to apply for licenses
during the Trump years, licenses were
approved within a month.
With the new
Biden sanctions, all American suppliers
of IP blocks, components, and services
departed overnight – thus cutting off
all service [to China]. Long story
short, every advanced node semiconductor
company is currently facing
comprehensive supply cut-off,
resignations from all American staff,
and immediate operations paralysis. This
is what annihilation looks like: China’s
semiconductor manufacturing industry was
reduced to zero overnight. Complete
collapse. No chance of survival.”
Posted at
Jordan Schneider’s Twitter account @jordanschnyc
from a translated thread at @lidangzzz
October 18, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--
The Biden
administration intensified its war on China
last week when it detonated a thermonuclear
bomb at the heart of Beijing’s booming
technology industry. In an effort to block
China’s access to crucial semiconductor
technology, Team Biden announced onerous
new export rules aimed at a “comprehensive
supply cut-off” of essential semiconductor
technology which– according to one
analyst– led to an “immediate operations
paralysis.” The terror unleashed by the
announcement was aptly summarized in a
thread posted at Jordan Schneider’s Twitter
account from a translated thread at @lidangzzz
(See above quote)
Naturally, the
Chinese government was blindsided by the
draconian new rules which include “all
Chinese advanced computing chip design
companies” and will undoubtedly “ensure
the elimination of all American products and
technologies from the entire ecosystem.”
The new sanctions regime will likely inflict
significant damage on China’s thriving
technology industry while causing
considerable harm to US partners who were
not consulted on the matter. But while
the announcement was a complete surprise, it
does fit with the much more extensive list
of hostile US actions towards China in the
last few months. Some of these include:
-
Multiple US delegations (Nancy Pelosi
and other sitting Congressmen) traveled
to Taiwan to challenge the One-China
policy that has been the cornerstone for
normal relations between the two
countries for the last 40 years.
-
Two US warships sail through strait, BBC
-
US-India maneuvers on the India-China
border
- The Biden Administration’s
persistent determination
to provide South Korea with a lethal
missile defence system that can be used
for offensive purposes and which
threatens Chinese security
-
The relentless strengthening of an
“anti-China” coalition
-
Two U.S. carrier groups conduct
exercises in South China Sea
- And, now–according to the Financial
Times–
The EU is being urged to rethink its
China policy
While in no way
exhaustive, the list should give the reader
some sense of the uptick in belligerence
that is presently aimed at Beijing.
Hectoring China has become a full-time job
which is not entirely unexpected as US-China
“containment” policy dates back as far as
the Cold War. What’s different now –as
Biden’s 2022 National Security Strategy
indicates– is that the US sees itself in
the midst of a “great power struggle” in
which the primary enemy is China who is
regarded as “the only competitor with both
the intent and, increasingly, the capability
to reshape the international order.” (NSS)
In other words, the Biden administration
is admitting that we are at war with China
and that we must use any means necessary to
prevail in that conflict. As foreign policy
analyst Andre Damon recently noted, the
NSS is not a strategy for the defense of
the Republic but a “blueprint for World
War 3”.
Indeed, so
containment alone will no longer suffice.
What is required is increasingly provocative
actions that will help to isolate, vilify
and, ultimately, weaken China so that it
becomes a “responsible stakeholder” in the
“rules-based system”. In other words, Biden
seeks a compliant vassal who will click his
heels and do as he is told.
Sound familiar?
Biden’s onerous new
export rules fit perfectly within this
broader strategy of persistent confrontation
and hostility. It also jibes with the
oft-repeated neoconservative view that there
is “no hope of coexistence with China as
long as the Communist Party governs the
country.” So, once again, we can see that
the administration’s attacks on China are
not merely designed to “contain” Chinese
development but are also aimed at regime
change. We believe that the recent
ratcheting up of Biden’s Tech War has
nothing to do with national security
concerns (like “still-emerging fields of
artificial intelligence and quantum
computing”) but is actually another
desperate attempt to preserve Washington’s
loosening grip on global power. Here’s how
author Jon Bateman summed it up in an
article at Foreign Policy Magazine:
“The Bureau of
Industry and Security (BIS) announced
new… limits on the export to China of
advanced semiconductors, chip-making
equipment, and supercomputer components.
The controls… reveal a single-minded
focus on thwarting Chinese capabilities
at a broad and fundamental level....
the primary damage to China will be
economic, on a scale well out of
proportion to Washington’s cited
military and intelligence concerns….This
shift portends even harsher U.S.
measures to come, not only in advanced
computing but also in other sectors
(like biotech, manufacturing, and
finance) deemed strategic. The pace
and details are uncertain, but the
strategic objective and political
commitment are now clearer than ever.
China’s technological rise will be
slowed at any price.” (“Biden
is Now All-In on Taking Out China”,
Jon Bateman, Foreign Policy Magazine)
There it is in black
and white. The US is going to do whatever it
takes to preserve its top spot in the global
order “come hell or high water.” And Bateman
is right, there will undoubtedly be “even
harsher U.S. measures to come, not only in
advanced computing but also in other sectors
(like biotech, manufacturing, and finance)”
And that, of course, means more sanctions
and tariffs, more disruption to vital
supply-lines, and higher costs for
everything. If you thought the war with
Russia impacted energy prices, “You ain’t
seen nothing yet!” Winding back 40 years of
globalization is going to be an excruciating
experience tantamount to major dental
surgery absent the Novocain. This is
from Reuters:
“The U.S. is
scrambling to tackle unintended
consequences of its new export curbs on
China’s chip industry that could
inadvertently harm the semiconductor
supply chain, people familiar with the
matter said….as of midnight Tuesday,
vendors also could not support, service
and send non-U.S. supplies to the
China-based factories without licenses
if U.S. companies or people are
involved. As a result, even basic
items like light bulbs, springs, and
bolts that keep tools running may not
have been able to be shipped until
vendors are granted licenses. And
without the minute-by-minute support the
foundries need, they could begin
shutting down, one source said...
The U.S. planned
to review licenses for non-Chinese
factories in China hit by the new
restrictions on a case-by-case basis,
but even if approved that could create
delays in shipments. Licenses for
Chinese chip factories were likely to be
denied.” (“U.S.
scrambles to prevent export curbs on
China chips from disrupting supply chain“,
Reuters)
See what I mean? More
supply-line disruption means higher prices,
more battered household budgets, and fewer
American families able to scrape by on their
shrinking wages. Does anyone in Washington
think about these things before they set the
wheels in motion? The Biden administration
is so obsessed with containing China, it is
willing to send US standards-of-living off a
cliff while bringing the world even closer
to nuclear annihilation. Here’s more
background from
an article at the Asia Times:
The US measures
won’t affect China’s sensors, satellite
surveillance, military guidance and
other strategic systems because the
vast majority of military applications
use older chips that China can produce
at home…..The new US restrictions
won’t stop China’s 2,000 surface-to-ship
and surface-to-surface missiles from
targeting US aircraft carriers in the
Western Pacific, or US air bases in Guam
and Okinawa, and they won’t prevent
China’s more than 1,000 interceptors
from aiming long-range air-to-air
missiles at US planes…
It will also elicit an all-out
Chinese effort to replace American
chip-making and design technology.
CapEx and R&D will shrink drastically in
the US semiconductor industry while
China allocates a massive budget to the
sector.
On a five- or
ten-year horizon, America’s
technological edge in semiconductor
design and fabrication is likely to
vanish. As capital budgets collapse in
the Western semiconductor industry, the
damage to the US and other Western
economies is likely to be greater than
the harm inflicted on China...an
all-out US ban on chip sales to China
would eliminate 37% of the revenue of US
semiconductor companies, lead to …
the loss of 15,000 to 40,000 highly
skilled direct jobs in the US
semiconductor industry.”..
At worst, the
damage to China’s economy is likely to
be temporary… But the impact of the
incipient depression in the Western
semiconductor industry may well do
permanent harm. (“China
chip ban a US exercise in extreme
self-harm”, Asia Times)
So, it could all
backfire like the poorly thought-out
sanctions on Russia that have thrust all
Europe into an unprecedented energy crisis?
Yep, that’s what he’s
saying. The new rules will cause China some
short-term pain but—in the long run—they
will only hurt American industry. It’s
another classic example of ‘cutting off your
nose to spite your face’, which appears to
be Biden’s MO on a great number of issues.
It’s worth noting,
that the Biden plan is another giant leap
towards “de-globalization. (which is the
reimposing of cross-border trade barriers in
order to prevent further economic
integration and lower costs.) For
decades, business and political leaders have
been touting the virtues of offshoring
businesses and outsourcing jobs as if that
was the true expression of God’s divine
plan. But now that China’s growth
threatens US global hegemony, foreign policy
elites have done a quick 180. Now the
globalization genie must be
drawn-and-quartered and shoved back into his
bottle so the West can preserve its primacy
by effectively divorcing itself from the
Chinese powerhouse.
By the way,
“decoupling” is the new buzzword among
foreign policy wonks. What the word implies
is that the US must implement “some
degree of technological separation from
China, but shouldn’t go so far as to harm
U.S. interests in the process.” In other
words, Washington is on track to selectively
terminate many areas of commerce with China
while trying not to shoot itself in its own
foot.
Good luck with that.
So, where is all of
this heading, you ask?
To more conflict,
more confrontation, higher prices, lower
standards of living and, eventually, a
disintegration of the prevailing order. That
much is certain. The problem, of course, is
that the China hawks now control the
levers of power in Washington which
means that the attacks on China will
intensify, decoupling will accelerate, and a
massively-destabilizing international crisis
will soon follow.
The Biden
administration is squandering American power
on unilateral actions it cannot enforce and
that will no have meaningful impact on
China’s development. They’d be better off
looking for ways to ease the transition to a
new world, then pathetically trying to turn
back the clock to the bygone “unipolar
moment”.