September 05/6,
2023 -
Information Clearing House - "ScheerPost"
--- The Biden regime’s
robotic procession to Beijing proceeds
apace. Following Antony Blinken’s fruitless
visit in mid–June, we have paid Janet
Yellen’s airfare for another fruitless
visit, and following Yellen it was the same
for John Kerry. This week it is Gina
Raimondo’s turn. The secretary of state, the
Treasury secretary, the chief climate envoy,
and the commerce secretary: What is the
point of this parade?
I cannot but wonder whether these
officials are dispatched across the Pacific
in descending order of competence. Raimondo,
who previously flopped as governor of Rhode
Island—except for her plan to cut civil
service pensions, an unfortunate success—is
mediocrity made flesh. The Chinese must be
wondering, with chagrin or amusement or
both, who the Biden regime will next send
their way.
The assignment in all these cases is the
same: It comes down to “two seemingly
contradictory responsibilities,” as The New
York Times’s Ana Swanson put it in a
curtain-raiser last week. She described “a
mandate to strengthen U.S. business
relations with Beijing while also imposing
some of the toughest Chinese trade
restrictions in years.”
This is succinct, although we can live
without the “seemingly.” Proposing to
conduct routine business while sabotaging
China’s competitive position in advanced
technologies is prima facie a
ridiculous idea. But The Times must have its
“seemingly,” because it is imperative we
pretend the Biden regime thinks sensibly and
means well in its relations with the
People’s Republic.
Blinken got nothing done, Yellen got
nothing done, Kerry got nothing done, and in
Raimondo’s case it is hopeless. The final
item on her itinerary is a visit to
Disneyland in Shanghai, and you have to
credit the secretary’s scheduler for the
parting reference to dreams and fantasy. An
English friend observes that we Americans
are doing a lot of blinkin’ and yellin’
across the Pacific these days. Fair enough,
but I think it is more of the former than
the latter for the time being. This
administration simply has no idea what a
sound China policy would look like.
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What is this all about? For a long time
now I have concluded that Biden’s foreign
policy people match the definition of
insanity commonly but mistakenly attributed
to Einstein. These people seem to be doing
the same thing again and again while
expecting a different outcome. But with
Raimondo’s visit to Beijing this week I have
to revise this assessment. Those running
Biden’s national security policies are
unimaginative ideologues petrified of
diverging from the neoliberal catechism,
yes, but they are not insane. I start to see
in their dealings with Beijing a diabolical
design to which the Chinese are very right
to object.
The Biden administration’s China strategy
comes down to parrying, in a word. All the
pointless talk is intended to obscure a
concerted effort to undermine China’s
economy because we cannot compete with it in
various strategic sectors, while—part
two—buying time to move maximum U.S.
military hardware as close to the mainland
as possible under the program the Defense
Department named a few years ago the Pacific
Defense Initiative, the PDI.
At the horizon, we are likely to see
Washington’s trans–Pacific military
ambitions trump longstanding trade and
investment relationships. This is what
“decoupling” and now “delinking” are all
about. They are warnings to the corporate
and financial sectors that their interests,
which came first in the decades after the
Dengist reforms of the 1980s, will no longer
take precedence as the new Cold War Biden
constantly denies provoking destroys
relations with the mainland.
Two years ago
Raimondo gave an interview to CNBC, the
financial news network, that more or less
announced the Biden regime’s intention to
subvert key sectors of China’s economy. She
was about to address something called the
U.S.–E.U. Trade and Technology Council and
told her interlocutor, “If we really want to
slow down China’s rate of innovation, we
need to work with Europe.”
It is useful once in a while to have
dumbheads such as Raimondo in high
positions, because, without meaning to do
so, they can tell you so much more than you
are supposed to know. Slowing down China’s
impressive advances in high-technology
sectors was precisely Washington’s intent by
the time Raimondo spoke. The Commerce
Department under her direction has since
imposed a wide variety of restrictions on
U.S. exports to China of semiconductor
chips, software systems, and the machinery
used to produce both. As Ana Swanson
reports, Raimondo is likely to pile on more
of these as soon as she returns from
Beijing.
The Biden regime dresses up this
profoundly undignified conduct as “narrowly
targeted” to technologies that could be of
use to the Chinese military. Jake Sullivan
set the tone for all of these visitors to
Beijing in a speech at the Brookings
Institution last April. “We are imposing
necessary restrictions on specific
technology exports,” he explained, “while
seeking to avoid an outright technological
blockade…. The administration intends to
maintain a substantial trade relationship
with China.”
This is what Raimondo and all of those
who preceded her to China say when
explaining their intent: Washington’s sole
concern as Raimondo imposes her regime of
restrictions is national security, and all
else can proceed rosily. It is hard to think
of a flimsier dodge. By this standard, she
would have to restrict sales of Juicy Fruit
gum to the Chinese. What the Biden
administration is doing comes down to
securitizing the economic relationship. If
you have ever doubted that the United States
is a failing imperium unwilling to accept 21st
century realities, I offer this as proof of
the proposition.
The Chinese know this and have said so
many times. I no longer think Blinken,
Yellen, et al. have any thought of
persuading them otherwise on these journeys.
That only looks like their intent. Their
true purpose is in the way of theatrical,
and Americans are their true audience: They
must make sure we do not understand Gina
Raimondo’s efforts to punch the Chinese well
below their belts for what they are: an
uncompetitive nation’s attempts to hold back
a rising economic power.
I found
that speech Sullivan delivered last spring
interesting for what he left out as much as
for what was in it. There was not a single
mention of the U.S. military buildup at the
western end of the Pacific.
Talk about elephants in the living room.
The Pentagon is developing the
Australian–British–U.S. alliance known as
AUKUS, there is the Quad group, comprising
the U.S., Australia, India, and Japan, there
are these recently and assiduously fortified
alliances with Seoul, Tokyo, Manila, and
Canberra, and none of this, we hear again
and again, has anything to do with
surrounding China or providing for the
movement of U.S. military capabilities
westward toward the mainland. This is only
“seemingly” the case, as The Times would put
it.
It is the same as with Raimondo’s
projects on the technology side: Neither the
Chinese nor anyone else in Asia believes
these silly explanations, and no one expects
them to do so. Beijing knows very well there
is a point to all these apparently pointless
visits U.S. officials insist on making. The
Biden regime is buying time as it
remilitarizes the western end of the
Pacific. The only people who are supposed to
understand otherwise are Americans. We are
not supposed to watch as Washington provokes
and prosecutes Cold War II before our eyes.
We are supposed to watch as American
officials—reasonable, constructive,
well-intended—make all efforts to talk to
the Chinese in the face of their stubborn
reluctance to cooperate.
This is my revised take on the
Blinken–Yellen–Kerry–Raimondo cavalcade
across the Pacific. These people are not
clods. They are purposefully malicious and,
it should go without saying, are making the
world even more dangerous than it already
is.
There are two things to think about here.
One, the Biden regime’s efforts to obscure
what it is up to at the other end of the
Pacific is a straight reprise of the first
Cold War, which now resides in all but the
most important history books as the
responsibility of the Soviets. We have a
responsibility to render and defend an
accurate record so that this does not happen
again.
Two, there is this administration’s
immense betrayal of Americans as it
aggresses in the Pacific, along with the
numerous lost opportunities of which
American are deprived. You will find in that
Jake Sullivan speech grand and plentiful
references to the revival of the American
middle class, bipartisan unity, and other
such elevated thoughts. Read the speech and
then ask: What is this nation’s leadership
doing in the cause of a competitive America?
Are we redoubling efforts to educate our
people or are we, diabolically, shutting
down access—see the University of West
Virginia—to liberal arts education? What are
we doing to produce the doctors and
scientists we need to find our way in the 21st
century? What are we doing to bring the
dispossessed into the economy, address drug
addiction, and all our other debilitating
social ills? What are we doing—seriously
doing, I mean—to repair and build out the
infrastructure we need? Nothing or not
enough are my answers.
The Chinese challenge could and should be
understood as a chance to reinvent America
by way of a Great Mobilization, cap “G,” cap
“M,” of New Deal magnitude. There is, of
course, no more than lip service to any such
idea. We are instead sacrificing this
historic opportunity to the
military-industrial complex, the greed of
corporations, and the ambitions of political
leaders who lack all principle or any
thought for the commonweal.
Maybe you think, as I do, that none of
the Biden officials flying off to Beijing is
serious about the true work to be done in
our relations with China, or is competent to
do it. We must consider, bitterly, that they
are perfectly representative of our
circumstances as defined by a leadership
that is more or less across the board
unserious and incompetent to meet the great
challenges of our time—China merely one
among many.