CHINA [XI JINPING] TUTORS U.S. PRESIDENT [D. TRUMP] ON
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
[12oct2017]
By Patrick Mendis, Associate-in-Research, Harvard University
Source 1: China US
Focus; Oct 12 , 2017
Source 2: HKTDC - Hong
Kong Trade Development Council; 09 Jan 18;
Access RAS 2018-01-18
|
Reuters: Donald Trump and Xi Jinping
|
- In typical fashion, President Donald Trump
tweeted: “If China decides to help [with the North Korea Problem], that
would be great. If not, we will solve the problem without them!”
Then he received a ten-minute tutorial from President Xi Jinping, after
which Trump declared that “it’s not so easy.” As if the Korea issue is not
complicated enough as it is, it is exacerbated by Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson who apparently believes it is more important to spend time
eviscerating his department to gain efficiencies than it is to avoiding
nuclear war on the peninsula. It underscores an utter lack of appreciation
for the clear and present danger.
- After losing over 400,000
Chinese soldiers to American bombings during the Korean War, the
never-ending conflict—even with the armistice in 1953—continues with the
grandson of Kim Il-sung of North Korea. For China, North Korea is a
protective buffer zone from the U.S. ally of South Korea. The Pentagon
maintains over 28,000 armed forces under the UN command in South Korea.
The demilitarized zone, which is a 160-mile long and 2.5-mile wide strip
of land, separates the North and South Koreas along the 38th parallel,
just 35 miles north of Seoul with 12 million people out of South Korea’s
50 million. As North Korea—with over 25 million people—intensifies its
ballistic missile program, the United States has opened a $11-billion
military base in South Korea and deployed the anti-missile THAAD system, even
though it would neither fully protect American forces nor South Korea.
- With the painful memories of the
three-year Korean War, the Japanese invasion and Nanjing massacre, and
most importantly the Century of Humiliation under Western powers,
President Xi Jinping and the Chinese people understandably want to have
their sense of natural place and peace in the existing world order with
its own territorial integrity. In this, China has diplomatically
settled almost all 14-nation border issues neighboring the Middle Kingdom—most
recently with India near the Bhutan and Nepal borders. North Korea with
its complicated legacy is the greatest challenge for Xi.
- One must compare the China
challenge to that of President Trump who now realizes his own border issue
with Mexico is a test of his leadership and still wants to build a Great
Wall to prevent illegal border-crossing, theft of American jobs, and
dependence on the American welfare system. China is similarly concerned
about a massive migration and refugee issue in the event of a destabilized
North Korea.
- As opposed to a misguided
America for its own problems with on-going wars in the Middle East and
elsewhere—financed by the Chinese, Japanese, and others—with increasing
national debt, China has taken up the American vision of a globalized
world through trade and commerce. This strategy is clearly China’s art of
“peaceful” war with the U.S. and the West, whose post-WWII legacy has been
to maintain their primacy over the world order.
- All this changed some 50
years later with the 2008 Beijing Olympics, when China won most of the
gold and silver medals. It signaled the “coming of age” of the Middle
Kingdom after four centuries of being eclipsed on the world stage. In
fact, Sun Tzu’s Art of War has been put into practice by China to “exploit
your enemy’s weaknesses, avoid his strengths.” The enlightened founding
generation of the U.S. understood the Middle Kingdom better and learned
from the wisdom of Chinese culture, literature, and history as they
reflectively embedded the “Commerce Clause” into the American Constitution
to create a commercial civilization in the new nation and beyond its
shores.
- Now China has championed
the American mission while the U.S. retreats from the founding vision to
herald President Trump’s “America First” strategy. President Xi’s “China
rejuvenation” narrative through his most ambitious foreign policy of the
Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is an experiment just as the American
project has always been an “Experiment” since its birth. The BRI is China’s
art of “peaceful” war to redress the old wounds inflicted on the Chinese
people without collateral damage to those who involved in it. In fact, the
BRI has a peaceful and win-win calculus as a global enterprise with over
80-member countries in the Beijing-based Asian Infrastructure Investment
Bank.
- Departing from Deng
Xiaoping’s strategy of “hide our capabilities and bide our time,” the
post-Olympics re-emergence has essentially elevated China into a global
leader arguably on par with the United States to address one of its
remaining issues—North Korea. Even before President Xi proposed the G2
concept to model after their bilateral relationship as a “new type of
great power relations,” the Chinese leader began to narrate the “China
story” with its territorial integrity and its Confucian heritage.
- Amid this, the United
States has further pushed China to pressure North Korea with the repeated
sanctions by the UN Security Council. The Hermit Kingdom with its nearly
900-mile border with China is trading over 80 percent of its imports and
exports from their northern neighbor and patron. Less significant in
percentage, however, is India as the second largest trading partner of
North Korea followed by Mexico, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and
Thailand. Even the rest of business relations with more than 100 nations
is nevertheless minuscule but the defiant young leader Kim Jong-un is no
recluse. Any punitive retaliation on these countries has greater and
negative implications for American trade relations and economic progress.
- The nationalists and
military strategists at the White House—including the forced-out Steve
Bannon, President Trump’s “Rasputin” in the foreign policy
architecture—have argued that China must solve the Korean crisis.
Softening the rhetoric lately, the former chief “trade war” strategist has
recently claimed in Hong Kong that the stable trade relationship could
help the two countries manage their differences over “other potential
conflict points such as North Korea and the South China Sea.”
- In his Art of War, Sun Tzu
had foreshowed this kind of inconsistent and undisciplined language in a
lost power: “If you don’t pay attention, you won’t last long. Don’t let
the door hit you on the way out.” By still arguing on trade and
appropriating American technology, the U.S. still upholds that it must
take tougher stance on other countries, including China and now with South
Korea. Blaming the elites in the U.S. for getting the country into this
situation, the embattled White House strategist expressed the prevailing
American sentiment, “We’re not at economic war with China, China is at
economic war with us.”
- Meanwhile, China continues
with economic development and global trade through its BRI. As the U.S.'
prestige and influence decline with unpredictable President Trump, China
makes more friends, influences others, and continues to tutor the American
president.
Content provided by CINA US FOCUS.
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