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Current US-China
Relations
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: A Lame Duck-Greenhorn Dance
This article appeared in AToL on
June 22, 2006
The Lame Duck
The world’s sole superpower is currently led by a
prematurely lame-duck president with an approval rating in the low 30%
range
going into mid-term Congressional elections in the second and final
term of his
administration. Political columnist Jim Rutenberg wrote on May 8, 2006
in The
New York Times: “To anyone who doubts the stakes for the White House in
this
year's midterm Congressional elections, consider that Representative
John
Conyers Jr. of Michigan, the Democrat who would become chairman of the
Judiciary Committee if his party recaptured the House, has called for
an
inquiry into the possible impeachment [of the president].”
Even President George W Bush’s own Republican Party elders
are reported to have advised him to dump his law-breaking
neo-conservative Vice
President and his overreachingly hawkish Secretary of Defense and to
replenish
the entire burn-out White House staff to try to preserve a Republican
congressional
majority next November and to resurrect diminishing chances of another
Republican presidency in 2008.
Having
gained the White House by the grace of a politicized Supreme Court,
Bush’s
first term was defined by his god-sent mission of faith-based War on
Terrorism
in reaction to terrorist attacks nine months into office and gave him
an
instant war-leader, if not war-hero aura that swept him into a second
term
against an ineffective opponent. The Battle of Iraq, the second
campaign of the
open-ended holy War on Terrorism after Afghanistan, has been won with
“catastrophic success” but the ensuing peace is being lost equally
catastrophically. The continuing quagmire in the conquered nation after
three
years of undermanned occupation is such a catastrophic failure that it
has
reduced the commander-in-chief of the occupation forces to a leader
with few
allies around the world and a prematurely lame-duck president at home.
Terrorists and
Terrorism
Terrorist attacks are specific acts by specific terrorists
while terrorism is a broad abstract mental fanaticism with no specific
pre-identifiable battleground or combatants until after a terrorist act
has
been committed. All suicide bombers are one-act perpetrators that defy
preemptive restraint. Most of them do not know themselves when they
will cross
the line from mental agitation to suicidal action, or what and where
targets
would be selected. The very definition
of terrorism is nonspecific, multifaceted and controversial. Different
governments define terrorism differently, and more importantly,
terrorist
groups are identifiable only with varying pejorative standards.
Terrorism to
some is liberation theology for others. Terrorists to some are heroic
freedom
fighters to others. Opposition to British rule over the American
colonies began
with terrorist attacks.
Improvised explosive devices (IED) used by insurgents
in asymmetrical warfare are as legitimate as remote-controlled cruise
missiles
in conventional warfare. In one respect, the US War on Terrorism is
officially
an undeclared war within the context of the US constitution while the
Islamic jihad, even a jihad by the
sword, when declared by a recognized cleric is a
legitimate holy war, a precept of Divine institution. Webster’s
Dictionary
defines terrorism as “1) the act of terrorizing, 2) a system of
government that
seeks to rule by intimidation and 3) unlawful acts of violence
committed in an
organized attempt to overthrow a government.” A terrorist is one who
adopts or
supports a policy of terrorism with action. State terrorism is
frequently the
midwife of insurgent terrorism.
A war on specific terrorists is arguably fightable by
military means provided sufficient resources, mostly manpower, are
committed,
and the price of escalation is accepted. But a war on terrorism is an
all-inclusive conceptual undertaking that even a superpower does not
possess
adequate resources to conduct, particularly if the fountain head of
such
superpower is the very flawed policies that force-feed terrorism. A War
on
Terrorism is a conflict without clear terms of engagement except that
the more
is won on the battlefield the more is lost in the hearts and minds of
the
target population. In a May 25, 2006
Washington press conference held jointly with British Prime Minister
Tony Blair,
President Bush openly admitted a good three years after having declared
“mission accomplished” in Iraq with the end of "major combat
operations”
that his macho “bring’em on” remark in reference to Iraqi insurgents
“sent the
wrong signal to people.” Just as the Vietnam War deformed US foreign
policy of
global anti-Communism and paralyzed President Johnson’s domestic
policies of
Great Society by robbing him of international endorsement and domestic
political support, Bush’s War on Iraq has consumed the hallowed promise
of his
missionary presidency both at home and abroad and provided visible
evidence of
slow corrosive defeat in his War on Terrorism.
The Greenhorn
On the other side of the globe, and the opposite end of the
ideological spectrum, the world’s most populous nation and fastest
growing
economy is led by a political greenhorn, at least by traditional
Chinese
standards. President Hu Jintao is a model alumnus of the Party School
of the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP), nurtured by a process carefully designed
to
ensure an orderly generational transition of the central leadership to
produce
a catholic and versatile heir-apparent acceptable to a wide range of
ideological factions within the world’s largest and arguably the most
complex
political party. Learning lessons from the damaging experience of the
Cultural
Revolution in which the winner-takes-all struggle for the correct
ideological
line ended with unimaginable chaos and violence that threatened the
very future
of the Party, the CCP has since adopted ways and means to smooth out
the
leadership transition process and to reach orderly resolutions of
inevitable
ideological and material conflicts in a complex
socio-economic-political system
that leave room for constructive disagreement and operational
compromise. In
many ways the CPC as currently constituted is a functioning
representative
democracy within the context of socialist politics.
Hu Jintao became general secretary of the CPC Central
Committee in 2002 and was elected president of the People’s Republic of
China
on March 15, 2003. In September 2004, he assumed the chairmanship of
the
Central Military Commission. At the time the US-China summit was
originally
scheduled for spring of 2005, Hu had officially held full rein of
leadership of
China for less than a year at a time when the nation was at a crossroad
in the
deliberation on correct ideological evolution and appropriate future
policies.
After more than two decades of headlong rush to transform
China from an autarkic centrally-planned economy into a limited open
market
economy, Hu is now leading a nation in the midst of fateful debates
about the
most effective and balanced route toward a modern harmonious socialist
society.
Autarky has never been voluntary Chinese policy under socialism but
rather an
externally-imposed sanction of the Cold War. China’s shift towards
market
economy in the last two-and-a-half decades had not been taken in
isolation from
world trends. When Deng Xiaoping introduced the “open/reform” policies
in 1979,
towards the end of the Cold War, it was a rational response to a world
infatuated with the extravagant promises of neo-liberal free trade. A
quarter
of a century later, while such open/reform policies have achieved
spectacular
results in bringing China forward into a modern interdependent world,
the
glaring resultant imbalances, such as excessive dependence on export,
worsening
income disparity, regional development gaps, rampant official
corruption,
serious environmental crisis and near-total collapse of the social
service
network and safety net, etc. are raising calls for re-thinking the
wisdom of
falling for the empty promises of neo-liberal globalization.
There is no
disagreement among the youth who are destined to shoulder the
continuing task
of national reconstruction toward economic prosperity and cultural
renaissance
on the need for further opening/reform. The
dispute is on the correct definition and
path of opening/reform:
open to neo-colonialism and reform towards social inequality and moral
decay;
or open to assuming a legitimate place as a strong and peaceful nation
in a
world order of free sovereign nations of equality and reform toward
creative
and scientific socialist construction based on equality, justice and
freedom
for all.
The Perfunctory Summit
This was the inauspicious backdrop against which the 2006
US-China summit was held. Neither leader
was in a position to bring to the summit new positions to resolve a
range of
immediate and developing friction, or the bold leadership necessary to
ease
emerging long-term contradictions between a declining superpower and a
rising
regional giant with fundamentally opposing ideologies.
Already conveniently postponed once by the
Katrina hurricane crisis in 2005 to mark much-needed time with which to
resolve
a diplomatic stalemate dead in the water, the resurrected summit in
April 2006
still turned out to be a poorly-staged non-event between an unpopular
US leader
in his final term of office and a Chinese leader who is presiding over
uncertain outcomes from fundamental policy debates at home. Neither leader carried the clear mandate
necessary for the bold leadership needed for a path-breaking summit of
long-range consequences, nor did either enjoy the policy flexibility
for achieving
fruitful diplomatic breakthroughs.
To appease pervasive US hostility towards communism, China
is made to feel the need to pretend it has abandoned the allegedly evil
ideology, an
artificial, self-defeating posture in view of modern Chinese history. US policy aims to channel China through
“peaceful
evolution” toward the disastrous path of the former Soviet Union, to
implode
toward neo-liberal capitalism open the country again to neo-colonialism
along
the model of post-war Japan and Germany as subservient allies in a Pax
Americana. On the other hand, China has been following a naive foreign
policy
toward the US that is based of fantasized US good will and fundamental
friendship temporarily obscured by misunderstanding. The reality is
that those
in the US policy establishment who are realists on China do not expect
to see
communism receding and thus any rapprochement between China and the US
cannot
be fundamental, only based on temporary expediency, such as the current
need to
cooperate on the US War on Terrorism. The fact is that communism will
continue
to evolve as a political institution, but those waiting for communism
to
collapse in China will have to wait for a long time, perhaps even
forever.
Thus
while the War on Terrorism is a distraction, the US continues to see
China as its
major threat and enemy. Those in Chinese policy circles who deny this
basic
fact will pay a high price for their fantasy. An
appeasement policy toward belligerent US
moral imperialism,
especially on the issue of interference in China’s internal affair,
most
glaring in the question of Taiwan on the pretext of enhancing
democracy, will
only prevent fundamental improvement of relations between the two
countries. The
best that can be hoped
for is for the fundamental antagonism to be managed into a peaceful
competition
to avoid open military conflict. Peace in Asia presupposes US
preparedness to
live in peace with a Communist China and cessation of US interference
in the internal affairs of other nations through moral imperialism.
Intense negotiation on the official categorization and
diplomatic protocol details of the summit dragged on until the last
minute over
whether it was a state visit to seal diplomatic breakthroughs or a
working
meeting to address intractable conflicts, with both parties more
concerned with
public relations impact on domestic politics than achieving real
progress on
improving bilateral relations. Exhaustive
diplomatic efforts were expanded on mundane protocol issues that have
little
long-range consequences. The summit was ensnared in short-term problems
and
issues that defy solution unless long-range visions are clarified as
controlling factors. Alas, such long-range visions were sadly missing
in the
publicly-reported official discussions, the absence of which was
camouflage by
the usual utterances of diplomatic platitudes to create an image of a
successful summit out of a perfunctory one.
While both leaders publicly touted the need for broad
convergence in strategic cooperation based on select operational
commonality in
national interests, the two nations remain far apart on specific issues
as well
as broad world views and ideology. The
US asserts that the enlargement of democracy is the fundamental basis
of its
foreign policy. China also proclaims its desire for enhancing
democracy. Yet
the two nations do not agree on what democracy means in different
nations and
under different historical conditions and socio-cultural contexts. US
culture
celebrates extreme individualism while Chinese culture puts priority on
Confucian hierarchal social harmony. The US promotes free trade and
open
markets as long as they are other nation’s markets. Free trade for the
US
is not
freedom to trade, but only trade not in conflict with US policy of
unilateral
sanctions. China is also committed to free trade but in practice has
been
engaged only in selling cheap labor and environmental pollution for
dollars
that cannot be used at home, or to buy high-technology that the US
forbids all countries to sell to China even for dollars, or to buy US
assets that are considered strategic. And the two nations are racing
headlong into
confrontational disagreement on the terms of fair bilateral and global
trade.
Rising economic nationalism is changing the domestic politics of both
nations,
with opposition to job loss through outsourcing and escalating trade
deficits
on the US scene, and opposition to foreign control of Chinese
enterprises and
hegemonic US market power on the Chinese side. Fundamentally, China, as
many
other nations also, is beginning to see US definition of free trade as
a
pretext to interfere with the economic sovereign authority of other
nations.
Geopolitically, the Chinese model is being received in the Third World
as an
alternative path to development from the discredited US neo-liberal
trade
system. The US is trying to convince China to become a belated
“stakeholder” in
the Pax Americana, a declining system in which China, as with all
developing
nations, holds a pitifully small and underprivileged stake. China is
beginning
to enjoy increasing popularity among the nations of the world while the
US
image has been in steady and rapid decline in recent years. The one
area in
which China had problem with other nations is in its export trade
sector, a
sector in which the US has been most influential in shaping and where
foreign
capital dominates.
Nonproliferation
Beside differences in trade and economic relations, a range
of national security issues present themselves as both concerns and
opportunities to the leadership of both the US and China. Among them
the issue
of nonproliferation of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass
destruction
sits on top of the pyramid.
Every nation supports the principle of nonproliferation, but
the US definition of the nonproliferation regime is fatally flawed.
Nobel Peace
Prize laureate Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International
Atomic
Energy Agency, an intergovernmental organization that is part of the
United
Nations system, evoked a vivid image when he said that for an nuclear
superpower with tens of thousands of warheads and the unimpeded means
to
deliver them to all corners of the earth to tell other nations not to
develop
nuclear weapons “is like dangling a lit cigarette from your mouth while
telling
everybody else to stop smoking.” World
nuclear nonproliferation must start with world nuclear disarmament by
the
nations that already have nuclear weapons taking concrete steps toward
getting
rid of them. Nonproliferation requires a roll-back toward disarmament
as a
first step. Despite post-Cold War reduction, the US and Russia together
still
hold some 20,000 nuclear warheads in their arsenals, and the US is
working on
developing new weapons. There is already a mounting surplus of enriched
uranium
and plutonium around the world for military purposes, yet the “weapons
countries”
continue to produce more.
China’s alleged military buildup is cited by
the US
as a justification for US military spending. Yet China’s air force does
not
have a single long-range bomber, and according to a story in Time
in
June1999, its entire nuclear arsenal “packs about as much explosive
power as
what the US stuffs into one Trident submarine.” Zbigniew Brzezinski
wrote in
January 2005 in Foreign Policy: “Forty years after acquiring
nuclear-weapons
technology, China has just 24 ballistic missiles capable of hitting the
United
States. Even beyond the realm of strategic warfare, a country must have
the
capacity to attain its political objectives before it will engage in
limited
war. It is hard to envisage how China could promote its objectives when
it is acutely
vulnerable to a blockade and isolation enforced by the United States.
In a
conflict, Chinese maritime trade would stop entirely. The flow of oil
would
cease, and the Chinese economy would be paralyzed.”
This is the basis of China’s bending backward
to avoid a military confrontation with the US, the danger for which
comes
entirely from US preemptive strategy.
ElBaradei
characterizes the US position on nonproliferation
as hypocritical and the alternative is seeing “20 or 30 countries with
nuclear
weapons. That would be the beginning of the end [of
non-proliferation].”
Backing non-nuclear-weapon nations into a defenseless corner,
reinforcing their
perceptions of international injustice and national humiliation, is a
formula,
he said, for seeing more, not less, nuclear proliferation. One might
add that
preemptive strikes serve only to accelerate the pace and strengthen the
rationalization for non-nuclear nations to embark on nuclear armament.
Yet David
Sanger, White House correspondent for the New York Times reported on
June 16
from Crawford, Texas, the president’s home ranch, that Bush “directed
his top
national security aides to make a doctrine of pre-emptive action
against states
and terrorist groups trying to develop weapons of mass destruction into
the
foundation of a new national security strategy.”
After waging a war to remove non-existent weapons of mass
destruction from Iraq, the US continues to try to get other nuclear
nations to
pressure North Korea and Iran to cease and desist with their nuclear
weapons
programs. Learning from the fate of Iraq, North Korea has discovered
that it
commands more leverage in dealing with the US by claiming to already
possess
nuclear weapons than to deny nuclear capability to ward off any threat
of
pre-emptive attacks. North Korea has said it needs to develop nuclear
weapons
to prevent a possible US invasion. Washington denies intentions of
attacking
the communist nation in one breath while threatens with the use of
force in the
next. Nuclear experts believe North Korea has enough radioactive
material to
make at least half-a-dozen bombs. North Korean negotiators claim its
country
already has operational atomic weapons, but no tests have yet been
detected to
confirm its arsenal.
Many nonproliferation specialists feel the US should
consider offering the all non-nuclear weapon countries assurance
against
foreign attacks, both conventional and nuclear, and provide them with
the fuels
to develop the nuclear power plants they need for peaceful economic
development, rather than continuing to pursue the economic and military
sanctions that have been in place against these nuclear capable
countries for
decades with no deterrent effect. Furthermore
there is an urgent need to
deescalate the US penchant for
military solutions in the world security regime. Security assurances to
non-nuclear-weapon states from the nuclear-weapon states are a sine qua
non
requirement for nonproliferation. Non-nuclear-weapon nations are not
blind to
the fact only nations without nuclear retaliatory capabilities have
been
attacked via conventional warfare by nuclear-weapon nations since the
beginning
of the nuclear age. As for the nuclear threat, if Japan had the atomic
bomb in
1945, not one atomic bomb would have been dropped on its soil, let
alone two.
The US continues to refuse to subscribe to the “no first use”
principle,
wearing the dubious honor of being the only nation in history that has
used
nuclear weapons in war, and not just once for effect but twice for
emphasis.
Arms Control vs
Disarmament
Arms control is the deadly enemy of disarmament. When
disarmament is accepted as unachievable
utopia, arms control becomes the compromise solution. But arms control
implies
that disarmament is unnecessary since arms control presents itself as a
regime
that makes armament safe and benign. The UN Conference on Disarmament
(UNCD),
established in 1979 as the single multilateral disarmament negotiating
forum of
the international community, was a result of the first Special Session
on
Disarmament of the United Nations General Assembly held in 1978. The
terms of
reference of the UNCD include practically all multilateral arms control
and
disarmament problems.
Currently the UNCD focuses on: cessation of the nuclear arms
race; nuclear disarmament; prevention of nuclear war; prevention of an
arms
race in outer space; effective international arrangements to assure
non-nuclear-weapon states against the use or threat of use of nuclear
weapons;
new types of weapons of mass destruction and new systems of such
weapons including
radiological weapons; and a comprehensive program of disarmament and
transparency in armaments. After almost three decades, disarmament is
still an
impossible dream.
US Ambassador Eric Javits, speaking at the plenary session
of the 66-member UNCD Geneva, Switzerland, which met from January 21 to
March
29, 2002, said the US places international peace and security as a
primary
goal, but national security is also necessary and essential, as if the
two
goals were mutually exclusive. Javits said on February 7, 2002 that in
order
for any arms control treaty to be effective, the security of all states
--
termed mutual advantage -- is vital.
The
Effect of September 11 Attacks
The terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 in New York and Washington
had profound
effects on US national psyche with fundamental political repercussions
on
foreign and domestic policy formulation. On
domestic policy, the US opts to sharply
curtail its century-old
tradition of civil liberty and personal privacy in the name of homeland
security. The admirable US tradition of protecting the innocent at the
risk of
not convicting the guilty has been largely abandoned. The norm now is
to err on
the side of homeland security. Ethnic profiling has been revived with a
vengeance. On foreign policy, hijacked by faith-based neo-conservative
extremists, the US has found a new enemy in the form of Islamic
extremism to
replace its old communist nemeses of the Cold War: namely the USSR and
China.
History may eventually cite the September 11 events as a turning point
in a
shift in global geopolitical order with unprecedented patterns of
cooperation
among previously antagonistic governments. This is because the US is no
longer
a safe haven exempt from foreign attack. (See:
Superpower Vulnerability - http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/GL14Aa01.html)
Thus the 2002 UNCD was of significance because it was the first
occasion in
which the US presented its post-9:11 posture on disarmament as a nation
under
siege.
On November 14, merely a month after the terrorist attacks, President
Bush and
Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a joint statement in which they
declared that the US and Russia “have overcome the legacy of the Cold
War,”
adding that “neither country regards the other as an enemy or threat.”
The two
Presidents of the world’s two major nuclear powers cited their joint
responsibility to contribute to international security, and went on to
say that
the US and Russia “are determined to work together, and with other
nations and
international organizations, including the United Nations, to promote
security,
economic well-being, and a peaceful, prosperous, free world.” Although the word terrorism was not
mentioned, the intention was clear that anti-terrorism, albeit the
official
definition of which is not congruent in the mind of each leader, was
the
motivating factor behind the new spirit of co-existence.
Yet on December 13, another month later, President Bush announced that
the US
would withdraw from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty,
pursuant to
its provisions that permit withdrawal after six months notice. This was
a
complete reversal of nuclear deterrence scholastics that had evolved in
the
Cold War that successfully prevent a nuclear holocaust though five
decades of
superpower hostility. The idea that both
superpowers agreed not to undertake defensive measures to neutralize
any
advantage of a first strike by exposing itself to certain vulnerability
to a counter
strike was a key factor in stabilizing nuclear escalation.
In withdrawing from the ABM Treaty, the US
now claims it knows with certainty that some States, including a number
that
have sponsored terrorist attacks in the past, are investing heavily to
acquire
ballistic missiles that could conceivably be used against the US and
its Allies
and protectorates, and this development is compounded by the fact that
many of
these same States, not content just to acquire missiles, are also
seeking to
develop chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons of mass destruction.
Why should terrorists resort to ICBMs [Inter Continental
Ballistic Missiles] that are costly and difficult to launch when a
small bottle
of biological agent can do more damage at a tiny fraction of the cost?
A recent
NATO [North Atlantic Treaty Organisation] study shows that the costs of
conventional weapons ($2,000), nuclear armaments ($800), and chemical
agents
($600) would far outstrip the bargain basement price of biological
weapons ($1)
to produce 50% casualties per square-kilometer (prices at 1969
dollars).
Terrorism can only be fought with the removal of injustice, not by
anti-ballistic missiles and smart bombs. It is a straw-man argument to
assert
the principle of refusal to yield to terrorist demands. It is a
suicidal policy
to refuse to negotiate with terrorists until terrorism stops, for the
political
aim of all terrorism is to force the otherwise powerful opponent to
address the
terrorists' grievances by starting new negotiations under new terms.
The
solution lies in denying terrorism any stake in destruction and
increasing its
stake in dialogue. This is done with an inclusive economy and a just
world
order in which it would be clear that terrorist destruction of any part
of the
world would simply impoverish all, including those whom terrorists try
to help.
The U.S. can increase its own security and the security of the world by
adopting foreign and trade policies more in tune with its professed
value of
peace and justice for all, in other words, by shunning unilateralism
and
hegemonic policies. The Al Qaeda, a hydra-headed cell-like structure,
can be
defeated only by enlisting the support of the entire international
community.
That sympathetic support was spontaneously extended by many after 9-11,
but
Bush frittered it away with his unilateral killing rampage on innocent
civilians in the name of collateral damage.
When it entered office before 9:11, the Bush administration
was antagonistic about cooperative relations with China and North
Korea, and
instead promised a fundamental reorientation of US security policy from
the
Cold War era to explore a new close partnership with India which had
been an
ally of the USSR, and showed little enthusiasm toward multilateral
regional
organizations such as APEC and Asean Regional Forum (ARF). In his first
State
of the Union address in 2002, Bush was forced to declare, after
labeling Iran,
Iraq and North Korea as an Axis of Evil: “We must prevent the
terrorists and
regimes who seek chemical, biological or nuclear weapons from
threatening the
United States and the world.” He added
further
that “In this moment of opportunity, a common danger is erasing old
rivalries.
America is working with Russia, China, and India in ways we never have
before
to achieve peace and prosperity.” This was a drastic policy shift. Time
Magazine reported in June 2002 that Clinton National Security Adviser
Sandy
Berger and counterterrorism deputy Richard Clarke in presenting their
transition report to Condoleezza Rice and her staff in the first week
of
January 2001 had presented al-Qaeda as the greatest threat facing the
US as
Clinton left office. Rice thought otherwise and identified China as the
greatest threat. Bush subsequent referred to China as a strategic
competitor,
rather than a strategic partner as the outgoing Clinton Administration
had
done. Events have proved Burger to be right.
Withdrawal from the ABM Treaty permits the US to develop new means of
shielding
the US against missile attacks which enhances temptation for the US to
consider
first strikes against other nuclear nations. The US claims it needs to
update
“means of dissuasion” to reduce the possibility that missiles will be
used by
hostile nations as tools of coercion and aggression against it, more
than just
against a stray missile or accidental launch. Such
“means of dissuasion” are also an
essential element of a strategy
to discourage potential adversaries from seeking to acquire or use
weapons of
mass destruction and ballistic missiles -- by removing the assured
possibility
that such weapons would have military utility. With US withdrawal from
the ABM
Treaty, the deterrence doctrine based on Massive Assured Destruction
(MAD)
became history, and the notion of a winnable nuclear war became US
policy.
In mid-December, a month after the 9:11 attacks, technical specialists
from the
US met their Chinese counterparts to explain that US withdrawal from
the ABM
Treaty was not aimed at China, notwithstanding earlier anti-China
rhetoric that
accompanied the withdrawal deliberations. The US wanted now to discuss
the
possible restart of a broad strategic dialogue with China in the
context of new
US strategic policy based on the War on Terrorism. The US further
explored
strategic issues and appropriate methods for enhancing mutual
understanding and
confidence in the context of increasingly cooperative relations between
the US
and China when President Bush visited Beijing at the invitation of then
Chinese
President Jiang Zemin on February 21, 2002, exactly 30 years to the
date of
President Richard M. Nixon’s historic visit to China to exploit
geopolitical
opportunities arising from the Chinese–Soviet split. Unfortunately, the
Bush
visit in 2002 did not yield any breakthroughs of historical
significance
despite US awareness of the need for Chinese cooperation on its War on
Terrorism. In some ways, such on the issue of US interference in
Chinese
internal affairs over the problem of Taiwan, the Bush visit represented
reversals from the Nixon/Kissinger commitments made three decades
earlier to
Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai on US withdrawal from Taiwan. Until those
commitments
are meticulously honored, US-China relations remain devoid of a solid
foundation.
June 19, 2006
Next: US Unilateralism
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