This first appeared in Asia Times.
The just concluded G20 summit
had on display the contrasting style of world leadership between China and the
U.S. as exhibited by their leaders, Xi Jinping and Barack Obama.
Xi’s message to the world was
based on cooperation and collaboration. Obama’s message was for the world to
follow the lead of American exceptionalism.
As the host nation, China got
to set the agenda and had the advantage of giving the opening remarks. Xi’s
opening address was to announce that China must embark on changing its economic
growth model by becoming a country of innovation and a leader in science and
technology.
Having taken 700 million out
of poverty within China, Xi went on to say that China would continue to
contribute to the global fight against poverty. That was the reason he launched
the land and maritime Silk Road initiatives.
The so-called one belt, one
road initiative was to improve the infrastructure along the way from East Asia
to Western Europe and all points in between. The Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank formed
concurrent to the OBOR has already begun financing some of the projects.
Improving the infrastructure of
the countries on the Silk Road would inevitably improve the livelihood of the
people in those countries. Xi observed, “It is meant to build not China’s own
backyard garden but a garden shared by all countries.”
Xi stood firmly on the side
of open trade and investment in the age of economic globalization. Repeatedly,
he emphasized that it will be essential to seek win-win models of global
growth, that all nations large or small, rich or poor must be treated equally
with respect.
“The world will be a better
place only when everyone is better off,” he said.
Because of conflicts and
turmoil, a pandemic refugee crisis, climate change and terrorism, the world’s
economy needs a new path for growth. Xi believes that path lies in technology
innovation.
China is of course already a successful
example of sustaining economic growth via technology innovation. Having in
China the world’s largest network of high-speed rail and the longest open water
bridges (nearly 100 miles long) are some of the indicators.
On its own, China has sent
man into outer space, put a lander to roam the moon and built its own space
station.
Just recently, China launched
the world’s first ever quantum communications satellite.
China has developed its
submersible technology such that they can now explore the ocean floor deeper
than 4 miles below.
For six years in a row, China
owns the world’s fastest super computer, leads in new applications for the
mobile phone and new uses via the Internet. China’s economy is clearly no
longer dependent on sweatshops. On the technology muscle beach, China is not the
97-pound weakling.
There is a fascinating and
unconfirmed rumor circulating on China’s Internet that the US Navy withdrew
from the South China Sea in July for a very practical reason.
Beijing government had
quietly informed Pentagon that their missile firing submarines had their radar
locked in on the American carriers and strongly suggested that the American
fleet withdraw from the area.
The Pentagon asked the American
fleet command for confirmation and the command was amazed to discover that
indeed some radar had locked in on the carriers. However the American on-board finder
could not locate where the locking radar was coming from. Thus they quietly hightailed
out of the South China Sea.
If true, this incident is
entirely consistent with China’s practice of Sun Zi’s Art of War, namely, the best
way to win a battle is not having to fire a shot. A similar tactic was used
nearly 20 years earlier.
Thomas Reed, an expert on nuclear weapons and former Secretary
of Air Force, reported in September 2008
issue of Physics Today, that China in
mid-1990’s had intentionally invited Danny Stillman of Los Alamos to tour
China’s nuclear research facilities, which he did on numerous occasions.
Stillman was responsible for
gathering intelligence on China’s nuclear weapon development capability and was
the contact China wanted. Stillman got his book on China’s state of nuclear
weapon technology ready for publication but the U.S. government quashed it.
At the time, the Clinton
Administration was busy prosecuting Dr. Wen Ho Lee of Los Alamos alleging that
he stole weapon related secrets for China. Publication of Stillman’s book would
have been, at minimum, awkward. Stillman had to settle for telling the story to
Reed later on.
President Obama as he headed
to Hangzhou China for the G20 conference had planned on several one-on-one
meetings on the sideline with other leaders, in addition to the high profile
tea with President Xi.
Consistent with his mission
as defender of human rights, he was planning to express his concerns to
Philippines President Duterte over the thousands of extra-judicial executions
of drug lords.
Upon hearing of Obama’s
intention, Duterte flew into a rage saying among other things that Philippines
is a sovereign nation and no longer a lap-dog of the U.S. He also asked
rhetorically, what about the hundreds of thousands of civilians massacred by
the Americans when they were the colonial masters of Philippines?
Duterte also called Obama the
“son of a whore.” Thanks to the Colbert
Report, we now know that Duterte was not the first to use such indelicate
language. Another exceptional U.S. president, Ronald Reagan, had called Gorbachev
then leader of USSR the same name in his moments of extreme emotion.
Obama’s meeting with Turkey’s
President Erdogan also did not go well. Erdogan in front of the foreign press
aired his difference with Obama including naming a Kurdish group that the U.S.
supports but Turkey considers a terrorist organization. (Of course, Asia Times has reported on numerous
occasions that rebel groups fighting Syria’s Assad with U.S. support also
fights for ISIS.)
Perhaps not wishing for
another Duterte-like confrontation, and perhaps the price of offending Turkey
would be too dear, Obama did not raise questions of human rights in Turkey with
Erdogan—human rights issues such as crackdown of the press and the mass arrests
that followed the unsuccessful coup.
Obama then proceeded to Laos
to attend the ASEAN Summit. He was the first U.S. president to visit Laos and
he formally apologized for the “secret” war America inflicted on Laos during
the Vietnam conflict.
Reported elsewhere in Asia Times, Laos continues to suffer the
aftermath consequences of carpet-bombing by the U.S. Air Force. Decades later
there remain millions of unexploded cluster bombs in the countryside. These
were accidentally detonated by unwitting farmers and their children with
dismaying regularity.
Obama’s offer of $30 million
per year for three years would barely scratch the surface for rendering Laos’
countryside safe for farming and allowing Laos to begin economic recovery.
Unlike hundreds of other
nations, United States has never agreed to halt the use of landmines,
antipersonnel and cluster bombs. The U.S. reserves the right to kill and maim
and at the same time make obscene profits from it.
It’s no small irony that the
great defender of human rights is also the dominant purveyor and user of these
lethal takers of human life.
The conscience salving donations
to compensate for the past atrocities and human suffering is a drop in the
bucket compared to the profits made on the victims’ bone piles. And as
Christina Lin pointed out in Asia Times,
the U.S. has made no efforts to stop the cycle of killing and profits, human
rights be damned.
The distinction is clear. Xi
Jinping offers cooperation and collaboration on a path for common prosperity.
Obama offers umbrella of missile defense protection and a path to death and
destruction.
No comments:
Post a Comment