Author Topic: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Taiwan, Vietnam, Philippines, etc)  (Read 336154 times)

Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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these are not actions of competitors , actions of enemies to the world
« Reply #1052 on: April 27, 2020, 02:59:11 PM »
"China is building an incredible number of warships"

But Bloomberg and Biden don't see anything here.

I suppose their new carrier will look just like the USS Ford,
by chance of course.  :x


Crafty_Dog

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Real Clear Politics: A US-China Cold War
« Reply #1054 on: April 28, 2020, 07:08:54 AM »


https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2020/04/27/a_china-us_cold_war_143042.html

Inter alia, the article notes this point that we were discussing recently:

"China’s leaders not only knew how contagious the virus was, they acted on that inside information. In December, they stopped all internal flights from Wuhan to protect Shanghai, Beijing, and other population centers. Yet they allowed international flights to continue. Flights from Wuhan to Madrid. Wuhan to Rome. Wuhan to Seattle. Wuhan to Los Angeles."

ccp

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1055 on: April 28, 2020, 07:25:14 AM »
"China’s leaders not only knew how contagious the virus was, they acted on that inside information. In December, they stopped all internal flights from Wuhan to protect Shanghai, Beijing, and other population centers. Yet they allowed international flights to continue. Flights from Wuhan to Madrid. Wuhan to Rome. Wuhan to Seattle. Wuhan to Los Angeles."

This is totally emblematic of the way the Red Chinese think of themselves VERSUS  the world.


Crafty_Dog

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1056 on: April 28, 2020, 04:50:56 PM »
This is a powerful bullet point to hammer home again and again.

G M

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1057 on: April 28, 2020, 05:06:22 PM »
This is a powerful bullet point to hammer home again and again.

Yup.






Crafty_Dog

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President Trump kicks Huawei in the nuts
« Reply #1063 on: May 18, 2020, 10:32:02 AM »
By: Geopolitical Futures

Huawei on life support? On Friday, the Trump administration moved forward with a long-awaited measure requiring even non-U.S. chip manufacturers using U.S. chipmaking equipment, intellectual property or design software to apply for a license before shipping microchips to Chinese tech giants like Huawei. This effectively forces Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. – the world’s dominant chipmaker – to choose between the U.S. and Chinese tech sectors. For now, at least, it’s choosing the U.S. The firm, which produces some 90 percent of the world’s most advanced microchips and which last week announced early stage plans to build a factory in the U.S. – has reportedly halted new orders from Huawei. One risk of this move for the U.S. is that it inadvertently accelerates development of a homegrown Chinese competitor. So it’s worth noting that China’s own top chipmaker, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., on Friday announced that it had received $2.25 billion in financing from a pair of state-owned funds. But the firm is believed to be several years away from being able to replace what industry leaders like TSMC provide. Thus Huawei’s startling admission this morning: Its survival is at stake.

DougMacG

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Re: US would lose to China in South Pacific
« Reply #1064 on: May 19, 2020, 06:35:43 AM »
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8326109/US-lose-war-China-fought-Pacific-Pentagon-sources-warn.html

My reaction to these types of analyses is that I assume this type of conflict would not involve the US alone vs. China.  How do these simulations come out if Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Australia, India(?), others, side with the US?  Secondly, like NATO issues, if these potential allies don't add much power, they need to step up their capabilities too.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1065 on: May 19, 2020, 09:06:39 AM »
Yes, AND

A sense of who would win a hot war very much influences who flinches when and where during the various interactions of a Cold War.

Crafty_Dog

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Zoellink: US does not need a new Cold War
« Reply #1066 on: May 19, 2020, 12:10:41 PM »
I disagree, but some fair points are raised:


The U.S. Doesn’t Need a New Cold War
Proponents of heightening the conflict with China understate the diplomatic successes of recent years.
By Robert B. Zoellick
May 18, 2020 7:03 pm ET

The U.S. approach toward China now relies on confrontation and accusation. Yet in diplomacy, as in war, the other side gets a vote. On May 22 China will convene two of its annual summits, the National People’s Congress and the Political Consultative Conference. The Communist Party will choreograph messages carefully: The collapse of communism in the Soviet Union casts a long shadow in Beijing, and Covid-19 came close to shaking the party’s legitimacy. In Chinese history, diseases, famines and other natural disasters have foretold the end of dynasties.

President Xi Jinping will want the gatherings to herald China’s relative success in handling the virus, its emerging economic recovery, and its role in a global “community of shared interests,” as he has previously called the world order. He needs to moderate Beijing’s propaganda overreach and its emissaries’ heavy-handed responses to critics. Chinese historians recall that past spasms of patriotic and party fervor—the Boxer Rebellion and the Cultural Revolution—scared the world.

How will the U.S. respond? The proponents of a “New Cold War” have declared their objections to China, but not what they plan to accomplish. When I worked with Secretary of State James Baker during the closing years of the old Cold War, we focused on what we wanted to get done—results, not mere expressions of dissatisfaction.

The New Cold Warriors can’t contain China given its ties throughout the world; other countries won’t join us. Nor can the U.S. break the regime, though the Communist Party’s flaws could open cracks within its own society. The U.S. can impose costs on China, but to what end, and at what price to Americans? After three years of bluster and tariffs, President Trump negotiated a narrow trade deal with China. Even before the pandemic the deal was unlikely to be fulfilled, and now it looks fanciful.

The New Cold Warriors expunge the successes of past U.S. cooperation with China. Beijing was once a wartime enemy, a supplier of proxy foes in North Korea and North Vietnam, and the world’s leading proliferator of missiles and nuclear weapons technology. Beginning in the 1990s, China reversed course and worked with the U.S. to control dangerous weapons. It turned from proliferation partnerships with Iran and North Korea to helping the U.S. thwart their development of nuclear arms. From 2000 to 2018, U.S. diplomacy prodded Beijing to support 182 of the 190 United Nations Security Council resolutions that imposed sanctions on states. China also assisted U.N. peacekeeping and helped Washington end the genocide in Darfur, Sudan.

China became the largest contributor to global economic growth. Beijing cut its current-account surplus from about 10% of gross domestic product to near zero, which drove world-wide expansion. For 15 years China was the fastest-growing destination for U.S. exports. It stopped manipulating its exchange rate. During the financial crisis, Beijing pushed the largest and quickest stimulus and helped stave off global depression, while cooperating closely with the U.S., the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

China is also a leading innovator in non-fossil-fuel technology, though it is the largest emitter of greenhouse gases. The U.S. and its allies successfully pressured Beijing to ban sales of elephant ivory, but China still permits illegal trafficking in rare species. This pandemic will likely prompt China to change its treatment of wildlife.

Over the past 50 years, America’s prudent and persistent policy toward Taiwan, combined with Beijing’s reluctant restraint, has enabled democracy to prosper safely.

This doesn’t mean that all is well with China. But it is flat wrong to suggest that working with China has not served U.S. interests. Self-deception will lead to dangerous diplomacy.

The U.S. and its partners face a staggering set of challenges. We need to find medical solutions to Covid-19. We must learn how to protect ourselves against future epidemics more quickly. America also needs a strong recovery, which will require a growing global economy, including China. Washington must anticipate financial weaknesses from mountains of debt and experimental monetary policies. Environmental and energy risks will require international cooperation and innovation. We have begun a huge digital transformation. Terrorists have not retired, and dangerous would-be regional hegemons still seek weapons of mass destruction. And we need to deal with China.

The U.S. strategy to address these challenges must begin with its allies. Europe’s role will be especially vital. Europeans have enjoyed Beijing’s benefits but also have felt China’s heavy hand. Most Europeans do not want to become Chinese tributary states, but they may adopt a benign neutrality toward Beijing. America’s appeal could tip the balance. The New Cold Warriors ignore how Washington led in defining shared objectives with allies during the Cold War—prodding, but also compromising, and combining idealism with pragmatism. America’s European and Indo-Pacific partners know addressing today’s problems will require working with China, even if countries need to develop separate systems in critical areas such as telecommunications.

The U.S. must have the military means to deter aggression against vital interests and allies. America should also promote the cause of freedom, which hasn’t been a Trump priority, and be a steady friend to other free countries. Even with authoritarian competitors such as China, the U.S. should emphasize human aspiration, not name-calling. We want to appeal to the Chinese public, not insult them. The U.S. needs to offer allies and the world an attractive approach, which must include working with China on mutual interests.

Mr. Zoellick is a former World Bank president, U.S. trade representative and deputy secretary of state.

Crafty_Dog

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70 minute documentary
« Reply #1067 on: May 20, 2020, 10:09:56 PM »
Haven't watched this yet; it came recommended, posting it for viewer later.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhMAt3BluAU&t=3s

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: China vs. Hong Kong and Taiwan
« Reply #1068 on: May 21, 2020, 09:47:12 PM »


China Moves on Hong Kong
Beijing plans a new national-security law. Is Taiwan next?
By The Editorial Board
May 21, 2020 7:23 pm ET
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Ted Hui, a pro-democracy lawmaker, is removed by security officers during scuffles between pro-establishment and opposition lawmakers at a meeting to elect a new chairperson for the House Committee at the Legislative Council in Hong Kong, May 18.
PHOTO: ROY LIU/BLOOMBERG NEWS
China’s forceful takeover of Hong Kong appears to have begun, and threats against Taiwan are rising. That’s the message this week as the National People’s Congress in Beijing moved to pass an onerous new security law for Hong Kong and the Chinese navy plans to practice an amphibious assault on an island controlled by Taiwan.

Under the Sino-British Joint Declaration, China promised Hong Kong legal autonomy and the preservation of basic liberties, including freedom of speech, press and assembly. Yet Beijing is now seeking to bypass the Hong Kong Legislative Council and impose the national-security law unilaterally. This rule-by-diktat means the end of the “one country, two systems” arrangement that Beijing promised for 50 years after 1997.

Enforcement of the national-security legislation would erase the legal lines between Hong Kong and the mainland. By our deadline China’s Communist Party legislature hadn’t released a draft bill, but rest assured the purpose is to silence and punish dissent to prevent a repeat of last year’s mass protests in Hong Kong. For months Beijing has falsely accused protesters of seeking independence from the mainland and acting on behalf of a foreign “black hand.”

On Monday pro-Beijing lawmakers used a legally questionable procedure to seize control of a powerful Legislative Council committee that vets bills and schedules final votes. China’s Hong Kong surrogates can now move forward with legislation making disrespect of China’s national anthem a crime punishable by up to three years in prison. When pro-democracy lawmakers protested, security guards dragged some from the room. Legislator Ted Hui had to go to the hospital after he was kicked in the chest so hard he struggled to breathe, the South China Morning Post reported.

At a hearing Monday Hong Kong prosecutors signaled they may seek yearslong sentences for 15 pro-democracy activists arrested for their role in last year’s protests. They include Martin Lee, the father of the Hong Kong democracy movement, media tycoon Jimmy Lai, and other prominent advocates of peaceful protest. The cases will now be heard in district court, which has the authority to impose sentences of up to five years for those found guilty of participating or organizing unauthorized protests.

Meanwhile, Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen was sworn in for a second four-year term this week and used her inaugural remarks to reject “one country, two systems” for the island. Taiwanese can see that China isn’t keeping its promise of autonomy to Hong Kong. She called for “peace, parity, democracy, and dialogue” between the two Chinese governments. Beijing reacted by attacking Ms. Tsai’s party and saying reunification is “inevitable.”

To underscore the point, Reuters quoted Chinese sources last week as saying the People’s Liberation Army is planning a large-scale landing drill off Hainan Island in the South China Sea in August to simulate the possible seizure of the Taiwanese-held Pratas Island in the future. If Chinese President Xi Jinping needs a nationalist rallying cry, he might sign off on such an assault.

The only way to deter any of this is to make sure Beijing officials know they will pay a heavy price. Hong Kongers may feel they have no choice but to protest in the streets even at the risk of arrest and imprisonment. They may lose but they will expose Beijing’s ugly side to the world. A bipartisan group in the U.S. Congress is advancing legislation that would sanction officials who implement the national-security law. The U.S. will also have to sell more arms to help Taiwan defend itself.

Mr. Xi wants the world to think his China is a benign power that follows global rules, but in Hong Kong and Taiwan we are seeing the true nature of the current Communist regime. The world will have to adapt to this increasingly dangerous reality.

Crafty_Dog

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Stratfor: China, HK, Taiwan, and America
« Reply #1069 on: May 27, 2020, 07:08:14 AM »
What the End of One Country, Two Systems Means for Hong Kong, Taiwan and the World
Rodger Baker
Rodger Baker
Senior VP of Strategic Analysis, Stratfor
4 MINS READ
May 26, 2020 | 22:06 GMT

HIGHLIGHTS

Beijing's decision to impose a long-delayed security law on Hong Kong reflects the mainland’s growing concern with challenges to national unity ahead of next year's 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party. But it is more immediately driven by the rising violence in Hong Kong and the political evolution in...

Beijing's decision to impose a long-delayed security law on Hong Kong reflects the mainland’s growing concern with challenges to national unity ahead of next year's 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party. But it is more immediately driven by the rising violence in Hong Kong and the political evolution in Taiwan. Despite international criticism, China will strengthen efforts to fully integrate Hong Kong and to further isolate Taiwan internationally.

The issues of Hong Kong and Taiwan are intimately linked for Beijing. Hong Kong was intended to be a model of effective unification under one country, two systems, to entice Taiwan to rejoin the motherland and bring to fruition the post-World War II rebuilding of China. But Hong Kong's integration has grown increasingly fractious over the past decade, and this has reinforced sentiment in Taiwan that reintegration with China would see a similar erosion of Taiwan's political and social structures.

With Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-Wen's reelection in January, driven in part by the Hong Kong protests, Beijing is aware that there is little support left in Taiwan for reintegration with the mainland. Rather, Taiwanese politics now splits between pro-status quo and pro-independence ideas. The COVID-19 pandemic has brought Taiwan's international status back to the forefront, with countries from the United States to Australia arguing in favor of increasing Taiwanese participation in International forums like the World Health Organization, something strenuously objected to by Beijing.

The issues of Hong Kong and Taiwan are intimately linked for Beijing: Hong Kong was intended to be a model of effective unification to entice Taiwan to rejoin the motherland.

The 2019 protesters in Hong Kong rallied around five key demands, essentially insisting on self-determination for Hong Kong. This was clearly something on which Beijing would not yield. As protests continued, elements within the movement grew more violent, with some using improvised explosives, something Beijing fears Hong Kong security forces cannot fully manage. The combination of the college break and the social restrictions implemented due to the COVID-19 crisis eased the protests, but the Chinese National People's Congress' decision to take up the security law reignited them. While these protests were small, they demonstrated a growing willingness to challenge Hong Kong's restrictions on gatherings and foreshadowed another summer of regular protest activity leading up to legislative elections in September.

The security law was supposed to be something Hong Kong itself passed following the 1997 handover from the United Kingdom, but domestic opposition delayed concrete action. Beijing has now stepped in to provide the legal tools to counter separatism, terrorism or intentional economic upheaval. The law will also provide a mechanism for Chinese agencies to operate directly in Hong Kong. The timing coincides with a delayed vote in Hong Kong later this week on a bill that would outlaw parodying or disrespecting the Chinese national anthem, another measure generating ire among Hong Kong protesters.

In the past year, China has grown more assertive in its international diplomacy, lashing out at anything it considers a challenge to Chinese national unity or criticism of Chinese actions. The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated already-tense exchanges between China and several Western countries, but despite criticism and threats of political and economic sanctions, Beijing remains undeterred. The 100th anniversary of the CCP is an important piece of China's narrative to reinforce Chinese nationalism and challenge what it sees as an outdated and unfair Western world order.

With rising international efforts to constrain China's economic and political rise, Beijing cannot allow Hong Kong, a Chinese city, to remain a challenge to central authority. The politics of one country, two systems no longer resonate, and leaving Hong Kong to its own devices no longer aids China's Taiwan policy. For Hong Kong, this means an acceleration of reintegration, and a more rapid erosion of special status — something that will likely trigger a further acceleration of corporate diversification or relocation from Hong Kong, challenging its status as a financial center. For Taiwan, it means increased economic and military pressure from the mainland. And for the world, it means China will use its political, economic and, if need be, military might to assert its sovereignty over its periphery, including Taiwan and the South China Sea.


Crafty_Dog

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GPF: US boosts scrutiny of Chinese firms
« Reply #1071 on: June 05, 2020, 03:45:49 PM »
Daily Memo:

U.S. boosts scrutiny of Chinese firms. The U.S. is taking steps to remove many Chinese firms from U.S. stock exchanges. On Thursday, the White House gave U.S. financial regulators two months to come up with recommendations for how to handle Chinese firms that refuse to comply with U.S. transparency requirements. Per Chinese law, Chinese firms listed on overseas exchanges effectively can’t comply; they’re required to hold their audit papers in China and forbidden from allowing foreign regulators to inspect them. For years, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has been pushing Beijing to change its stance. But since so many high-profile Chinese firms are either state-owned or closely linked to the Chinese government or military, Beijing is loath to budge. While the high-profile Chinese companies Beijing wants to protect face a low risk of collapse, many of the listed companies are obscure, often-fraudulent operations that have teamed up with unscrupulous U.S. investment firms to exploit loopholes in U.S. securities regulations. And there’s a staggering amount of money tied up in these listings – upward of $1 trillion, by some estimates, or around 3.3 percent of U.S. equity market valuation – so a lack of compliance with accounting rules poses a systemic risk to the U.S. equity markets. As a result, last month, the U.S. Senate approved legislation that would de-list companies if they defy U.S. audit regulations for three consecutive years. And U.S. exchanges are making their own moves. NASDAQ has unveiled tighter restrictions on IPOs and suspended trading of China’s Luckin Coffee for a month on grounds (pun intended) that it had inflated revenues by more than $300 million. An inability to raise capital on U.S. exchanges is a problem for Chinese firms and thus the Chinese economy. But unless other foreign exchanges follow the U.S. lead on the matter, don’t expect Beijing to back down.


Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Re: US-China, The Death of Engagement with china
« Reply #1073 on: June 09, 2020, 06:11:10 AM »
China scholar Orville Schell on the death of engagement:  "Without political reform and the promise of China transitioning to become more soluble in the existing world order, engagement no longer has a logic for the United States. Beijing’s inability to reform, evolve, and make the bilateral relationship more reciprocal, open and level finally rendered the policy inoperable. Because Xi Jinping viewed just such changes threatening his one-party rule, there came to be an irreconcilable contradiction at the heart of engagement that killed it.​
https://www.thewirechina.com/2020/06/07/the-birth-life-and-death-of-engagement/
-----------------------------
A serious study of the relationship with every President since Nixon.

Crafty_Dog

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StratforP HK's September Elections
« Reply #1074 on: June 09, 2020, 03:48:28 PM »
As Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing and pro-democracy camps focus on winning legislative elections in September, the city will see protests -- and U.S. and Chinese reactions to the unrest -- kick into high gear....

A year after the city's extradition bill prompted more than a million people to take to the streets in June 2019, marking a watershed moment in last year's protests, Hong Kong's political crisis is heating up once again. The next three months in Hong Kong will see protests kick back into high gear as pro-Beijing and pro-democracy camps focus on winning Legislative Council elections planned for September. The central government in mainland China will fast-track its controversial national security laws ahead of the polls to increase control over protestors and politicians, while the regional Hong Kong government will work to fulfill its side of the legislation. The White House, meanwhile, will pressure China to ease back on its encroachment in Hong Kong by possibly stripping away the city's special tariff treatment, but will weigh carefully whether to escalate further to financial measures that would cripple Hong Kong's status as a business hub in a way that decreases U.S. influence.

On June 18, Hong Kong's COVID-19 social gathering restrictions will expire if not renewed, although the government will retain the powers to reimpose these restrictions until at least August 31.

In September, the Hong Kong Legislative Council's four-year term will also expire, requiring elections. Pro-Beijing lawmakers have held the majority in the body since the late 1990s and the pro-democracy camp is aiming for a majority, holding its own primary to streamline candidate lists July 11-12. The government has only tentatively set the election date, leaving room for a postponement.

Sources indicate that as early as August, China's National People's Congress Standing Committee will formulate and pass national security legislation for Hong Kong.

As the U.S. presidential election campaign season goes into full swing, China's global rise, the origins of COVID-19 and trade relations will also all become key U.S. foreign policy issues from now until November.

The Next Phase of Hong Kong's Political Crisis

Hong Kong's protests will heat up this summer as COVID-19 infection rates and control strategies ease, prompting both the pro-establishment and the pro-democracy camps to escalate confrontation ahead of the September elections. The likely lifting of COVID-19 restrictions will probably result in more frequent street clashes between protesters and police as pro-democracy supporters attempt to maintain protest momentum and public outrage to fuel voter support and turnout. Leaders will likely highlight actions by the central government and maintain staunch opposition to the legislature's pro-establishment agenda in order to underscore alleged central government overreach and complicity between the Hong Kong government and Beijing.

While mainstream leaders advocate moderate and peaceful actions, crackdowns by authorities and increasing frustration with unilateral action by Beijing will probably increase the use of radical tactics by pro-democracy fringe elements, increasing the level of violence beyond what occurred in 2019. Alternatively, if authorities try to extend COVID-19 gathering restrictions, or if new controls are necessary to combat a second wave of infections, it will likely be seen by activists as an attempt to use the pandemic to exert additional political control.

The Final Form Of China's Security Law

Beijing's controversial national security legislation, which bans secessionism, subversive activity, terrorism and foreign meddling, has yet to take shape. Potential developments that would mark a more significant shift in Hong Kong's special status and impact foreigners include:

If the new national security law includes a provision allowing for extradition to mainland China, raising the same risks as the now withdrawn 2019 extradition bill in terms of transgressions that could include business crimes.

If mainland Chinese agents are tasked with enforcing the law as opposed to Hong Kong police.

If police are granted the right to wiretap and search premises without a warrant.

If the new law bans subversion of not only the central government but also the Hong Kong government.

If the law encompasses bans of collaboration with non-political organizations, which could include foreign non-governmental organizations (NGOs).

If the legislation is not enforced by Hong Kong's existing court system but requires recourse either to a specially set up a court or one with a curtailed pool of judges.

China will probably seek to quickly implement the national security legislation to empower Hong Kong authorities with a policy tool that allows Beijing to avoid heavy-handed intervention into city affairs, while regularizing mainland oversight of the city's internal affairs. China will also likely grant Hong Kong authorities additional tools to suppress protests and pro-democracy politicians. Beijing probably calculates that the enhanced penalties for protest-related violence, arrest and search powers, as well as potentially the ability to make arrests for alleged seditious or secessionist speech, will erode the pro-democracy camp's momentum.

Chinese officials may assess that the 2019 demonstrations and November district council elections demonstrated that pro-Beijing forces in Hong Kong cannot influence the action of elected Hong Kong institutions over the long term, leading China to propose the national security legislation to avoid having to deploy People's Armed Police Units.

Beijing contemplated such a military intervention throughout 2019, but avoided the move to prevent a strong global backlash that could jeopardize Hong Kong's status as an internal finance and business hub.

China's intervention and oversight over other elements of Hong Kong's internal affairs will also likely grow, shrinking the space for viable counter actions by the pro-democracy camp and spurring more desperate tactics. The new Beijing-imposed national security law could allow for more expansive powers in banning political candidates for a wide range of actions or foreign links. This would be a deepening of bans conducted during the 2016 election to weed out pro-independence figures — a move that would risk a major street backlash.

In 2019, Beijing reshuffled the Chinese officials in charge of Hong Kong affairs, bringing in effective hardliners closely aligned to President Xi Jinping. Since that time, Beijing's liaison office has increasingly asserted the right to openly comment on Hong Kong affairs, with city authorities interpreting its role as supervisory over "one country, two systems."

If the national security legislation extends its ban on secessionism and subversive activity to speech acts, it could also allow for more wholesale crackdowns on protesters and dissident speech, leading to more extreme and radical action by the fringe elements willing to defy authorities. Similarly, terrorism aspects of the bill could be broadly interpreted to encompass numerous acts by protesters.

Protesters Take Their Fight to the Polls

The leadup to the September elections will bring rising acrimony in the city, while an electoral win by the pro-democracy camp would open a period of increasing confrontations within the Hong Kong government that will lead to further efforts by Beijing to circumvent local policymakers. As these events play out within Hong Kong, the central government will be compelled to shape them into its narrative, while the United States will react to try to pressure in favor of the city's autonomy.

Within Hong Kong, the competing pro-establishment and pro-democracy camps will maneuver ahead of the election to secure public support and erode their opponents. The pro-establishment camp alternatively will focus on containing street unrest and demonstrating their effective oversight of the COVID-19 outbreak, while pursuing further fiscal stimulus and economic supports to assist with recovery. The pro-democracy camp will respond by finding opportunities to filibuster and hold the legislative agenda up with demands for concessions, banking on a repeat of the groundswell of support that delivered a landslide victory in November's district council elections. The pro-establishment camp will highlight the dangers of disruptive protests to the city's growth and will use any adverse U.S. actions to place blame on their pro-democracy adversaries. The legislative council will be less high stakes in some ways for the pro-establishment camp, given that in the event of a loss the pro-Beijing elements would still maintain a great deal of institutional power, with the chief executive candidate effectively controlled by Beijing.

The outcome of the election will be a key inflection point for the city, with several potential outcomes:

If pro-establishment forces lose out in the September elections, central government circumvention of the city's legislative council would become increasingly common as a means of reining in the city and integrating it more closely into the mainland. However, Beijing's allies will maintain the high ground in terms of the power balance in the city through the office of the chief executive, and the pro-democracy camp's approach will not be effective in stopping the gradual encroachment of mainland control.

For pro-democracy forces, a decisive win in the legislative council in September would give them another platform to air their concerns. However, in terms of tangible power, the body has limitations. This will lead to increasing acrimony in the city as the council potentially wields its power to veto budgets in order to force a confrontation with the chief executive. Afterward, there will be a period of two years before the 2022 chief executive election that will see increasing desperation by pro-democracy political forces.

If, by contrast, pro-establishment forces manage to maintain or gain ground in upcoming elections, Beijing will feel more comfortable easing back somewhat and relying instead on its allies in the city to forward its agenda.

Alternatively, if the COVID-19 situation justifies the decision and pro-democracy forces appear poised to sweep the polls, pro-Beijing authorities may delay the September elections altogether citing safety concerns, which would pave the way for a Beijing-appointed interim body. This would be a highly inflammatory action that would spark protest backlash so would only be done in extremity.

As Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing and pro-democracy camps focus on winning legislative elections in September, the city will see protests — and U.S. and Chinese reactions to the unrest — kick into high gear.

For China, the election will bring a key decision point in the broader trend of mainland-Hong Kong relations, and preserving the city's overall business value to the national economy. China's overall national strategy and internal issues will drive it to accelerate the integration of Hong Kong, but the city's continued key financial role in the country will compel a balance between these goals and economic interests. Several factors will drive Beijing to increase its grip on Hong Kong through its own institutions or allies in the city, if they can be relied on:

In Taiwan, a major loss for the more Beijing-friendly Kuomintang Party and the effective neutralization of the pro-unification wing of the political spectrum has increased pressure on Beijing to assert national unity by exerting authority in Hong Kong ahead of next year's hundredth anniversary of the Communist Party.

Within China, COVID-19's sustained economic damage and increased unemployment have eroded the Communist Party's legitimacy and will hinder 2020 growth substantially. One means of deflecting political repercussions will be to make progress on key national goals, including securing Hong Kong.

China, however, must still be mindful of eroding Hong Kong's unique economic status, even as it concentrates on tools to tamp down unrest. Although Hong Kong's importance to China has waned over the past two decades, there are no realistic alternatives to the full scope of what the city provides to businesses at this time. China will thus continue to rely on Hong Kong as a gateway for investment into the country amid the mainland's continued maintenance of capital controls and interventions in the city's financial sector, as well as its banking system.

Upwards of 60 percent of foreign direct investment flowed in and out of China through Hong Kong in 2018.
In 2019, Hong Kong also accounted for 48 percent of the money raised by Chinese companies in initial public offerings, and provided 25 percent of offshore U.S. dollar funding for Chinese businesses.

Caught in the U.S.'s Crosshairs

Internal Hong Kong-Beijing tensions will also drive U.S. decisions that could have an outsized impact on the city's long-term business hub status. As the U.S. presidential campaign season picks up ahead of the November election, the White House will use its Hong Kong policies as a means of highlighting its hardline push against China, and to pressure China to reconsider imposing greater security and policy control over Hong Kong. Electoral setbacks for the White House in terms of the economy, COVID-19 and domestic protests against police brutality will increase the White House's desire to focus on China as an electoral issue.

The United States is less likely to escalate to financial sector measures, such as limiting Hong Kong's access to dollars, sanctioning major Hong Kong or Chinese banks or invoking the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). Such moves would not only risk raising public ire against the pro-democracy camp in the city ahead of elections, but erode U.S. influence over the city that could then tangibly bite into the city's key economic sectors and status as a business hub. With no hope for Beijing to step back on its national security law, a U.S. reaction is likely to be one that limits damage to U.S. interests in ways that still creates pain for Beijing.

Washington could enact limited impact options to include extradition treatment changes, visa regulation shifts, a state department travel advisory as well as sanctions on Chinese and Hong Kong officials — all of which will add complexity for businesses and individuals operating in Hong Kong.

Middle range options would bleed into the trade realm, including export controls, limits on dual-use technology or a full repeal of Hong Kong's special tariff status. While the tangible economic hit to Hong Kong would be relatively limited, removing the special tariff status would risk derailing the U.S.-China phase one trade deal and carry great weight in terms of symbolizing the erosion of the city as a key business hub.

On the most extreme end of the spectrum, Washington could roll out measures that would limit Hong Kong's access to U.S. dollars or even a nuclear option of using the IEEPA to block investment or transfer of funds to Chinese entities or persons.
To support its pressure campaign against China over Hong Kong, the United States will work to enlist its allies, most notably the United Kingdom given its status related to the 1997 handover agreement.

Regardless of U.S. actions over Hong Kong, U.S.-China tensions will still mount over issues such as COVID-19 blame, the South China Sea, Chinese tech giant Huawei, Taiwan, trade and human rights issues. Although others are available, Hong Kong's special tariff status is the biggest weapon currently at Washington's disposal to retaliate against Beijing over any of these issues, although others are available. International businesses are likely to face greater pressure to consider the long-term trends emerging in Hong Kong, as changing Chinese policy will likely mean that Hong Kong-based businesses and individuals will face risks similar to those seen inside of mainland China. Amid rising U.S.-China tensions over Hong Kong, American companies operating in the city or in mainland China, as well as British businesses or other allied countries, could face the risk
of Chinese retaliation for U.S. actions either overtly linked to Hong Kong or in a more indirect manner.

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Stratfor: China-Taiwan
« Reply #1075 on: June 11, 2020, 12:07:17 PM »


China's Evolving Taiwan Policy: Disrupt, Isolate and Constrain
Rodger Baker
Rodger Baker
Senior VP of Strategic Analysis, Stratfor
10 MINS READ
Jun 11, 2020 | 17:44 GMT
A 3D rendering of eastern China and the island of Taiwan lit by city lights from space.
A 3D rendering of eastern China and the island of Taiwan lit by city lights from space.

(Anton Balazh/Shutterstock.com)
HIGHLIGHTS
For China's leadership, the unification of Taiwan is more than a symbol of the final success of the Chinese Communist Party or an emotional appeal to some historic image of a greater China. It is a strategic imperative driven both by Taiwan's strategic location, and by the rising antagonism between...

For China's leadership, the unification of Taiwan is more than a symbol of the final success of the Chinese Communist Party or an emotional appeal to some historic image of a greater China. It is a strategic imperative driven both by Taiwan's strategic location, and by the rising antagonism between the United States and China. Taiwan is the “unsinkable aircraft carrier” off the Chinese coastline, splitting China's near seas, and bridging the arc of islands stretching southwest from Japan with those from the Philippines south through Indonesia. Taiwan is crucial for both any foreign containment strategy, and for China's confidence and security in the East and South China seas — areas critical to China's national defense, food security and international trade.

China's Management of Taiwan
For decades, China has seen Taiwan reunification as an issue that can be delayed so long as Beijing could constrain the emergence of strong pro-independence forces. To achieve this, China has relied on a combination of tools, from conciliatory political and economic policies to more coercive military activities and international diplomatic isolation. For several years, particularly during the 2008-2016 administration of Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou, China eased off its more overt coercive measures, and instead sought greater economic and social interactions with Taiwan. This was intended to tie the islands' economic status so tightly to the mainland that it would tamp down political sentiment that bucked the cooperative trend, and perhaps ultimately lead to a peaceful unification under a “one country, two systems” model.


But the election, and then re-election, of President Tsai Ing-Wen — combined with the resurgent power of her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which leans more pro-Taiwan than pro-unification, and the island's changing demographics — have effectively erased any lingering expectation of Taiwan giving up its sovereignty and willingly joining with the mainland. Tsai and the DPP reject the 1992 Consensus, an arrangement between Taiwan and China that they would agree there is only one China (though each was able to have their own interpretation of whether that was the current communist People's Republic of China or the past Nationalist Republic of China), thus forming the framework for cross-strait interactions. More recently, Beijing has stepped up its link between the 1992 Consensus and the “one country, two systems” concept, thus asserting that any consensus is a recognition that mainland Communist China is the only China. In this context, even the island's Kuomintang party has backed away from the 1992 Consensus amid increasing political pressure inside Taiwan.

With President Tsai calling for a committee to review Taiwan's constitution, and pursuing a more assertive policy to sign trade deals with Western powers and expand relations with Southeast Asian states, Beijing is concerned that Taiwan may be laying the groundwork to move from de facto to de jure independence, even if not immediately. Taiwan's apparent success in battling the COVID-19 pandemic, and the unfolding events in Hong Kong, are raising international sympathies for Taiwan at a time when Beijing is trying to tighten the island's political isolation. The United States' public recognition of Tsai's re-election and request for new arms sales, as well as its increased patrols in the South China Sea and through the Taiwan Strait, all point to a potential change in Taiwan's security and international status — and one that Beijing sees as a clear violation of its claimed sovereignty and a threat to its strategic security.

China's Taiwan Toolkits
China has five main toolkits it draws from for its Taiwanese policy: incentivize, disrupt, isolate, constrain and force. The first three (incentivize, disrupt and isolate) are largely a combination of economic and political tools, while the latter two (constrain and force) move more heavily into the military space. During Taiwan's previous administration under President Ma, China relied largely on the first tool (incentivize) while selectively drawing from the second two (disrupt and isolate).

But given the changes inside Taiwan, and in Taiwan's international ties, Beijing no longer sees the first as having much relevance, and is now shifting heavily toward the second two. At no time is China not using the fourth tool (constrain), shaping the future battlespace to limit Taiwan's options and ability to rely on external powers. The fifth, direct military action, is one Beijing wishes to avoid but sees as potentially necessary over the next decade due to the pace of change in Taiwan and shifting U.S. regional interactions.

1) Incentivize: Using primarily economic, social/cultural and political tools to encourage greater integration with the mainland to highlight the benefits of cooperation and eventual reunification. Examples include:

Offering economic benefits for Taiwanese companies operating in China.
Opening sectors of the Chinese economy to Taiwan, such as agricultural products.
Suspending “dollar diplomacy” competition between the Mainland and Taiwan.
Loosening opposition to Taiwanese presence in select international forums.
Encouraging tourism between Taiwan and the mainland.
Emphasizing Chinese cultural ties, and the strength of the Chinese market and economy.
2) Disrupt: Using economic, political and informational tools to disrupt social and political unity in Taiwan, and thus prevent the formation of a strong pro-independence bloc. Examples include:

Selectively applying regulations to Taiwanese business operations on the mainland.
Engaging in disinformation campaigns in Taiwan and countries sympathetic to Taiwan.
Carrying out cyber espionage and cyber attacks.
Adding complications to trade and tourism to create uncertainty, delays and economic loss.
Using military statements or exercises to create a sense of a less stable Taiwan.
3) Isolate: Reducing the “international space” for Taiwan to operate by influencing global organizations and foreign nations in ways that limit their interaction with Taiwan, or keep such interaction within tightly prescribed boundaries. Examples include:

Blocking Taiwanese participation in international forums, as it did in the recent World Health Assembly meeting.
Threatening or carrying out economic action against businesses from third-party countries that do not adhere to Chinese convention labeling Taiwan a province of the People's Republic, or that assist in Taiwan's defense.
Threatening or carrying out economic action against countries that either recognize Taiwan, or conduct political, economic or military actions that appear to support Taiwanese autonomy or independence.
Accelerate dollar diplomacy efforts to strip away Taiwan's remaining formal diplomatic ties.
4) Constrain: Shaping the physical environment around Taiwan and in China's near seas to increase Beijing's strategic posture vis-a-vis Taiwan, and increase the cost of intervention by foreign powers if China should shift to military action to coerce or conquer Taiwan. Examples include:

Increasing China's air, surface and subsurface maritime capabilities and reach.
Increasing missile range and deployments to raise the cost of foreign intervention in China's near seas.
Dominating key features in the South and East China seas and along strategic routes.
Weakening regional U.S. alliance structures through economic, political and military coercion and concessions.
Enhancing China's Marine Corps and military amphibious capabilities.
Increasing and regularizing Chinese naval operations in the waters around Taiwan.
5) Force: Using military force to isolate Taiwan from international economic and security connections, eroding Taiwan's governed space, disrupting or damaging critical Taiwanese infrastructure, degrading Taiwanese military capabilities, and/or (in the extreme) invading and occupying Taiwan. Examples include:

Disrupting key supply lines to Taiwan, including raw materials, machinery.
Conducting cyber attacks on Taiwanese government and critical infrastructure.
Naval blockade of Taiwanese ports.
Closing the Taiwan Strait and/or airspace around Taiwan.
Seizing outlying Taiwanese-controlled islands.
Selective missile/drone strikes.
Amphibious assault and occupation.
The Military Option
Although Beijing would prefer to avoid a military confrontation over Taiwan, it has never taken the military card off the table. The pace of China's military developments have far exceeded Taiwan's, and the balance has clearly tilted in favor of China, including even in several scenarios where the United States intervenes in a cross-strait conflict. But for Beijing, a potential victory in a military action to take Taiwan does not necessarily outbalance the numerous costs. An invasion risks not only jeopardizing Chinese soldiers and equipment, but prompting a global economic and political backlash.

Even If the United States was deterred from intervening in a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, Beijing would encounter a significant international economic and political response. And it is not clear a successful invasion would translate into a successful occupation, or the ability to capitalize on Taiwan's own economic capacity. So long as China retains some negative influence in Taiwan sufficient to deter active moves toward formal independence or foreign military occupation, it will likely delay direct military action.

That does not mean, however, that China is not actively preparing the battleground, both in the political realm to demonstrate the futility of Taiwanese independence, and as a concrete way to increase the likelihood of victory if there is a shift to open hostilities. This shaping takes several forms. First, China uses its economic heft to dissuade any significant foreign support for Taiwanese international space. Second, it similarly uses its political pressure to shape foreign companies and countries in their interaction with Taiwan. By isolating Taiwan diplomatically, China limits the strength of Taiwan, and reduces the potential for foreign intervention as Beijing shapes the physical environment.

Taiwan's apparent COVID-19 success and the unfolding events in Hong Kong are raising international sympathies for Taiwan at a time when Beijing is trying to broaden the island's political isolation.

It is the third component, the physical military space, that has been most notable in recent years. Beijing's construction and militarization of artificial islands in the South China Sea create a Chinese defensive ring around Taiwan, allowing China to interfere with key maritime routes foreign powers would take to intervene in cross-strait tensions. Expanding the Marine Corps, increasing the supply of amphibious ships, and stepping up the training cycle provides the conceptual force for occupying outlying Taiwanese islands and for an invasion force of the main island. China's developments of anti-ship missiles, including work on hypersonics, further increases the cost of intervention by foreign powers. At the same time the United States is sailing ships and flying aircraft to assert freedom of navigation around Taiwan, China is also honing its capacity to deny the water and airspace to foreign powers. China will match these efforts to shape the future battlespace with continued activities to spread disunity within Taiwan through economic, political and informational means.

A More Contentious Region
For now, it is unlikely that Taiwan will seek formal independence, despite the ruling DPP. Taiwan is, however, seeking a larger international environment and is reaching out to Europe, Southeast Asia and India for improved economic ties. Taiwan is also seeking the weapons systems necessary to increase its own ability to counter-strike should China invade, including the ability to strike into the mainland to increase the cost of any Chinese military action. While reunification is largely off the table in Taiwan, the island's strongest propensity is for a continuation of the status quo of de facto, rather than de jure, independence.

We can anticipate, then, that China will pursue a policy to disrupt, isolate and constrain Taiwan over the next few years, offering very few conciliatory incentives unless there are clear opportunities provided by political or economic dynamics in Taiwan. This will include shoring up the current artificial islands in the South China Sea that serve as forward basing and interdiction of key maritime routes (there are rumors of Beijing even considering the use of floating nuclear reactors to both reduce resupply problems and disincentivize foreign military action against these military outposts); deploying more anti-ship and anti-air missiles in and around China's near seas, including hypersonic missiles; increasing training for its carrier battle groups and marine corps amphibious operations; and using its civil maritime and aviation organizations to maintain a consistent presence in its claimed areas to demonstrate effective control. We may, at times, even see China experiment with various forms of loose blockades to disrupt foreign economic and security connections to Taiwan.



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China Swallows Hong Kong
« Reply #1079 on: July 01, 2020, 04:44:41 AM »
Who could have seen THIS coming?
https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/china-swallows-hong-kong/

Under the guise of protecting “national security,” the new law criminalizes as “subversion” and “terrorism” various expressions of protest and political dissent. It further endeavors to cut off Hong Kong’s support lines by criminalizing, as conspiracy to endanger national security, sundry exchanges with other countries and outside groups.

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GPF: SE Asian leaders supports UNCLOS against China; Indonesia
« Reply #1080 on: July 01, 2020, 07:37:06 AM »
Maritime maneuvering in the Indo-Pacific. During their annual summit on Saturday, Association of Southeast Asian Nations leaders jointly declared that the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, or UNCLOS, should be “the basis for determining sovereign rights, jurisdiction and legitimate interests over maritime zones” in disputed waters like the South China Sea. This may sound anodyne, but it’s notable that the risk-averse bloc, which in the past has repeatedly failed to show even token levels of unity on the South China Sea, is now backing UNCLOS. (The Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague in 2016 ruled that many of China’s sweeping maritime claims were not supported by the 1982 law.)

Meanwhile, the local government in Indonesia’s Natuna Islands (whose nearby oil-rich waters China claims) is openly calling for Australian investment and rejecting Chinese money. China is launching new maritime drills and new dredging operations around the disputed Paracel archipelago. U.S. anti-submarine aircraft have been spotted around Taiwan for eight consecutive days. Japan and India launched joint maritime drills. And the United States is reportedly mulling plans to open its training facilities in Guam to fighter pilots from fellow Quad members Japan, Australia and India.

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GPF: Beijing's big bet in Hong Kong
« Reply #1081 on: July 01, 2020, 08:47:24 AM »
    Beijing’s Big Bet in Hong Kong
The security law over Hong Kong raises the question of whether Beijing passed it from a position of strength or weakness.
By: Phillip Orchard

When Beijing retook control of Hong Kong from the British 23 years ago, the understanding was that Hong Kong would maintain a high degree of autonomy under the “one country, two systems” framework for a period of 50 years. On Tuesday, the Communist Party of China declared that that time was up. And it did so with striking ease. There was no bloody Tiananmen-style showdown between the army and pro-democracy protesters; no tanks inside Victoria Park. Beijing merely had its rubber-stamp legislature unanimously approve a sweeping national security law – one first announced just a month ago and never released for public comment – bypassing the Hong Kong legislature in violation of the city’s mini-constitution, known as the Basic Law.

The move presages a dramatic deterioration of political freedoms in Hong Kong. The security law, which will be enforced by separate courts and security forces effectively controlled by Beijing, is conspicuously broad, meaning things like peaceful pro-democracy protests, anti-CPC editorials and school curricula that don’t toe the party line could realistically be defined as “separatism, subversion, terrorism and foreign interference.” At minimum, uncertainty about how the law will be enforced will have a chilling effect on civil society in Hong Kong. Activists are already disbanding their organizations and bleaching their Twitter accounts. If China starts making full use of its powers, there’s not much anyone can do to stop it.

China, of course, could’ve done this years ago. The main reason it didn’t is that it benefits enormously from Hong Kong’s reputation as a stable, rule-of-law oriented financial hub – a reputation earned through the city’s autonomy and political freedoms. The national security law will undoubtedly undermine Hong Kong’s standing and capacity to facilitate the mainland’s financial needs, posing enormous risks to the already-teetering Chinese economy. But Beijing is betting heavily on its ability to mitigate risks and walk the line between eliminating political threats from the city without burning the whole system down. Already, there are some signs that the conventional wisdom is wrong, that the Hong Kong business community has been bluffing. And if it’s wrong – if squeamish foreign firms and banks flee, or if the move accelerates China’s financial decoupling with the West – the CPC appears to be willing to say: so be it.

Still Indispensable

Hong Kong’s economic importance to the mainland has steadily diminished since China began to open and reform its economy. In 1993, Hong Kong’s economy was equal to 27 percent of China’s gross domestic product. Today, it's less than 3 percent. Last year, the GDP of Shenzhen province alone surpassed that of Hong Kong. China is hardly an easy place to do business, but thousands of foreign firms and investors in the country have found ways to get fabulously wealthy without Hong Kong anyway.
Yet, Hong Kong is still indispensable in several ways, including as a transshipment hub for Chinese exports. Perhaps its most important role is as the mainland’s foremost gateway for foreign investment, as well as a place for mainland firms to raise dollar-denominated funding critical for expanding operations abroad. More than half of foreign direct investment into China in 2018 was routed through Hong Kong, and nearly half of projects on the mainland funded by overseas investment were tied to Hong Kong interests. The flows go both ways: The city facilitated more than 55 percent of outbound Chinese FDI in 2018, including the bulk of funding for Chinese Belt and Road Initiative projects. The same year, it was the largest offshore clearing center for yuan, with its banks facilitating a little more than 75 percent of the world’s yuan-denominated payments. Chinese firms on the Hong Kong exchanges now boast a total market capitalization of more than $3.4 trillion, or some 73 percent of the market total. This number will rise if/when the U.S. makes good on its threats to delist Chinese firms from its own exchanges.

Foreign firms have benefitted from Hong Kong's relatively impartial courts, independent regulators and central bank; free flows of information and modern fintech infrastructure made operations far less risky there than on the mainland. Foreign banks were happy to avoid mainland capital controls and party meddling. Chinese mainland firms gorged on access to dollars they couldn’t find as easily elsewhere, with the greenback-pegged Hong Kong dollar perfectly interchangeable in the West and Hong Kong’s sophisticated fintech infrastructure tightly integrated with those in London and New York. Hong Kong also enabled them to avoid some of the regulatory and geopolitical risks that would come with listings on Western exchanges.

Naturally, Beijing had been eager to assert its authority over the city with as light a touch as possible to avoid disrupting the status quo. In lieu of brute force, it tried to rely more on things like cooption of Hong Kong institutions such as the legislature, media and the police and its ability to capture the interests of the city’s business elite to the mainland. It occasionally reached across the border to snuff out perceived threats to mainland political stability, most famously with its 2015 kidnapping of Hong Kong booksellers and wayward tycoons, but otherwise it largely avoided trying to muzzle the pro-democracy movement altogether. Evidently, Beijing felt that the protests of the past year had made the status quo no longer tenable.

How the Law Could Backfire

The national security law may well address Beijing’s concerns about political threats to mainland stability. But it will be extraordinarily difficult for China to impose the sorts of tight social controls needed to truly squash dissent without harming its financial vitality. Can banks credibly claim to be able to protect the privacy of their clients if and when the CPC – which wants to prevent corrupt mainland figures from using Hong Kong as a haven for their assets – demand access to their books? Will financial analysts face prosecution if they publish an unflattering assessment of a Chinese state-owned enterprise? Can foreign firms expect a fair shake in court if seeking redress against a Chinese firm with suction among the CPC elite? Will Beijing feel compelled to bring down the great firewall around Hong Kong, cutting off free flows of information that are the lifeblood to the industry? What’s the risk of getting caught between Beijing and rival foreign governments like Washington, which is steadily ramping up pressure of its own over Hong Kong and threatening to deprive figures and institutions that support the law of access to critical U.S.-dominated financial networks?

So far, Hong Kong’s business community has been conspicuously supportive of the law. Even high-profile foreign institutions like the London-based Standard Chartered and HSBC – whose iconic headquarters in the city was designed as a monument of capitalism and has often served as a base for protesters – have thrown their weight behind it. To be sure, some are relieved by the prospect of returning to stability. Some, presumably, have good reason to fear the costs of openly opposing the CPC.

Beijing has reportedly warned foreign banks that they’ll lose access to lucrative mainland accounts if they cause a fuss.
Still, Beijing wants to give itself room to apply the law as it sees fit, and is therefore unlikely to carve out explicit exemptions for commercial sectors. This means uncertainty over exactly how Beijing will exercise its power will hang over the business community in Hong Kong indefinitely, regardless of how much it actually decides to use the law. The sense that politically motivated prosecution or even rendition is just a misstep or misunderstanding away won’t vanish even if Beijing tries to exercise restraint. And if seemingly random, politically motivated interpretations do become the norm, foreign banks and firms will increasingly look elsewhere. According to an AmCham survey released after the law was announced in May, some 40 percent of Hong Kong businesspeople polled said they were already considering pulling up stakes. Sixty percent said their operations would be negatively affected by the new law.

Beijing is going to great lengths to guard against certain risks. For example, Chinese financial regulators for the first time explicitly pledged to support Hong Kong’s currency if the city sees a surge of capital flight. Critically, Chinese money has steadily come to dominate the city, diminishing the risks, if only a little, of a foreign exodus. It's making halting but notable progress on reforms intended to make foreign institutions more comfortable operating in mainland centers like Shanghai, Shenzhen and Hainan. It’s gaining headway on efforts to reduce the country’s dependence on the dollar by, for example, setting up alternate systems to facilitate cross-border transactions and a digital currency that could facilitate foreign trade without access to dollars. China realizes that it’s still home to the world’s most valuable labor pool, its fastest-growing consumer base, and among its deepest wells of investment capital. It views the issue as similar to the question of how much longer foreign firms will be willing to depend on Chinese manufacturing and supply chains. So long as there’s money to be made in China, there’s good reason to believe that foreign firms will stomach a lot to keep their slice of the pie.

But China can’t eliminate all the risks of a major hit to Hong Kong’s value as a financial hub. With the Chinese economy – and, in particular, its banking sector and bevvy of private firms struggling to pay down dollar-denominated debts – already under immense stress thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, the consequences of even a modest hit to Hong Kong’s currency or credibility in foreign finance circles could carry major costs. This raises the question of whether Beijing is doing this out of weakness or strength. In other words, is it willingly taking on these risks because it thinks it has succeeded in making them manageable – and, by virtue of its relative success in handling the pandemic, making itself ever-more indispensable to the global economy and ever-more immune to U.S. pressure? Or because China's internal pressures turn concern about unrest spilling over from Hong Kong to the mainland into an existential fear? Or because it figures financial decoupling from the West and the accompanying capital flight were inevitable? Or merely because the protests have embarrassed Xi Jinping personally to the point where he had to act?

In truth, the answer is probably some mix of all of the above. China is strong and ambitious and yet contending with existential risks on seemingly every front. With Hong Kong, as with so many of its other woes, Beijing is stuck choosing between unsavory options. In these situations, its authoritarian impulse typically prevails. It leans on the only thing it really trusts – its own power – prioritizing control over capitalist efficiency, and figuring out the rest later.   




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WSJ: How Not to Punish China
« Reply #1084 on: July 09, 2020, 11:07:38 AM »
How Not to Punish China
Weaponizing the dollar to hurt Hong Kong would backfire on the U.S.
By The Editorial Board
July 8, 2020 7:05 pm ET

Washington is mulling a variety of ways to punish Beijing for violating Hong Kong’s autonomy. But one new idea should be off the table: weaponizing the U.S. dollar to undermine Hong Kong’s currency.

News reports Tuesday suggested some Administration officials are contemplating cutting off Hong Kong banks’ access to U.S. dollar funding. The aim would be to undermine the Hong Kong dollar, which since 1983 has been fixed to the U.S. dollar at a rate of about 7.8 Hong Kong dollars to $1.

That peg is a currency board, which means that every single Hong Kong dollar in circulation is backed by around 13 cents held in a vault at the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. To maintain the system, the HKMA and banks must be able to freely buy and sell U.S. dollars as demand for Hong Kong dollars rises or falls. Unlike mainland China’s currency, the yuan, Hong Kong’s money is stable and freely convertible, and has been the backbone of the territory’s prosperity for decades.

That should be reason enough for the Trump Administration to leave the Hong Kong dollar alone. The victims of any disturbance to the currency board would be the people of Hong Kong, who are already suffering enough at Beijing’s hands. The United Kingdom and other countries recognize that one effective way to push back against Beijing’s imposition of a draconian security law is to allow Hong Kongers to emigrate. Washington can do its part by avoiding a crippling depreciation of the Hong Kong dollar that would wipe out emigres’ savings as they leave.

The bigger risk from such economic warfare is to the U.S. Washington derives enormous influence from the free convertibility of the greenback, which allows governments, institutions and individuals to use the dollar as a global reserve currency.

The dollar’s global reach is why financial sanctions bite countries such as Iran and North Korea on the relatively rare occasions Washington does cut off access to dollars. That influence also offers the Trump Administration better ways to impose financial penalties on Beijing, such as Magnitsky-style sanctions targeted at individual officials involved in human-rights abuses.

The more creatively Washington wants to think about how to hold Beijing accountable, the better. But the Administration should take care to play to American strengths rather than undermining them in the process. One of the biggest strengths is a fully convertible dollar.



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Stratfor
« Reply #1087 on: July 14, 2020, 10:40:51 AM »
What to Make of the U.S. Rejecting China's Claims in the South China Sea
3 MINS READ
Stratfor
Jul 14, 2020 | 16:31 GMT
HIGHLIGHTS

The United States' partial rejection of China's South China Sea claims will add to mounting tensions between the two countries, but will not alone derail their trade deal or upset the status quo of the contested waterway. This marks a shift from the previous U.S. approach of refraining from an official position on specific Chinese claims in the South China Sea, though Washington is still remaining partly neutral by not explicitly backing the overall maritime claims of countries contesting those of China. The waterway, however, will still be a growing site of U.S.-China competition, worsening the two countries' already fraught relationship troubled by Hong Kong, COVID-19, human rights issues and tech competition. ...

The United States' partial rejection of China's South China Sea claims will add to mounting tensions between the two countries, but will not alone derail their trade deal or upset the status quo of the contested waterway. On July 13, the U.S. State Department officially rejected China's "nine-dashed line" maritime claims in the South China Sea, affirming a 2016 ruling under the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea. Specifically, the United States stated:

China cannot assert an exclusive economic zone around the Spratly Islands and Scarborough Shoal, and has no right to unilateral energy extraction in these areas.

China cannot harass Philippine vessels around the Philippines' Mischief Reef or Second Thomas Shoal.

The United States rejects any Chinese claims to waters beyond 12 nautical miles around the Spratly Islands.

China cannot claim the waters around Vanguard Bank near Vietnam, Luconia Shoals near Malaysia, Brunei's exclusive economic zone or Indonesia's Natuna Islands.

China's claims to the James Shoal near Malaysia are unlawful since the territory is submerged.

This marks a shift from the previous U.S. approach of refraining from an official position on specific Chinese claims in the South
China Sea, though Washington is still remaining partly neutral by not explicitly backing the overall maritime claims of countries contesting those of China. This somewhat aloof approach enables Washington to avoid alienating its regional partners, many of which have expansive claims in the South China Sea, including Taiwan and Vietnam. It also avoids setting a precedent for taking sides in maritime disputes further afield, such as those between allies Japan and South Korea. South China Sea claimants — which include the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei — do not want Washington's overt support either, given China's preeminent military position in the South China Sea and its role in their respective economies. A more ambiguous U.S. stance helps bolster their position without putting them in China's sights.

The rejection marks the first time Washington has taken an official position on specific Chinese claims in the South China Sea, adding to mounting U.S.-China tensions.

The waterway, however, will still be a growing site of U.S.-China competition, worsening the two countries' already fraught relationship troubled by Hong Kong, COVID-19, human rights issues and tech competition. The United States has been increasing the tempo of its naval operations in the Western Pacific in recent months, including a dual-carrier drill in the South China Sea and the expansion of facilities. Washington also plans to increase military spending in the region under the Pacific Deterrence Initiative.

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GPF
« Reply #1088 on: July 14, 2020, 10:41:44 AM »
second

Daily Memo: Beijing's South China Sea Claims,
Weekly reviews of what's on our bookshelves.
By: Geopolitical Futures

Washington rejects Beijing's claims. On Monday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo expanded the U.S. condemnation of China’s expansion in the South China Sea, rejecting several Chinese claims in disputed waters beyond what was covered in the 2016 arbitral ruling in The Hague. That ruling invalidated several Chinese claims to reefs near the Philippines in the Spratly Archipelago. Pompeo said the U.S. would also regard as illegal Chinese harassment of fishing fleets or oil exploration in certain areas off the coast of Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia and Vietnam. This is a notable shift for the U.S., which has traditionally just encouraged regional states to work out their myriad disputes either bilaterally or at international arbitration courts. But China, of course, has not been deterred by international rulings like the 2016 decision, and has been steadily increasing its harassment of regional states over their oil exploration and fishing activities. Indeed, over the weekend, Vietnam lost another foreign partner helping it drill for oil off its southeastern coast.

The problem for the U.S., however, remains persistent doubts among regional partners about U.S. willingness or capability to go beyond rhetorical defenses of their interests. A U.S. move in May to deploy warships to waters off Malaysia to keep an eye on the Chinese coast guard was notable in this regard. The U.S. Navy has also gone to great lengths to demonstrate that the COVID-19 outbreaks that briefly sidelined several warships in April are ancient history; in recent weeks, it has moved three carrier groups into the Western Pacific, conducted a number of major exercises in the area and stepped up surveillance in waters off Taiwan. Setbacks haven’t stopped, though: A major fire that broke out Sunday aboard the USS Bonhomme Richard, a U.S. Wasp-class amphibious assault ship that was being upgraded in San Diego to accommodate the F35-B – exactly the sort of vessel the U.S. would need to do anything that actually deters Chinese expansion in the South China Sea – might just sideline the warship for good.

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GPF George Friedman: The Truth about the Thucydides Trap
« Reply #1089 on: July 14, 2020, 10:50:43 AM »
   
    The Truth About the US-China Thucydides Trap
By: George Friedman

We remember Thucydides as a historian thanks to his documentation of the Peloponnesian War, but we often forget that he was also a philosopher. And like all great philosophers, he has many things to teach us, even if his teaching is inappropriately applied. Thousands of years after the war was fought between Sparta and Athens, observers argued that it showed that an authoritarian government would defeat a democracy. This was widely said in the early stages of World War II and repeated throughout the Cold War. In truth, what Thucydides said about democracies and oppressive regimes was far more sophisticated and complex than a simplistic slogan invoked by defeatists.

Jacek Bartosiak, who wrote of the Thucydides trap for us last week, is never simplistic, but I think he is wrong in some respects. The error is the idea that China is a rising power. He is certainly correct if by rising he means it has surged since Mao Zedong died. But he is implying more: that China is rising to the point that it can even challenge the United States. The argument that the U.S. may overreact is based on this error. The U.S. is choosing to press China hard, but the risk of doing so is low.

The most important thing to understand about China is that its domestic market cannot financially absorb the product of China’s industrial plant. Yes, China has grown, but its growth has made it a hostage to its foreign customers. Nearly 20 percent of China’s gross domestic product is generated from exports, 5 percent of which are bought by its largest customer, the United States. Anything that could reduce China’s economy for the long term by about 20 percent is a desperate vulnerability. COVID-19 has hurt and will continue to hurt many countries. But for China, if international trade collapsed, internal declines in consumption would come on top of the loss of foreign markets.

China faces a non-military threat from the United States, which relies on exports to China for about half of 1 percent of its GDP. If the U.S. simply bought fewer Chinese products, Washington would damage China without firing a shot. If China is a rising power, it is rising on a very slippery slope without recourse to warfare.

But the United States has even more devastating options. China must have access to global markets, which depends overwhelmingly on the ports of its east coast. The South China Sea is therefore a frontier of particular interest for Beijing. The military problem is simple. To access the ocean, China must control the sea lanes through at least one (and preferably more) outlet. The United States does not need to control these lanes; it just needs to deny them to China. The difference is massive. The Chinese have to force the U.S. into deep retreat to secure access. The United States needs only to remain in position to fire cruise missiles or lay mines.

The U.S. Navy controls the Pacific from the Aleutians to Japan, Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia and Australia, giving Washington an old and sophisticated alliance system that China cannot match. And though allies can drag a nation into conflicts it doesn’t want to be part of, having no allies deprives a nation of strategic options. If only one of China’s littoral nations allied with it, China’s strategic problem might be solved. The failure to recruit allies is an indicator of the regional appreciation of Chinese power and trustworthiness. Adding to China’s strategic problems is that it borders some countries such as Vietnam and India that are hostile to its interests.

Hypothetically, China could forge an alliance with Russia, a nearby power with which it shares some common competitors. The problem is that Russia’s focus must be on its west and on the Caucasus. It has no ground force it could lend to China, nor does it have a naval force that would be decisive in its Pacific operations. A simultaneous strike westward by Russia and eastward by China is superficially interesting, but it would not divide U.S. and allied forces enough to take the pressure off of China.

It’s true that China is a rising power, but as I said, it’s rising from the Maoist era. It has a significant military, but that military’s hands are tied until China eliminates its existential vulnerability: dependence on exports. Under these circumstances, the idea of initiating a war is farfetched. More than perhaps any country in the world, China cannot risk a breakdown in the global trading system. Doing so might hurt the U.S. but not existentially.

The United States has no interest in a war in the Western Pacific. Its current situation is satisfactory, and nothing is to be gained from initiating a conflict. The United States is not giving up the Pacific – it fought wars in Korea and Vietnam as well as World War II to keep it. The U.S. can’t invade mainland China or conquer it. It cannot expose its forces to massive Chinese ground forces. In this sense China is secure. China’s fear is maritime – isolation from world markets. And that possibility is there.

There is of course evidence of advanced Chinese systems being prepared and claims that the U.S. is losing its relative share of power. But this is one of the great defects of military analysis: counting the hardware. In the U.S. military, I have noted people rolling their eyes when they hear about the superweapons being produced. The closer you are to weapons development, the more you are aware of its shortcomings. Wars are won by experienced staff, brave and motivated forces, and factories that don’t screw up. Engineering is part of war but not its essence. The question for any military is not what equipment it has but how long it takes to jury-rig the breakdown. Technology matters, of course, but it is only decisive in the hands of those with deep experience of the battle to be fought. China lacks that. For all its hardware and technology, it has not fought a naval battle since 1895 (which it lost). China has no tradition of naval warfare to compare to its experience on land. And tradition and lessons passed down from generation to generation of admirals are extremely valuable. The United States has been in combat frequently, launching aircraft against land targets, conducting active anti-submarine searches and coordinating air defense systems for large fleets in combat conditions.

It's on this point that I disagree with Jacek. He submits that China is rising, with a particular focus on a technological prowess with which the U.S. is not keeping pace. Maybe that’s true. But the U.S. is still the superior power. It has an economic superiority, a geographic superiority, a political superiority in alliances, and a superiority of experience not only at sea but in air and space. Technology can only offset those deficiencies so much.

So I think the Thucydides concept, while valid, doesn’t apply to this case. China is not pressing the United States in any dimension, and for this reason, American rhetoric is not matched by the frenzied production the U.S. puts in motion when it is concerned.

And so Jacek and I will continue to duel.   



« Last Edit: July 14, 2020, 10:54:02 AM by Crafty_Dog »

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The piece to which George Friedman is responding
« Reply #1090 on: July 14, 2020, 10:55:53 AM »
Fourth

The Thucydides Trap and the Rise and Fall of Great Powers
A theory used to explain the Peloponnesian War can also be applied to the growing tensions between the U.S. and China.

By Jacek Bartosiak -July 8, 2020Open as PDF
Roughly 2,400 years ago, Thucydides, a Greek historian and author of “History of the Peloponnesian War,” expressed a view that resonates in strategic thinking to this day. He argued that the real cause of the Peloponnesian War was the rapid increase in the power of Athens and the fear this aroused in Sparta, which had dominated Greece thus far. Author Graham Allison used this concept in his book “Destined for War,” in which he described the relationship between the U.S. and China as an example of the “Thucydides trap” – the idea that the decline of a dominant power and the rise of a competing power makes war between the two inevitable.

Thucydides focused his writings and analysis on the structural tensions caused by a sharp change in the balance of power between rivals. He pointed to two main factors that contribute to this change: the aspiring power’s growing need for validation and its demand, either implicit or explicit, for a greater voice and strategic place in multilateral relations; and the current power’s fear and determination to defend the status quo.

In the fifth century B.C., Athens emerged as a powerful force that in mere decades had become a merchant maritime power, possessing financial resources and wealth but also reaching primacy in the Greek world in the fields of philosophy, history, literature, art, architecture and beyond. This irritated the Spartans, whose state had been the dominant land power in Greece throughout the preceding century.

As Thucydides argued, Athens’ behavior was understandable. With its rising power, its confidence also increased, as did its awareness of past injustices and determination to right the wrongs that were committed against it. Equally natural, according to Thucydides, was the behavior of Sparta, which interpreted Athens’ behavior as ungrateful and a threat to the system that Sparta had created and under which Athens was able to emerge as a great power. This combination of factors resulted in structural tensions and, subsequently, a war that devastated Greece.

In addition to the objective shift in the balance of power, Thucydides drew attention to Spartan and Athenian leaders’ perception of the situation, which led to an attempt to increase their own power through alliances with other countries in the hope of gaining a strategic advantage over their rival.

The lesson that Thucydides taught us, however, is that alliances are a double-edged sword. When a local conflict between Kerkyra (Corfu) and Corinth broke out, Sparta felt that, to maintain the balance, it needed to help its vassal, Corinth. The Peloponnesian War began when Athens came to Kerkyra’s defense after Kerkyra leaders convinced the Athenians that a de facto war with Sparta was already underway. Corinth also convinced the Spartans that, if they did not attack Attica, they would be attacked by Athens themselves. Corinth accused the Spartans of misunderstanding the gravity of the threat to maintaining a favorable balance of power in Greece. Although Sparta ultimately won the Peloponnesian War, both Athens and Sparta came out of the 30-year conflict in ruins.

Peloponnesian War Allies
(click to enlarge)

The Thucydides trap, which many now call a “security dilemma,” can also be seen in the context of U.S.-Chinese relations.

The United States is concerned about China’s growing economic power and military capabilities, believing that it could challenge the primacy of the U.S. and the existing security architecture in the Western Pacific and East Asia. China, meanwhile, is concerned that, so long as the Americans are present in this part of the world, they will limit the legitimate growth of Chinese power and influence.

Political scientist Joseph Nye believes that the key trigger in the Thucydides trap is an excessive reaction to the fear of losing one’s power status and prospects for future development. In the case of Washington and Beijing, the relative decline of America’s power and the rapid rise of China’s power destabilizes their relationship and makes it difficult to manage. Gen. Martin Dempsey, then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the U.S. Armed Forces, even admitted in May 2012 that his primary task was to ensure that the United States did not fall into the Thucydides trap.

As a result of the slow but noticeable erosion of the U.S. position in the Western Pacific, it is highly conceivable that a scenario could emerge in which the current hegemon is tempted to conduct a strategic counteroffensive in response to an incident, even a trivial one, in the South China Sea or East China Sea, believing falsely that it has the edge over its inferior rival. This would trigger a modern Thucydides trap.

An in-depth reading of Thucydides’ work reveals a second trap, even more complex and dangerous than the first. Thucydides clearly warned that neither Sparta nor Athens wanted war. But their allies and vassal states managed to convince them that war was inevitable anyway, which meant that both city-states would need to gain a decisive advantage at an early stage of the escalating confrontation. Thus, they decided to enter the war after being urged to do so by their vassal states.

According to research conducted in 2015 by a team led by Graham Allison at Harvard’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, 12 out of 16 historical cases spanning the past 500 years and with similarities to those described above by Thucydides ended in a war of domination. Releasing the competitive tension, if that was even possible, always required huge and often painful adjustments to one’s expectations, status and international position.

As Allison recalls, eight years before the outbreak of World War I, British King Edward VII asked the British prime minister why there was disagreement with his nephew, German Emperor Wilhelm II, when the real threat to the British Empire was the United States. The prime minister asked for an appropriate response in the form of a memorandum from the head of the Foreign Office, Eyre Crowe.

The memorandum, delivered to the king on New Year’s Day 1907, was, as Allison writes, “a diamond in the annals of diplomacy.” The logic within it was truly consistent with Thucydides’ own: The key to understanding the German threat was understanding Germany’s ability, over time, to deploy not only the strongest army on the Continent but also the strongest fleet, given the growing strength of the German economy and Germany’s proximity to Britain. Thus, regardless of German intentions, Germany would pose an existential threat to Britain, its maritime power and the security of communication routes connecting the metropolis with the colonies that represented the backbone of the empire.

Three years later, both U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt and the German emperor attended Edward’s funeral. Roosevelt, himself a keen supporter of the expansion of the American fleet, asked the emperor whether Germany would give up building a large fleet. The emperor said Germany was determined to have a powerful fleet, and added that he grew up in England, felt part English himself and believed that war was unthinkable.

At that time, in 1910, world war seemed as impossible as it does now. But it turns out that cultural, spiritual, ideological and even family ties, as well as economic interdependence and the global trading system, are not enough to prevent conflict. Both then and now.

To learn more, please visit strategyandfuture.org.

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Jacek Bartosiak
Jacek Bartosiak
https://geopoliticalfutures.com/author/jbartosiak/
Jacek Bartosiak is an expert in geopolitics and geostrategy and a senior analyst with Geopolitical Futures. He is founder and owner of Strategy & Future. Dr. Bartosiak is the author of three books: Pacific and Eurasia: About the war (2016), dealing with the upcoming rivalry of great powers in Eurasia and about the potential war in the western Pacific; The Commonwealth between land and sea: On war and peace (2018), on the geostrategic situation of Poland and Europe in the era of rivalry between powers in Eurasia; and The Past is a Prologue on geopolitical changes in the modern world. In addition he is Director of the War Games and Simulation Program of the Pulaski Foundation; Senior Fellow at The Potomac Foundation in Washington, co-founder of "Play of Battle", which prepares military simulations; associate of the New Confederation and the New Generation Warfare Center in Washington; member of the advisory team of the Government Plenipotentiary for Central Communication Port (2017-2018), president of the board of the company Centralny Port Komunikacyjny Sp. z o. o. (2018–2019). Dr. Bartosiak speaks at conferences on the strategic situation in Central and Eastern Europe, The Western Pacific and Asia. He graduated from the Faculty of Law and Administration at the University of Warsaw, and is a managing partner at a law firm dealing with business services since 2004.
« Last Edit: July 14, 2020, 11:02:31 AM by Crafty_Dog »

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WSJ
« Reply #1091 on: July 14, 2020, 12:07:40 PM »
Rule of Law in the South China Sea
The State Department finally declares Beijing’s claims unlawful.
By The Editorial Board
July 13, 2020 7:11 pm ET
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The U.S. Navy flagship America-class amphibious assault ship USS America during routine patrol in the South China Sea, April 20.
PHOTO: JONATHAN BERLIER/U.S. NAVY/ZUMA PRESS
In the last decade China has intensified its efforts to exert military control over the South China Sea, the vital waterway also claimed in part by Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and others. While the U.S. has sent warships on freedom of navigation exercises, it has remained formally neutral on these maritime disputes.

No longer. In a statement released Monday, the State Department declared that “Beijing’s claims to offshore resources across most of the South China Sea are completely unlawful.” In 2016 the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague said as much, but China ignored it and accelerated its militarization. The State Department document for the first time embraces that ruling and says, “The world will not allow Beijing to treat the South China Sea as its maritime empire.”

During the pandemic Chinese vessels have tailed Malaysian oil-exploration boats and rammed a Vietnamese fishing boat. Beijing wants to repudiate international norms and control commercial activity in the region. This month the U.S. sent two aircraft carriers to the South China Sea, prompting a state media outlet to tweet that “China has a wide selection of anti-aircraft carrier weapons” and “any US #aircraftcarrier movement in the region is at the pleasure” of the Chinese military.

Beijing has probably concluded that it can gradually tighten its grip on the South China Sea and, while the U.S. might complain and occasionally send naval assets passing through, its hegemony won’t be challenged. Monday’s State Department decision, along with shows of military force, signals that the U.S. may be toughening its strategy against Chinese regional bullying.

This is one of those Trump-era diplomatic moves—like moving the Israeli embassy to Jerusalem or pulling out of failing arms accords—that a more risk-averse Administration would not have tried. China won’t be happy. Yet the decision brings official U.S. policy in line with international law and geopolitical facts. No matter who wins the White House this year, a key priority of U.S. foreign policy in 2021 will be deterring Chinese lawlessness and expansion. This is a necessary first step.


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WSJ: A Way to Curb Chinese Intimidation
« Reply #1092 on: July 14, 2020, 02:31:28 PM »
sixth

A Way to Curb Chinese Intimidation
Congress kept companies from cooperating with the Arab boycott of Israel. It can follow that model now.
By David B. Rivkin Jr. and Anastasia Lin
July 13, 2020 6:49 pm ET
WSJ


Facebook, FB 0.3054393305439331% Google and Twitter TWTR 1.6558249556475457% announced this month that they will refuse to comply with customer-information requests from Hong Kong authorities until the companies review the implications of a new Chinese security law designed to suppress dissent in the territory. If the tech companies don’t cave in, it will be a rare instance of Western businesses standing firm against Beijing’s intimidation.

Corporations typically kowtow, fearful of losing access to China’s massive market. International airlines, including American, Delta and United, changed their websites so that Taipei isn’t listed as being in Taiwan. The general manager of the National Basketball Association’s Houston Rockets apologized for tweeting an image that read “Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong.” Mercedes-Benz DMLRY 2.420135527589545% apologized for an English-language Instagram post that included an innocuous quote from the Dalai Lama. The Big Four accounting firms issued statements criticizing Hong Kong protests after some of their employees took out an ad supporting them.

Using its economic power to pressure Western corporations is a key element of Chinese statecraft. The Communist Party keenly appreciates that Western entities are far more credible than Chinese government or media. China scrutinizes statements by Western companies, focuses on those that are even mildly critical of its behavior, and threatens them on social media with economic retaliation and blacklisting.

Such threats often appear to emanate from private Chinese citizens. But given the government’s heavy censorship of Chinese social-media platforms, they inevitably bear the party’s imprimatur. Moreover, the Chinese government almost always backs up the statements attributed to its citizens, waging a joint campaign, so that the language of these “private” complaints tracks Communist Party propaganda.


Beijing also attempts to suppress authentic Chinese voices critical of its human-rights abuses. One of us (Ms. Lin) represented Canada in the Miss World 2016 finals in Washington. The London-based Miss World Organization—most of whose sponsors are Chinese companies—isolated her from the media during the pageant and threatened to disqualify her after she was seen speaking informally to a Boston Globe columnist. The ban on her contact with journalists was ameliorated only after intense public pressure.

It’s too much to expect corporations, whose objective is to make money for shareholders, to take a lonely stand against a government that controls access to a major market. But U.S. lawmakers could stiffen corporate spines. In response to the Arab League boycott of Israel, Congress in 1977 made it illegal for U.S. companies to cooperate with any unsanctioned foreign boycott and imposed civil and criminal penalties against violators. That legislation and the implementing regulations “have the effect of preventing U.S. firms from being used to implement foreign policies of other nations which run counter to U.S. policy,” according to the Commerce Department.

Antiboycott regulations forbid U.S. companies to “agree” to eschew doing business in Israel or with a company already blacklisted by the Arab League, or to cooperate with the boycott’s enforcement by providing information about business relationships with Israel or blacklisted companies. All requests for such cooperation must be reported to the Commerce Department. The regulations presume that any action taken in response to boycott-related requests violates the law. It isn’t sufficient to claim that one’s boycott-related speech or activity is based on one’s own views.

These regulations survived legal challenges from companies that claimed violations of their First Amendment right to free speech. Federal courts upheld the rules as narrowly tailored restrictions on commercial speech driven by a compelling government interest. American companies eventually grasped that the rules protected them from foreign pressure. In time, antiboycott compliance became part of American corporate culture and didn’t require much enforcement.

Beijing’s efforts to force American companies to support and comply with its propaganda and deception campaigns and furnish information on Chinese dissidents are similarly inimical to vital American interests. Preventing Western companies from participating in Chinese propaganda campaigns would diminish China’s soft power and impair its ability to use economic blackmail as a tool of statecraft.

Congress should enact legislation prohibiting American companies, as well as foreign entities doing business in the U.S., from cooperating with any Chinese effort to enlist them for propaganda or furnish information on dissidents. In particular, they would be barred from changing their public statements and social-media presence in response to Chinese pressure or from taking other steps to placate Beijing, whether its demands are communicated directly or indirectly. Any such Chinese demands would have to be reported to the U.S. government.

With most Americans—91%, according to a March Pew Research Center report—agreeing that Beijing threatens American interests, such legislation should be able to win bipartisan support. It would also be constitutionally defensible as a narrowly tailored regulation of commercial speech supported by a compelling government interest—countering Beijing’s push for global dominance.

The goal would not be to prevent companies from speaking, or to compel their speech, on China-related issues. They could not, however, legally comply with Chinese government attempts to direct their speech. Like the antiboycott laws, such a statute would protect Western companies, enabling them to tell Beijing that they are unable to comply with its demands. The U.S. can’t stop Chinese state institutions from spreading propaganda, but it can use the law to shield Western companies from the Communist Party’s intimidation.

Mr. Rivkin practices appellate and constitutional law in Washington. He served in the White House Counsel’s Office and Justice Department under Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Ms. Lin, an actress, was Miss World Canada 2015 and 2016. She is the Macdonald-Laurier Institute’s ambassador for China policy and a senior fellow at the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights. She is the wife of James Taranto, the Journal’s editorial features editor.

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Stratfor: Trump moving gradually
« Reply #1093 on: July 15, 2020, 03:41:52 PM »
Trump Carefully Continues to Increase Pressure on China in Hong Kong
3 MINS READ
Jul 15, 2020 | 20:33 GMT
HIGHLIGHTS
Despite growing bipartisan pressure among U.S. legislators to take more aggressive action against China, the White House's latest actions in Hong Kong indicate the administration still seeks to avoid any moves that could substantively damage the city's status as an economic hub or jeopardize the U.S.-China phase one trade deal. On July 14, U.S. President Donald Trump announced the issuing of an executive order invoking the United States-Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992 to certify the city no longer warrants autonomous treatment under U.S. law, as well as the signing of the Hong Kong Autonomy Act (HKAA) into law. These two actions mark another step in the incremental escalation of U.S. pressure on China over its implementation of a severe new national security law in the city but still fall short of more extreme moves Washington could take, reflecting a still cautious White House strategy.  ...

Despite growing bipartisan pressure among U.S. legislators to take more aggressive action against China, the White House's latest actions in Hong Kong indicate the administration still seeks to avoid any moves that could substantively damage the city's status as an economic hub or jeopardize the U.S.-China phase one trade deal. On July 14, U.S. President Donald Trump announced the issuing of an executive order invoking the United States-Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992 to certify the city no longer warrants autonomous treatment under U.S. law, as well as the signing of the Hong Kong Autonomy Act (HKAA) into law. These two actions mark another step in the incremental escalation of U.S. pressure on China over its implementation of a severe new national security law in the city but still fall short of more extreme moves Washington could take, reflecting a still cautious White House strategy.

Trump's executive order falls short of imposing a significant penalty on Hong Kong or Beijing that would provoke an escalatory response from China, likely to preserve some strategic aspects of his administration's bilateral relationship with Beijing. The order specifically applies to U.S. tariffs on Hong Kong's exports on par with China, eliminates Hong Kong passport holders' preferential treatment, suspends the extradition treaty with the city, ends U.S. arms sales to and the training of Hong Kong police, and opens up the United States further to Hong Kong asylum seekers.

The application of China-level U.S. tariffs to Hong Kong would hit about $1.77 billion in the city's domestic exports to the United States, which is around 2 percent of its manufacturing production and 0.1 percent of total exports.
The Hong Kong extradition treaty has only been used twice between 2015 and 2018, with five U.S. requests rejected. In terms of the passport status change, the application process and duration for mainlanders and Hong Kongers is currently almost identical.
Leaks indicate that the Hong Kong police will be able to easily replace equipment that they have been receiving from the United States with other suppliers.
The U.S. measures on Hong Kong have not yet targeted the city's vital services sector, particularly its financial sector. On July 14, White House leaks emerged indicating that the administration decided against measures that would undermine Hong Kong's crucial peg to the U.S. dollar.
The signing of the Hong Kong Autonomy Act also demonstrates that the administration maintains broad latitude in terms of how to shape sanctions in light of its broader China strategy. The law does set the stage for potential sanctions on Chinese and Hong Kong officials over the erosion of the city's autonomy, with the potential for foreign financial institutions that transact with them to be hit as well.

On July 14, the White House issued a statement clarifying that it interprets the section of the act that places some requirements on the president if he declines to sanction an individual or entity as "advisory and non-binding.”
Although the bill moved quickly through both houses of Congress after it was introduced in May, the Trump administration reportedly slowed its passage to impose revisions that would grant the U.S. Department of Treasury greater control over sanctions targets, suggesting an intention to more carefully tailor sanctions.
The new U.S. sanctions against China's Uighur crackdown in Xinjiang, along with the and the U.S. State Department's recent rejection of China's South China Sea territorial claims, have also fallen short of measures that would derail U.S.-China relations.
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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1094 on: July 18, 2020, 07:52:16 PM »
In the South China Sea, Washington Tries to Balance Support and Entanglement
Rodger Baker
Rodger Baker
Senior VP of Strategic Analysis, Stratfor
8 MINS READJul 17, 2020 | 09:30 GMT
Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands on April 21, 2017.
Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands on April 21, 2017.
(TED ALJIBE/AFP via Getty Images)


HIGHLIGHTS

Washington continues to walk a delicate balance between supporting its allies and partners in the region and avoiding entanglement in regional territorial conflicts.

So long as U.S. policy remains largely reactive to China, rather than proactive in defining and shaping the region toward a particular goal, its behavior will remain difficult for partners and allies to anticipate.

Now that the State Department has issued a new position statement, China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nation states will be watching closely to see just how far the words translate into action.

In the recently released U.S. Position on Maritime Claims in the South China Sea, Washington continues to walk a delicate balance between supporting its allies and partners in the region and avoiding entanglement in regional territorial conflicts. The test will come when the United States is called to act upon its more clearly articulated position on Chinese expansionist behavior.

The United States asserts a "free and open Indo-Pacific" as a key component of its national security strategy and has long argued that China's so-called nine-dash-line and its actions to exert greater influence over the South China Sea are anathema to global norms, regional stability and U.S. interests. The new Position on Maritime Claims is one piece amid this larger puzzle.

Over the past few years, the U.S. Navy has increased its freedom of navigation operations in the South China Sea. Washington has affirmed that the South China Sea region falls within the U.S. mutual defense treaty with the Philippines (similar to earlier statements regarding Japan and the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands). The United States has encouraged joint training and patrols throughout the region. And the 60th annual National Defense Authorization Act sets aside up to nearly $7 billion in fiscal years 2021 and 2022 for a new Pacific Deterrence Initiative aimed to increase U.S. activities and cooperation in the region and counter Chinese expansion.

Parsing the U.S. Statement

Four years after the Permanent Court of Arbitration ruled that there was no legal basis to China's so-called nine-dash-line territorial assertions and that no feature in the Spratly Islands meets the definition of an island (and thus none can serve as the basis of a 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone), the U.S. State Department issued the U.S. Position on Maritime Claims in the South China Sea. In many ways, the new statement merely reiterates often-asserted U.S. views. But given the timing and the shifting regional and international context, the statement serves as a key component of a broader U.S. reassertion of its role in the Western Pacific.

a map of territorial claims in the South China Sea

While continuing to avoid taking sides in legitimate territorial disputes, the United States asserted that many of China's claims are invalid under the tribunal's ruling and the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea. In this way, Washington recognized Philippine sovereignty over Mischief Reef and Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratlys, and over Scarborough Reef (better known as Scarborough Shoal). China currently occupies Mischief Reef and patrols Scarborough Shoal, while the Philippines occupies Second Thomas Shoal.

Washington has long tried to avoid choosing sides in regional maritime territorial disputes. In part, this helped keep the United States from being drawn into a confrontation with China by an ally, whether the Philippines in the South China Sea over the Spratly Islands or Japan in the East China Sea over the Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute. But it also helped the United States avoid getting tangled in disputes between partners and allies, such as South Korea's and Japan's conflicting claims to Dokdo/Takeshima, or the many overlapping claims among Southeast Asian states in the South China Sea. The new statement marks an evolution of the U.S. position on territoriality in the region, and may set Washington up for more direct responses to any future Chinese action on disputed islets or waters.

The United States also asserted that because the nine-dash-line is invalid, it considers Chinese harassment of offshore oil and gas exploration and fishing by Southeast Asian nations both illegal. The statement specifically cited Vanguard Bank — a series of undersea features, several with Vietnamese outposts — around which Vietnam suspended oil and gas drilling operations due to aggressive Chinese actions and threats. It also highlighted Luconia Shoals, inside Malaysia's EEZ, where Chinese coast guard vessels patrolled for hundreds of days last year. And it cited Natuna Besar, an island in Indonesia's Natuna Sea where Chinese fishing vessels with coast guard escorts intruded into the waters in late 2019 and early 2020 in assertion of China's "historical" fishing grounds.

The final focal point of the Position on Maritime Claims centers on James Shoal, an undersea feature inside Malaysia's EEZ that Beijing frequently touts as the southernmost point of China. China's claim to the shoal has been traced to faulty maps and misinterpretations of maritime features. But it nonetheless serves as a key location in China's broader regional claims based on a mix of so-called historical fishing grounds, select interpretations of historical claims and occasionally on modern law. The statement points out, however, that undersea features like James Shoal do not form the basis for maritime claims under international law.

Rebuilding Trust

The selection of these specific features in the U.S. statement is intentional. It highlights each counterclaimant (Brunei's EEZ is also mentioned), and shows different ways China asserts its dominance in the South China Sea: namely, occupation and artificial island building, coast guard and militia patrols, interfering with other nations' offshore resource development, and using its fishing fleets as a tool of state policy and territorial assertion. The attention to the Philippines reflects the need to reestablish trust in U.S. reliability as a partner, particularly as President Rodrigo Duterte's shift to China was in part justified by the lack of U.S. assistance to stop China from occupying islets in the South China Sea while U.S. defense cooperation weakened Manila's access to Chinese trade and investment.

For the United States, rebuilding trust with Asian partners and allies will be critical given how the region has long been torn between Chinese economic ties and U.S. security ties. A main challenge the United States must overcome is the perception that its regional policy is largely reactive. In short, the United States appears to be responding to China's expansion, but doesn't necessarily have any U.S.-specific set of goals aside from blocking China from altering the status quo. China is a large and economically important neighbor, a critical source of trade and investment. In a region where infrastructure development, investment and creating economic opportunities for growing populations is a daily challenge for local governments, simply being anti-China is not only insufficient, it is counterproductive.

Testing U.S. Commitment

Three areas will shape regional assessments of U.S. commitment and leadership moving forward. The first is economics. Is the United States willing to increase its loans, investments and trade with Southeast Asia to assist in infrastructure development projects, and at a competitive rate with China? Cooperative efforts, for example with Japan, Australia and India, may partially fulfill this need, but even with a renewed focus on the Western Pacific, there is unlikely to be an Asian Marshall Plan that facilitates a surge of regional development and growth. Meanwhile, the post-COVID economic situation will make investment and assistance even more critical in supporting regional governments.

Direct military intervention, even if just through a show of force, raises the stakes in the overall U.S.-China military relationship.

The second is in cooperation and training. How willing is the United States to increase defense training, arms sales and technology transfers? In the case of Vietnam, for example, the United States has already begun supplying coastal patrol vessels and stepped-up port visits. Despite political differences, the Philippines remains a central focus of U.S. military joint training. And again, U.S. partners such as Japan and the United Kingdom may be taking a more active role in strengthening regional maritime capabilities. Paired with local capacity building, the United States will also continue on its trend of a notable presence in the region, including everything from Freedom of Navigation Operations to strategic aviation flights to bilateral to multilateral exercises.

The final and most difficult test, however, will come when China continues along its current path in the region and seeks to interfere with regional offshore oil operations, declares an air defense identification zone over the South China Sea, chases off neighboring fishing vessels or begins occupying another reef such as Scarborough Shoal. Thus far, China has patrolled the shoal and interfered with Philippine fishing vessels gaining access to the waters around the shoal and the safe waters in its lagoon. Should Beijing begin to physically occupy the shoal or begin land reclamation operations as it has elsewhere, the United States would be forced either to demonstrate its strong commitment to blocking the action or once again allow China to occupy territory unhindered.

Though the United States clearly states such activities would be illegal, its defense agreement with the Philippines may only come into effect if the Philippine military comes under threat during a Chinese operation. The United States could resort to diplomatic and economic tools, from statements in the United Nations to sanctions against Chinese companies or officials engaged in further land reclamation inside the Philippine EEZ, but it is unclear whether that would be sufficient to reassure Manila or its neighbors of U.S. commitment.

Direct military intervention, even if just through a show of force, raises the stakes in the overall U.S.-China military relationship. Failing to do so risks U.S. reputation. So long as U.S. policy remains largely reactive to China, rather than proactive in defining and shaping the region toward a particular goal, its behavior will remain difficult for partners and allies to anticipate. Now that the State Department has issued the new position statement, China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nation states will be watching closely to see just how far the words translate into action.


G M

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G M

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Re: May be nothing...
« Reply #1097 on: July 21, 2020, 09:23:42 PM »
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/houston-police-respond-suspected-document-burning-chinese-consulate

We hope.

I see a scenario where the 3 Gorges collapses, the PRC blames Taiwan and/or US and launches strikes on Taiwan and/or US.

It's 2020, why not?


Crafty_Dog

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