Wednesday, June 16, 2021

NATO, Viewing Beijing Challenges

"China's stated ambitions and assertive behaviour present systemic  challenges to the rules-based international order and to areas relevant to alliance security." 
NATO
 
"I want all Europe to know that the United States is there. NATO is critically important to us." 
"[Russia and China are not behaving] in a way that is consistent with what we had hoped."
U.S.President Joe Biden

"If  you look at the cyber threats and the hybrid threats, if you look at the co-operation between Russia and China, you cannot simply ignore China."
"But one must not overrate it, either ... we need to find the right balance."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel

"China is coming closer to us. We see them in cyberspace, we see China in Africa, but we also see China investing heavily in our own critical infrastructure [ports and telecom networks]"
"We need to respond together as an alliance."
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg
 
China's steadily increasing military presence stretching from the Baltics to Africa, alarms NATO. It is presenting "systemic challenges", it announced at the recently-concluded summit with member-nations. The alliance, originally created as a force to defend Europe during the days of the Soviet Union and the Cold War, while still having Russia in its sights, has swerved its attention as well to the actions of the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing.

China is outraged at its global reputation being besmirched by false allegations it claims, emanating out of the G7 and NATO. China, to be sure, finds itself in an awkward position. While it is aggressive and provocative, it also attempts to be ingratiating, helpful, interested in amity and harmony among itself and other nations of the world. The mystery is how it expects to be viewed favourably by democratic
countries when it provokes India over territorial rights in dispute, and does the same with territory in dispute over its claims in the South and East China seas.

There is the Belt and Road initiative whereby China has set out to substantially 'help' poorer countries gain entry to its new 'silk road' economy by handing out loans in generous payback conditions for the building of critical infrastructure; roads, bridges, seaports and the like. Gargantuan sums of financing arranged, which poor countries are eager to take advantage of until they realize they will face enormous difficulties paying back the loans.

China's generosity evokes gratefulness in those it assists, even as it creates conditions of loyalty to its agenda with a frisson of resentment at both the dependency on China's largesse and a burden of unaffordable repayment. One of the issues at the G7 summit was the announcement of a global infrastructure plan meant to counter China's Belt and Road Initiative by a more generous plan the G7 collective would design and initiate without crippling recipient nations' fragile economies.
 
 
China's soft power and its hard power, both on full display, has earned a lash-back from the influential, wealthy democracies that once harboured the hope and expectation that China would join the world of orderly, restrained, cooperative world politics. Instead, its insatiable hunger for resources, territory, influence, control and respect while marauding other nations' secret military, industrial, scientific and social secrets and indulging in cyberintelligence theft has aroused suspicion and push-back.

China's soft power seen in its vaccine diplomacy with the potential to raise its reputation worldwide, has boomeranged. Sinovac and Sinopharm shipped COVID-19 vaccines to Africa, Asia and the Middle East, occasionally cost-free as a gift, to mollify global opinion over suspicions that the virus that appeared in Wuhan was poorly handled to prevent it becoming a pandemic. Apart from the fact that China's generosity with its vaccines failed to gain it acclaim, partially on the basis of their low efficacy, that impact fizzled even as the world demands more clarification over SARS-CoV-2 origins.

The origins secrecy and deceptions succeeded in renewing calls for deeper investigations, and for China to hand over documents it refused to release to the World Health Organization investigators when they travelled to Wuhan for their initial report which ended up being inconclusive in reflection of that lack of cooperation, while keeping the investigators under their watchful eye and pressing thumb. China remains obdurately obstructionist.

A round of sanctions developed based on a number of glaring issues that Beijing declares to be of no outside interest to anyone or any nation other than China. They include the 're-education' and slave labour imposed upon the Xinjiang Uhghurs and other minority Turkic Muslim populations whom China is committed to de-Islamizing, and re-Communizing for full integration into Chinese CCP culture and social-political expectations of all populations within China. 
 
Courtesy Reuters
 
Beijing's unification threats to Taiwan, its bulldozing of Hong Kong's move toward full democritization, its provocations against its neighbours in disputed territorial ownership, its aggression over international G5 telecommunications and Internet servicing by Huawei and its grudge-fights against countries like Australia and New Zealand, its aggressive interest in the Arctic for navigable trade routes, all arouse suspicion over its ultimate goals. Its micro-military skirmishes with India over Himalayan-area border issues, its strengthened alliance with Russia, altogether paint an unsavoury picture of entitlements.

And then there is the massive expenditure on military infrastructure, modernizing and ultra-equipping its military, on land, sea and air. Western democracies have painted themselves into a troublingly unpalatable position. On one hand, trade and manufacturing and services alongside political infiltration have woven a web of interdependence. Wealthy countries are indebted to China for its production capabilities, even while they welcomed Chinese investment in critical national enterprises and natural resources.

If and when they 'cut off their nose' it will be to spite their face.

Lithograph View of Canton or Guangzhou
The arrival of the Portuguese in Guangzhou, pictured here, in the early 16th century. (Corbis Historical / Getty)

 

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