{"id":87420,"date":"2024-06-14T06:00:26","date_gmt":"2024-06-13T20:00:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=87420"},"modified":"2024-06-20T13:54:50","modified_gmt":"2024-06-20T03:54:50","slug":"the-challenge-of-communist-china","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/the-challenge-of-communist-china\/","title":{"rendered":"The challenge of communist China"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"\"<\/figure>\n

The problem of dealing with a belligerent communist China is the geopolitical challenge of the age. Its favourable resolution will open the door to global amity. The alternative is enduring global instability, confrontation, and the risk of a major war in the Pacific, fought with nuclear weapons standing ready on a hair trigger.<\/span><\/p>\n

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, which was studied closely in Beijing, China came to view the United States as a powerful adversary which would one day seek to impede its rise. \u00a0It adopted a policy to \u2018hide its strength and bide its time\u2019. \u00a0Priority was afforded to economic development, and the generation of a vast industrial and technological base\u2014something \u00a0that no dictatorship had ever managed to create. At the same time, China studied US military prowess in order to better understand how the US had managed to potently network its platforms and systems on a global scale. <\/span>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

After the global financial crisis of 2008, China began to act more boldly in the wake of what it perceived to be the onset of US decline, building leverage in its external relations, accelerating its military build-up, and stepping up its long march through international institutions. It then embarked on \u2018national rejuvenation\u2019, in the face of perceived US weakness. Paranoid and insecure, but at the same time overly confident, China\u2019s belligerence increased. One of the most astute analyses of this journey, by Rush Doshi, says it all in its title: <\/span>The Long Game: China\u2019s Grand Strategy to Displace American Order, <\/span><\/i>2021. <\/span><\/p>\n

Australia\u2019s China policy consistently misjudged this long trend. Policy only began to harden in 2016. Then, across a range of fronts\u2014including foreign interference, espionage and cyber\u2014Australia \u2018stood up\u2019 to the challenge of China (see Malcolm Turnbull\u2019s memoir, <\/span>A Bigger Picture, <\/span><\/i>2020, chapter 34). We should, however, have started to adjust policy from around 2009. The key judgements that underpinned the 2009 Defence White Paper went beyond military affairs. In framing the looming China challenge correctly, it set out a strategic template that should have flowed across other national security and economic policy areas. <\/span><\/p>\n

However, instead of seeing China as it was, official thinking preferred to see an \u2018imagined China\u2019\u2014that is, China as the \u2018responsible stakeholder\u2019 that was emerging in the 1990s and early 2000s after the shock of the heinous massacre of 4 June 1989. \u00a0In this imagining, with the end of the Cold War, it was thought that a liberal order could be extended across Eurasia, bringing China into a global system of interconnected trade, investment and technology development, as well as into co-operative international institutions, which would somehow civilise its despotic tendencies. China\u2019s rulers, however, saw the trap that was being set for them\u2014the end of the communist regime, as economic liberalisation would lead inexorably to calls for political reform.<\/span><\/p>\n

Policy swung after 2009 to the trope of the China-centred \u2018Asian Century\u2019, which returned from the 1990s, obsolete and ill-suited to the early 2010s. \u00a0Re-reading today the Asian Century White Paper of 2012 is a telling exercise. It, and the Australia-China Comprehensive Strategic Partnership of 2014, seem a distant memory. Policy did not adjust quickly enough to the reality that the \u2018imagined China\u2019 was no more, or rather had never been. As a result, President Xi Jinping was given the benefit of the doubt after 2012. Due to this misreading of China, and timidity which was a function of our economic exposures, we lost valuable time we could have better used to enhance our resilience, diversify our trade, and build up our hard military power. <\/span><\/p>\n

China showed its true colours through its campaign of trade coercion against Australia that began around 2018. This was political warfare, where trade was used as a weapon to attack our sovereignty. Chinese political warfare seeks to attack political and social fault lines (for instance in a federation), creating fractures and undermining national resolve, setting the conditions for eventual subjugation to Chinese interests. <\/span><\/p>\n

Initially, however, this onslaught was treated as a cyclical, as distinct from a structural, problem. The Government adopted a stance of ‘strategic patience’, with each issue being treated separately, on their individual merits. There was a reluctance to frame the issue in terms of Chinese political warfare. The release by the Chinese Embassy in Canberra of the ’14 points’ in November 2020 was the key inflection point. Thereafter, Australia treated the trade coercion for what it was, and then Prime Minister Scott Morrison took the issue out of its bilateral framing. The high point was the discussion that he led at the G7 meeting in June 2021 on Chinese coercion and political warfare. He circulated the ’14 points’ to his fellow leaders. Great interest was shown in the Australian experience of being coerced and resisting. <\/span><\/p>\n

There is now a risk of a new \u2018imagined China\u2019 emerging and embedding itself in official thinking. Instead of continuing to work to rally likeminded nations against Chinese coercion, as we did in 2021, the alternative approach of quiet engagement\u2014assuming \u00a0that if only we moderate our language, then somehow Chinese belligerence will dissipate, and relations will be \u2018stabilised\u2019\u2014might yet entrench a dangerously benign view of the China challenge in official thinking. This approach implies that the challenge is not structural, but rather cyclical, and that we can, through adroit diplomacy, enlarge the space for \u2018cooperating where we can\u2019, while minimising the space for \u2018disagreeing where we must\u2019.<\/span><\/p>\n

In this new variation on the earlier \u2018imagined China\u2019, Chinese belligerence is excused on the basis that \u2018all great powers behave so\u2019. \u00a0This rationalisation is simply wrong and ahistorical: Bismarck\u2019s Germany was, for instance, a far more restrained and cautious great power than was Imperial Germany after 1890. \u00a0The world paid the price in 1914. \u00a0Great powers make choices about how to behave\u2014and should be held to account for their choices. <\/span><\/p>\n

Worse than being wrong, excusing Chinese belligerence as being an intrinsic function of great power behaviour will lead to poor strategy. The space for Australian willingness to \u2018disagree where we must\u2019 will reduce, as our anticipation of China\u2019s belligerent response\u2014normalised and excused\u2014will increasingly lead to self-censorship and reticence. This will see Australia abandon the hard-won gains of its resistance over recent years. China wants our silence\u2014over human rights, Taiwan, territorial aggression, unsafe military activities and more besides. \u00a0We should not give it so readily.<\/span><\/p>\n

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This new version of an \u2018imagined China\u2019 also implies that it is in Australia\u2019s interests to \u2018triangulate\u2019 a position of relative strategic safety in relation to the US and China, as if the problem is those major powers\u2019 rivalry, and that Chinese aggression is a function of the tensions of rivalry, or a response to US attempts to deny China \u2018space\u2019 (whatever that means). We should, however, resist such equivalence. We have a stake in this contest playing out such that US primacy, including its military superiority, is maintained. <\/span><\/p>\n

Our policy, however, appears to be one of \u2018triangulating peace\u2019 in the region, in a vain attempt to seek an \u2018equilibrium\u2019 between two competing great powers. This plays into China\u2019s strategy of undercutting US alliance structures and security assurances. Our actual grand strategy is being conducted, thankfully, at variance with our declared policy\u2014through contributing to the building of a US-centred system of integrated deterrence in the Indo-Pacific, the hardening of Australia as a bastion for allied warfighting operations, and the continuing integration of certain strategic functions undertaken on Australian territory into global US warfighting systems. <\/span><\/p>\n

We need, more than ever, deep strategic expertise, historical perspective, and a capacity to engage in contested, intelligence-informed conjecture about the China challenge. Instead, official thinking is not simply ahistorical\u2014it is formulaic. \u00a0Abstractions (such as \u2018stabilised relations\u2019 and \u2018disagree where we must\u2019) have become the framing references for our China policy. These are talking points that do not add to public understanding. Discourse matters. Emphatic language, involving detailed public explanation, is required. China well understands \u2018discourse power\u2019, where the production and management of discourse legitimates the authority of the Party\u2014for instance, through the \u2019discourse power\u2019 that is involved in the official framing of Chinese history. Australia should engage vigorously in such discourse\u2014contesting, for instance, the CCP notion that there are different, equally valid, \u2018civilisational\u2019 models for enshrining political and human rights. This would require disagreement with the Communist regime\u2019s ideas, policies and practices, across a wide canvas. <\/span><\/p>\n

Moreover, the China challenge is broken down into discrete functional components\u2014defence, foreign policy, trade, immigration, international education, foreign investment and so on\u2014each led by a different department or agency. To deal effectively with the China challenge, we need to see China as it is, and accept that the character of the regime matters analytically and for policy purposes. From that, we need to derive an integrated national strategy that is organised around sustaining structural competition with China, by a US-led West, with the ever-present possibility of confrontation being factored into every calculation. <\/span><\/p>\n

On the hard security side, such an integrated national strategy would include: building rapidly the military power that we would need to defend Australia in a Pacific war; transforming ANZUS into an Australia-US warfighting alliance, and realising the technology benefits of AUKUS more quickly; building security networks in the Indo Pacific region that are aimed at resisting Chinese regional hegemony; bolstering extended nuclear deterrence against Chinese nuclear threats; improving national cyber defences; stepping up counter-espionage and counter-foreign interference operations; and strengthening social cohesion. <\/span><\/p>\n

On the economic side, such a strategy would encompass new industrial and trade policies focused on strengthening resilience to deal with future waves of economic coercion by China; enhancing security of supply chains (for instance, in telecommunications, to avoid another 5G situation); diversifying trade, to de-risk reliance on Chinese markets; building industrial strength, including in high-end manufacturing; and hardening further the regulatory environment, especially around foreign investment and export controls. <\/span><\/p>\n

To devise such a strategy, government structures will need to be redesigned. A dedicated policy planning staff will be required to devise the national strategy that is described above. \u00a0Once finalised, it should be presented to the Australian community, as the centrepiece of a national security statement, by way of a primetime address by the Prime Minister to the House (in a similar fashion to the annual budget).<\/span><\/p>\n

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The China challenge cannot be managed effectively by diplomats, for whom concepts such as ‘diplomatic resets’, \u2018thaws in relations\u2019, or ‘stabilisation’ are preferred. These are cyclical notions. The China challenge is, however, a structural one. As such, it can only be dealt with effectively by way of a structural response\u2014one that is able to create new conditions. For the first time in 500 years, the West is being challenged by a Eurasian land power in China, which also possesses significant, and growing, sea power. This was not seen in Imperial Germany, Nazi Germany or the Soviet Union. Imperial Japan was a sea power, but it could not sustain land power. Unlike those earlier challengers, China is also an economic powerhouse, and the major trading partner of many nations (Australia included) in a still substantially connected world. The post-war order is crumbling, as structural forces tear it apart. This order cannot be \u2018balanced\u2019 for so long as these forces are at play. <\/span><\/p>\n

The China challenge has to be seen in these ‘world historical’ terms\u2014a concept that would be familiar to students of dialectics, which would include graduates of the CCP Central Party School. US strategy towards the Soviet Union in the 1980s had a structural, \u2018world historical\u2019, character. Fashioned by then President Ronald Reagan, Secretary of State George Shultz, and Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, it was designed to create new conditions after decades of confrontation, and then coexistence, during the Cold War. The nations of the West could do this again by working in concert, shaping their domestic and external policies (to the extent required to sustain structural competition with China), and deterring hostile Chinese actions through collective defence. China cannot be stronger than the aggregate weight of the US, Europe, Japan, India, Australia, South Korea, and others. In the long run, it will lose any structural competition against such an assembly of democratic power, especially given its long-term disadvantages such as population decline; the middle-income trap; a significant debt overhang; a lack of natural allies; political rigidity; and dependence on imported energy, resources and food. <\/span><\/p>\n

The reference to the collapse of the Soviet Union is not meant to suggest that China also has to collapse into chaos. What it does mean, however, is that the West has to do more than coexist in a state of d\u00e9tente with China. Coexistence with a regime that is both party and state, which is obsessed with regime security and domestic control, and which mobilises the economy and the population in the service of a constant state of aggressive domestic and external struggle, is not sustainable, being neither stable nor durable. China\u2019s strategy of perpetual struggle against the West, and liberal capitalism\u2014and here a line can be drawn connecting Lenin, Stalin, Mao, and now Xi\u2014will not change. In a stalemated duel of indefinite duration, a point of friction will eventually escalate to confrontation, conflict and potentially war. With no lived experience of how best to navigate the risk of global war\u2014last confronted in the mid-1980s\u2014accepting this stalemate would be to invite permanent instability and worse.<\/span><\/p>\n

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Coexistence with a moderated and restrained China\u2014the China that would have emerged perhaps if the modest political reforms of Zhao Ziyang (Premier 1980-87) had been pursued\u2014would on the other hand be more sustainable. Without overly prescribing a specific end-state, the West has to apply enough structural pressure on China that its choices are affected and its behaviour moderated\u2014ideally without conflict. To avoid the latter, it is imperative that both sides agree on principles and procedures for managing points of potential miscalculation\u2014especially in relation to incidents at sea, in the air, in cyberspace and in space. This was done during the Cold War. Similarly, the Cold War did not preclude US-Soviet cooperation on arms control and disarmament. <\/span><\/p>\n

Western strategy should, however, set a higher objective than simply avoiding conflict, and otherwise coexisting. It should have as its objective the structural creation of new conditions, and a different future. In that future, China would be a respected, leading participant in a revitalised liberal economic and security order, with the risk of war returned to levels not seen since the early 2000s. Global attention would then be able to be turned to critical planetary issues such as climate change, artificial intelligence, poverty, global financial stability, pandemic prevention, and so on. Dealing with the China challenge therefore means changing the future. Not doing so will heighten the risk of confrontation, conflict and possibly war, as coexistence in an unstable equilibrium simply defers catastrophe. Structural competition, and deterrence of Chinese aggression, would on the other hand represent the safer longer-term bet, and lead to a better, more stable, equilibrium.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

On the auspicious occasion of the visit to Australia of Premier Li Qiang, the Australian Government should take the opportunity to start to boldly set out this better vision for the future\u2014not just in terms of the bilateral relationship, but more crucially in relation to the Indo-Pacific region and the world order. Here are some points that the Chinese side may wish to consider, all of which are suggestions for how China might help to build that better world. China should:<\/span><\/p>\n

    \n
  • Renounce the use of force, and \u2018grey zone\u2019 methods short of war, to achieve its political objectives in relation to Taiwan. It should cease practising cross-strait attacks and blockades, and other preparations for war in 2027. It should commit to peaceful and unforced dialogue on cross-strait issues.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
      \n
    • Renounce the use of force and ‘grey zone’ measures to resolve territorial differences in its maritime periphery (especially in the South China Sea, where it should cease its militarisation of reefs and features, and the East China Sea), and on its land borders (especially with India). Were it to do so, China would significantly enhance peace and security in the Indo-Pacific region.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
        \n
      • Cease supporting Russia\u2019s illegal and immoral invasion of Ukraine. China should put limits on its \u2018no limits\u2019 alliance with Russia, which will otherwise be emboldened to further threaten the peace of the Euro-Atlantic region.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
          \n
        • Direct the People\u2019s Liberation Army to cease its unsafe and unprofessional actions at sea, in the air, and elsewhere; and engage in the development of meaningful risk-reduction and confidence-building mechanisms.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
            \n
          • Improve transparency in relation to the PLA Rocket Force, especially in relation to Chinese nuclear planning and doctrine, strategic nuclear stability, and the governance of the PLARF\u2014the latter in light of corruption concerns, which undermine international confidence in China\u2019s stewardship of nuclear weapons.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
              \n
            • Cease the warlike deployment of its cyber weapons on to US and other critical networks, in anticipation of conducting destructive cyberattacks during conflict, which would not meet the international standards of proportionality and military necessity. It should also cease supporting or enabling malicious cyber actors, especially where the cyber-enabled theft of intellectual property and trade secrets is involved (it promised Australia in April 2017 that it would do so), and should more genuinely cooperate in efforts to tackle cybercrime.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                \n
              • Cease interference in foreign democratic processes, in universities, and in foreign domestic communities, as well as foreign interference through social media platforms such as TikTok and WeChat. It should cease the transnational repression of Chinese people living abroad, especially where they are citizens or residents of other countries. It should cease spreading the techniques and technologies of repression to authoritarian regimes (for instance, mass surveillance systems).\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                  \n
                • Respond to concerns about human rights and political freedom, including with respect to Hong Kong, Xinjiang, Tibet, Inner Mongolia, religious freedom, and media freedom. China should release all political and arbitrarily detained prisoners (including Australian Yang Hengjun), and dismantle its internment camps and forced labour programmes. Reform should also include the development of an independent judiciary and the entrenchment of the rule of law as a restraint on the arbitrary exercise of executive power, and a check on human rights abuses.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                    \n
                  • Account for the origins of COVID-19, which caused such catastrophic global economic and social damage, and acknowledge the conduct of any dangerous biological research.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                      \n
                    • Broaden the sources of advice to Xi, and increase the contestability of that advice, as a solvent against \u2018groupthink\u2019, especially in external affairs. Foreign think tanks, such as the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, journalists, and academics should be allowed to operate freely in China.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                        \n
                      • Improve the business climate in China, such that foreign businesses can assist China with its economic transformation, in areas such as decarbonisation, clean energy, digital services, health and aging. This will require the stringent enforcement of international intellectual property laws, improved legal protections for foreign businesses in China, and the removal of the CCP from much of China\u2019s economic life.\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                          \n
                        • Relatedly, reduce risk in high-technology supply chains (for example, in telecommunications), and reverse security laws that require businesses to support Chinese intelligence interests, so that democratic nations can more readily trust and utilise Chinese technology and innovation.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                            \n
                          • Cease using trade as a coercive political weapon, as it has against Australia, the Republic of Korea, Lithuania, and others, which increases distrust about China as a power that is willing to turn economic linkages into political weapons. China should abide by international trade rules, as required by virtue of its World Trade Organisation membership, which was granted in 2001 by the international community in good faith on the understanding that China would benefit from open trade, and that it would not engage in coercive and predatory practices.\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
                              \n
                            • Improve the transparency of the Belt and Road Initiative and other development and investment schemes, which are marked by poor outcomes, and which typically undermine sovereignty, including in the Pacific.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n

                              \u00a0<\/span>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

                              By addressing these issues, and working amicably with the global community, China would make a decisive and beneficial difference to the state of the world, and would enhance its place in it. It would be a respected, leading nation. Global economic integration, to the benefit of all humankind, would intensify, and geopolitical tensions would abate. That would be a China, and a world, that would be worth imagining. <\/span><\/p>\n

                              Successful structural competition with China will see the world order transformed. Peace and stability will ensue. In dealing with China, rather than shrinking the space for disagreement\u2014or, worse, falling silent\u2014Australia should rally with likeminded nations in an epic contest with China, with victory as the goal. <\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

                              The problem of dealing with a belligerent communist China is the geopolitical challenge of the age. Its favourable resolution will open the door to global amity. The alternative is enduring global instability, confrontation, and the …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1703,"featured_media":87421,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1383,52,1248,3812,775,204],"class_list":["post-87420","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-ccp","tag-china","tag-chinese-foreign-policy","tag-economic-coercion","tag-maritime-coercion","tag-xi-jinping"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nThe challenge of communist China | The Strategist<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/the-challenge-of-communist-china\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The challenge of communist China | The Strategist\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The problem of dealing with a belligerent communist China is the geopolitical challenge of the age. 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