Someone high up, like General level, or Cabinet-level leaked these documents. And NO, they were not “modified” from their true content. A person who leaks any documents does not modify them. That is absurd.
Anyways, a fall-guy or patsy has been selected. What will follow will be a media circus. Sigh. Pay it no mind.
A war is upcoming. The USA wants it. The rest of the world doesn’t. What will happen?
No one knows.
Will China End US Global Hegemony? The Future of Our Multipolar World
The media wants war!
80s Mashup
Why is Taiwan an inseparable part of China?
I am from Taiwan.
I can give you a lot of information proving beyond any doubt that, Yes, Taiwan is a part, actually a province, of China.
Chiu Yu’s answer to Is Taiwan part of or separate from China?
Chiu Yu’s answer to What government controls Taiwan?
Chiu Yu’s answer to How many Taiwanese consider themselves Chinese and would accept an invasion?
But just the mere fact that such questions are asked again and again demonstrates how many people in the West have given up on using their independent minds to think through any question based on logic and facts, instead of letting themselves dragged by the nose by Western propaganda.
Western propaganda wants you to take in whatever they place in your esophagus, and regurgitate it like a cow, without ever processing it through your brain.
Many people are still incredulous even after being told that every single country on Earth, including the US and Taiwan itself, recognizes Taiwan as a part of China. The so-called One-China Principle reiterated by every US administration says that there is only one China, Taiwan is a part of China, and the US supports neither Two China’s nor One-China, One Taiwan.
I urge you to seriously contemplate the implication of the above, process it really through your brain, perhaps for the first time, instead of mindlessly letting Western propaganda do the thinking for you.
- Is the US known for frivolously acceding to things like this to other countries? If so, can you give another example? If not, why does it accede to this one in particular? Is there a reason?
- How about all the other 200 countries? Are they all known to make frivolous concessions like that? What did they gain from doing that?
- How about the United Nations, which stipulates in even more absolute terms that Taiwan is a province of China?
- How about Taiwan itself? Why does it say the same in its own Constitution?
Don’t you think there is a deep, fundamental and justifiable reason for this that might be making a lot of sense? Or you still think it is all some wishy-washy arbitrary happenstance that randomly placed Taiwan in the grips of China, as Western propaganda would like to have you believe?
Is the US such a pushover, who caved in to China at the first sign of pressure? You really believe that? If not, then why would the US accede to such a thing, especially when it was 10 times more powerful than China?
If the US were such a pushover, why hasn’t Greece claimed that it owns Macedonia, or Malaysia claimed it owns Singapore, or South Africa claimed it owns Eswatini, all with immediate consent by the US? Why has the US basically not conceded to anyone else, the way it conceded to China on Taiwan? Why?
Saddam Hussain claimed Kuwait was part of Iraq. What happened? The US didn’t cut him any slack and chased him out right away.
Kim Il-sung claimed North Korea owned South Korea. What happened? The US didn’t cut him any slack and launched the Korean War.
North Vietnam claimed it owned South Vietnam. What happened? The US didn’t cut it any slack, but sent in troops to fight it. Of course, it failed, but that’s not the point here.
The US has done many similar things in Africa and the Middle East, never easily acceding to any territory claims by anyone, big and small.
You say, it’s because Iraq and North Vietnam were weak compared to the US. OK, then how about Russia with 8000 tanks and 6000 nuclear warheads? Did the US accede to the Russian claim that it owns Crimea in 2014? Donbas in 2022? Mind you, China was much weaker than Russia today when the US made these concessions.
Why was the US adamant about the UK giving up India and the Suez Canal in the 1950s, despite the UK’s claim of possession to both? They were even allies!
I can give you another 10 examples like this. No, the US is never a pushover on issues like this, nor are many of the other 200 countries. They don’t do this for no reason, OK? So what is the reason?
So why China and Taiwan? Why do they all concede in this case only? Has it occurred to you that there may be a much deeper and more fundamental, more justifiable reason for this? Something that Western propaganda would hope that you will never know, and that you would never use your brain to think for yourself?
A Collapse WORSE Than 1929 is Here
“The Shot Heard Round the World” was Fired on today’s date!
The study of history gives perspective on our present world. Consider the events leading to the American Revolution. In 1763, after decades of on again, off again war, British forces decisively defeated the French to conclude the Seven Years War, leaving them a virtually invincible empire, with the strongest navy, the largest merchant fleet, and the fastest-growing economy in the world.
However, during the later 1760s and early 1770s, relations between Great Britain and her American colonies grew steadily worse. The Stamp Act of 1765, the occupation of Boston in 1768, the Boston Massacre of 1770, and the Tea Party of 1773, had enflamed passions on both sides of the Atlantic.
In 1774, Parliament, with King George III’s consent, passed the Massachusetts Government Act of Great Britain, transferring most of the powers of the colony’s elected government to the royal governor, General Thomas Gage. Fearing the outbreak of violence, Gage began to confiscate military supplies, principally gunpowder, from the militia.
By April 1775, the provincials had for some time been hiding weapons and powder at various locations, including the town of Concord, some twenty miles west of Boston. On the 18th of April, Gage dispatched about 700 infantry, all British regulars under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Francis Smith, to seize the munitions there. Despite the general’s attempts to maintain secrecy, Paul Revere and others brought news of the raid to Lexington shortly after midnight.
As word of the approaching troops went out through the surrounding countryside, Captain John Parker and some seventy to eighty militia gathered near the town meeting house and waited for the redcoats. Knowing the munitions at Concord had been safely moved to other locations, Parker had no intention of engaging the British troops and ordered his men “don’t fire unless fired upon.” He and his men lined up on Lexington Common in a show of resolve, expecting the redcoats to continue to Concord without hostilities. Tension was high as the two groups faced off.
The question of who fired first has long engaged historians. Participants on both sides were adamant that the other initiated hostilities, but it is unlikely the matter can ever be settled. What we do know is that a sound like a gunshot was heard and it was spark enough to cause the British troops to fire without orders. Their officers tried immediately to halt the unauthorized attack. So rapidly did matters escalate that few militiamen managed to fire their weapons in the skirmish, which left eight Americans dying. Most of the provincials scattered in the face of the much larger force opposing them.
Once Smith, the British commander, had regained control of his troops, he regrouped and pressed on to Concord. Upon arriving there he assigned about ninety men to guard the way back to Boston, in particular the North Bridge which spanned the Concord River outside of the town. Another group he sent to search the farm of provincial Colonel James Barrett for munitions, almost all of which had been removed previously. Barrett himself was in command of the militia on Punkatasset Hill, overlooking the bridge. His numbers grew steadily as militiamen arrived from neighboring towns, reaching a force of some 400 armed men.
Seeing smoke rise from Concord, Barrett and his officers grew concerned the British troops were burning the town to the ground, although such was not the case. Barrett’s troops advanced to the bridge and began to cross it. Again, tense men facing one another led to someone firing a shot, followed by another until both sides fired volleys across the bridge at one another. Within three minutes the action was over, but several men lay dead or wounded. Outnumbered and low on ammunition, the British troops retreated into town.
Fortunately for the British, Gage had sent a relief force of about 1,000 infantry under the command of General Hugh Percy and the two groups met at Lexington. Together they marched back to Boston in a bloody retreat which saw many casualties. Total American casualties (killed, wounded, and missing) were 95, versus 273 for the British. By the morning of April 20, some 15,000 provincial troops held Boston under siege.
The events of April 19, 1775 rocked the world of the colonists. It would not be until sixty-three years later Ralph Waldo Emerson would declare the battle to be the “shot heard round the world,” but it was evident to all who survived the day that something fundamental in the world had changed. Unlike previous incidents, such as the Boston Massacre, for the first time British and American forces had fought and killed one another. Few, if any, could foresee it would take eight years, until the signing of the Treaty of Paris (1783), to finally settle the matter of American independence from Great Britain.
Today, one often hears or reads laments about life “in these uncertain times.” But what times are certain? While some periods are relatively more peaceful and prosperous than others, in every time there are doubts about what comes next. In our own time, there are many reasons for concern: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine; the growing strength and aggression of China; cultural unrest in America dividing the country along fault lines of politics, race, and sex; failures of major banks; and so on.
However, as bestselling author David McCullough has noted, “One might also say that history is not about the past. If you think about it, no one ever lived in the past. Washington, Jefferson, John Adams, and their contemporaries didn’t walk about saying, “Isn’t this fascinating living in the past! Aren’t we picturesque in our funny clothes!” They lived in the present. The difference is it was their present, not ours. They were caught up in the living moment exactly as we are, and with no more certainty of how things would turn out than we have.”
No certainty, just the necessity to live in the present while trying to shape a better future for those who come after us. One lesson of April 19, 1775 is that we should take heart from the experiences of our ancestors. Out of their struggles came, in the words of Lincoln, “a new nation, conceived in liberty.” Our present challenges are real, but let us not imagine they are unprecedented. Rather, let us take courage from the example of those who came before us.
BY:
Harold Lowery is the author of the historical novel From Lexington to Yorktown.
Chao Tom
(Shrimp Mousse over Sugar Cane)
Ingredients
Sugar Cane
- 10 sticks/1 can ripe sugar cane, each 6 inches in length
Mousse
- 1 pound raw tiger shrimp, peeled
- 1 clove garlic, minced
- 1 teaspoon granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon vegetable oil
- 1/2 teaspoon fish sauce
Instructions
- Combine the prawns, garlic, sugar, salt and pepper.
- Place mixture in food processor until smooth.
- Grease hands with vegetable oil.
- Split each sugar cane into fourths, lengthwise.
- Cover the middle of each stick of sugar cane with 3 tablespoons of the prawn mixture, pressing lightly.
- Cover the exposed ends of the sugar cane stick with foil.
- Grill over a medium charcoal fire or cook under a preheated boiler for about 5 minutes, turning to cook evenly.
- Remove the foil.
Notes
Serving Suggestions:
Serve with lettuce leaves, basil, cilantro, sliced cucumber and bean sprouts.
Serve with rice paper wrap and angel hair pasta.
As an appetizer: Eat mousse off the sugar cane.
As an entree: Cut mousse off the sugar cane into pieces and wrap in rice paper with lettuce leaves and herbs. Dip in fish sauce.
María Medem’s Atmospheric Illustrations Are a Soothing Tonic for A Hectic World
María Medem lives and works in Spain. Her fascination for comics and abstraction led her to work very early on in the arts and illustration fields. Her work then evolved into narrative compositions borrowing from strange and surprising comic strips. She regularly collaborates with various publications such as Medium, the New York Times, Wired or Anxy magazine.
María’s creations are a soothing tonic for a hectic world. Drenched in resplendent sunset tones, these dreamy scenes and their peaceful characters capture comforting moments of tranquility.
More: Instagram h/t: itsnicethat
The Grand Totalitarian Plan:
This is the grand plan by RAND for the next couple of years.
Found HERE
70’s Best Disco, Funk & R’n’B Hits Vol.1 (Serega Bolonkin Video Mix)
Do you want Taiwan to be free from China and become an independent country?
I was born and grew up in Taiwan. I have never lived in mainland China, and do not consider myself enamored with the CCP. The points I am making below may even deviate from official CCP positions due to the latter’s inconvenience while treading on issues related to the Chinese Civil War. But I can afford to be more candid as I have no such baggage. I simply say it as is.
I have put in maybe more than 20 answers on Quora urging people not to ask questions like “Do you WANT Taiwan to be independent?” or “WHY can’t Taiwan be independent?”. These are useless questions. It is like asking an 8-year old “Do you WANT to go to math training camp, or do you WANT a big ice cream?”, or “WHY can’t I eat 10 big ice creams at once and never go to school?” These are useless questions. They belong to Facebook chat circles like those for dog lovers and cooking enthusiasts, and should not appear on Quora to waste people’s time.
The real, pragmatic questions, those having real bearing on facts and ensuing events that can give an understanding of the background reality and future developments, are very simple:
WHAT is the current legal status of Taiwan, and WHAT caused it to be?
WHAT needs to be done if Taiwan wants to be independent?
My simple answers based on international law and observation of facts:
- Taiwan is a province of China, because legally, everyone in the world, including the US, Taiwan itself, and all countries still having diplomatic ties with ROC/Taiwan, says so.
- It is the creation of World War II, the rightful claim earned with 30 million lives and trillions of properties lost in mainland China. What is won by fire and blood will not be shortchanged by saliva and keystrokes. It is just the cold, hard law of the world. Whoever frivolously tampers with it will be badly burned, as he deserves.
- Taiwan can become independent by demonstrating a commitment and willingness to sustain commensurate loss by fire and blood, as the mainland Chinese did in 1945. This is the universal law, proven again and again since time immemorial to this day, in Asia, in Europe, in the American Independence War, and in the American Civil War. Taiwan can become independent only by honoring this universal law.
- So far Taiwan only displayed a willingness to incur American losses of lives and properties toward this goal, so that Taiwan can steal an independence to continue on with its corrupt, kleptocratic ways, with the US as a collateral. This simply will not fly [1].
It has been somewhat surprising how little Westerners know the history about China and Taiwan, before they think they have the authority to comment on Taiwan’s future. Many believe that evil, demonic PRC and that angelic, adorable Taiwan popped out of a vacuum in 1949, with no history preceding. For the big picture, I suggest Wikipedia as a start, if you really want to have an educated opinion. And I suggest that you go back 2-300 years for your own good. Here I will just gather international treaties that defined Taiwan’s status that possess current legal power, acknowledged by all parties that had legal stakes and authorities over this matter in World War II. These included China, the US, the UK, and Japan. Since 1945, there has been no superseding treaty in contradiction, which was agreed and signed by all signatory nations mentioned above.
My remarks follow below the quoted treaties, which also touches on illegal sovereignty claims by Japan today over Ryukyu (aka Okinawa).
What I didn’t include here is the Constitution of the Republic of China (ROC), which currently controls the Chinese province of Taiwan, as well as small portions of the provinces of Fujian and Guangdong, and the Special District of Hainan, all provincial-level administrative regions of the ROC. The ROC Constitution proclaims in no uncertain terms that Taiwan is a province of China.
These treaty articles below contain all relevant information. You can also skip to my Remarks on Key Points later if you are not interested in the details of these treaties.
_______________________
<Begin of Quotes of Treaties>
The Joint Communiqué of the People's Republic of China and the United States of America - August 17, 1982 5. The United States Government attaches great importance to its relations with China, and reiterates that it has no intention of infringing on Chinese sovereignty and territorial integrity, or interfering in China's internal affairs, or pursuing a policy of "two Chinas" or "one China, one Taiwan." The United States Government understands and appreciates the Chinese policy of striving for a peaceful resolution of the Taiwan question as indicated in China's Message to Compatriots in Taiwan issued on January 1, 1979 and the Nine-Point Proposal put forward by China on September 30, 1981. The new situation which has emerged with regard to the Taiwan question also provides favorable conditions for the settlement of United States-China differences over United States arms sales to Taiwan. 6. Having in mind the foregoing statements of both sides, the United States Government states that it does not seek to carry out a long-term policy of arms sales to Taiwan, that its arms sales to Taiwan will not exceed, either in qualitative or in quantitative terms, the level of those supplied in recent years since the establishment of diplomatic relations between the United States and China, and that it intends gradually to reduce its sale of arms to Taiwan, leading, over a period of time, to a final resolution. In so stating, the United States acknowledges China's consistent position regarding the thorough settlement of this issue.
__________
The Joint Communiqué of the Government of the People’s Republic of China and the Government of Japan – September 29, 1972
3. The Government of the People's Republic of China reiterates that Taiwan is an inalienable part of the territory of the People's Republic of China. The Government of Japan fully understands and respects this stand of the Government of the People's Republic of China, and it firmly maintains its stand under Article 8 of the Potsdam Proclamation.
__________
The Postsdam Proclamation – July 26, 1945; Signatories: The Republic of China, The United States of America, and The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
8. The terms of the Cairo Declaration shall be carried out and Japanese sovereignty shall be limited to the islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, Shikoku and such minor islands as we determine.
__________
The Cairo Declaration – December 1, 1943; Signatories: The Republic of China, The United States of America, and The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
It is their purpose that Japan shall be stripped of all the islands in the Pacific which she has seized or occupied since the beginning of the first World War in 1914, and that all the territories Japan has stolen form the Chinese, such as Manchuria, Formosa, and the Pescadores, shall be restored to the Republic of China. Japan will also be expelled from all other territories which she has taken by violence and greed. The aforesaid three great powers, mindful of the enslavement of the people of Korea, are determined that in due course Korea shall become free and independent.
<End of Quotes of Treaties >
____________________________
Remarks on Key Points:
- There has been no international treaty pertaining to the legal status of Taiwan since Japan’s unconditioned surrender pursuant to the terms of the Postdam Proclamation in 1945, signed by all original signatory nations. This is very important because of the word “we” in Article 8 of the Postdam Proclamation. Any treaty not signed by all signatories of the Postdam Proclamation will not have legal power superseding the terms of the latter. This means neither the US, nor the UK, nor China, nor a subset thereof, can single-handedly determine Japan’s post-war territory outside the 4 home islands.
- Because of this, and because of the even more explicit and categorical terms in the Cairo Declaration, Japan does not have sovereignty over Ryukyu, which it calls Okinawa. At the end of WWII, a la Potsdam, all Allied Powers denied Japan’s sovereignty over Ryukyu, which Japan also acceded to as part of its unconditioned surrender [2]. Ryukyu was an independent country that Japan brutally annexed in the late 19th century, murdering its people and obliterating its language, culture and history. Ryukyuans were used as human shields by the Japanese during Allied invasion in WWII [3], and are still treated like second class citizens today, discriminated against socially, culturally, and through unfair laws, such as disproportionate burden of US military bases in Japan. Ryukyu Independence movement is persecuted and heavily suppressed inside Japan by the government today. Japan will have to be held accountable to this illegality and let the formerly free Ryukyuans regain their independence.
- These treaties clearly precluded any attempt to legally define Taiwan as a separate entity outside China, let alone a “country”. This is an outcome of war, after the people in mainland China, not Taiwan, fought Japan for 8 years, losing 30 million lives and trillions in properties. An outcome of war earned in fire and blood is not going to be shortchanged with saliva and keystrokes, nor will it be undermined by giving people who didn’t pay a price a bigger voice than those who did! I think this is a point anyone vainly chanting the slogan of freedom and democracy for Taiwan should take a very hard look at and fully grasp its gravity. If you ignore this, you are making a big mistake!
- To be absolutely fair, and true to the spirit of all the above treaties, there is an unresolved issue between the Republic of China (ROC) and the People’s Republic of China (PRC) over who will eventually be the only legal and exclusive representative of the re-unified China including the province of Taiwan. This can be achieved either peacefully or non-peacefully [4]. But none of these disputes involves whether Taiwan is an independent country. Not a single legal document, including ROC’s (Taiwan) own Constitution, does. Taiwan is not a country, nor does there exist any dispute over such question, period!
- As to any attempt to change the above international treaties, as I said, that amounts to changing the outcome of a war, and WWII at that! You are talking about changing an outcome of WWII as a result of 30 million lives and trillions of properties lost. Ideas like that should not be toyed with frivolously, unless one is ready to show a willingness to pay a commensurate price, as the mainland Chinese did when they earned the right to sign the Cairo Declaration and the Potsdam Proclamation. Those legal treaties were not handed to them for free, but with an awful price tag! One does not meddle with such things frivolously! The mainland Chinese paid the deadly price and earned its rightful claim. One simply cannot ask them, or anyone in their position, to throw it up for nothing! The US recovered Guam and acquired the Mariana Islands from Japan, and Russia acquired the Kuril Islands from Japan, all outcomes of WWII, all islands much smaller than Taiwan. Russia even pushed its territory westward by eating into Germany and Poland. Would either of them give up these trophies of war? No, and rightly so! Japan acquired the Marshall Islands from Germany as a trophy from WWI, and it was under no obligation to cough it up until it was beaten with fire and blood in WWII. End of discussion! That’s how the real world works. Meta-narratives have no place in such matters!
- Whether it was ROC or PRC, the 30 million dead and those doing the fighting were the mainland Chinese, and they should have the biggest say on the legal status and future of Taiwan according to these treaties, and they already did, with the other Allied Powers consenting. The spiritual forebears (and actually, soul-inspirations) of the Taiwanese DPP party, the colonial slaves of Japan, were really in this sense the losing side of WWII and should just shut up about Taiwan’s status. This however is not Taiwan’s ruling DPP party’s narrative, and not how they are brainwashing its youths. The “pride” and “courage” [5] of the brainwashed youths chanting self-determination slogans in Taiwan are anchored in a seceded Taiwan as its fundamental premise. Secessions are won by blood and fire, never by hot air. Just ask the Catalonians, the Chechens, or the Confederate States of America! Taiwan is rightfully the territory hard earned by mainland Chinese of the ROC, and ROC in Taiwan has a guideline for re-unification with the mainland, which was well on its way from 2008 up to 2016 before the DPP sabotaged it and totally steered it off course toward secession. All this aggressive posturing you see today from the PRC toward Taiwan did not exist before 2016. It started purely as a reaction to DPP and Trump’s provocation. Everyone can testify to that [4]. The DPP of Taiwan did not pay any price, other than stealing the fruits of other’s sacrifice. All hot air and no sacrifice? It will not work. It will not stand!
- I would like to be fair and objective. I have no problem, as I have always maintained, if the Taiwanese were willing to fight like a man, the way the mainland Chinese fought Japan for 8 years and lost 30 million lives and trillions in properties in order to recover Taiwan, its former province, in 1945, and if the Taiwanese displayed commitment and determination to sustain commensurate loss in lives and property as the mainland Chinese did in the 1940s, with or without US aid, to achieve their aspiration, then they can do whatever they want, and they have my respect [6]. But what I am seeing is that Taiwan is cowering like a dog, barking behind its master, the US, hoping the master would fight and die for it so that its kleptocratic politicians can continue to engage in systemic corruption, embezzlement, extortion, graft, nepotism, cronyism, and suppression of political dissention and opposition, whistleblowing, press freedom and judicial independence, while pushing further its campaign to brainwash and bribe the young to ensure open-ended hold on power, bolstered by the blank checks issued by Western powers and media for unspeakable ulterior motives. I consider them despicable and not deserving of any of the rotten meat they are drooling over.
- Finally, from the US-China joint Communiqué, one can see that the US didn’t hold up its end of the bargain regarding arms sales to Taiwan.
I would also include here a comprehensive argument about the current situation in this link:
- Chiu Yu’s answer to Why should we risk American lives protecting Taiwan?
- Chiu Yu’s answer to Should the United States defend or ditch Taiwan?
- Chiu Yu’s answer to What do you think Taiwan should do? Reunify with mainland China, or double down on its independence? Any other possibilities?
Another link, more focused on Taiwan itself but with some redundancy with the above, is here:
Chiu Yu’s post in China – World Leader.
As a last word, I should note that those mainland Chinese of WWII didn’t sacrifice for nothing. To this day, the Taiwanese DPP still doesn’t dare declare independence, the reason for which ultimately can be attributed to the WWII sacrifice made by these people, which gives the rest of China, including people from Taiwan like me, and righteous people around the globe, legitimacy, entitlement and justice behind them, to reject Taiwan independence offhand.
Notes:
[1] The US is gradually coming to see this Taiwanese chicanery using the US as a collateral, and has recently demanded that Taiwan take measures to beef up its own abysmal defense infrastructure to prove it is willing to fight for itself. So recently one can see a lot of hot-air measures being thrown around on this. However, these are mostly cosmetic and superficial, with the most fanatic independence-supporting young generation vehemently opposing (close to 90%) military drafts and extension of reserve military training. Let’s see if these facades will swindle the US, or the US will call its bluff in time.
[2] Emperor Hirohito expressed Japan’s acceptance of the terms of Potsdam on September 10th, 1945, via midiation through Sweden and Switzerland. Franklin Roosevelt asked Chiang Kai-Shek, leader of the Republic of China, to take over Ryukyu’s governance in 1945, but the latter declined due to concerns about the emerging civil war. The Republic of China (Taiwan) never recognized Japan’s rule over Okinawa for over 60 years after 1945. It continued to call it Ryukyu in official documents and sent ambassadorial level diplomates to Ryukyu in protest. This position lasted until the early 2000s.
[3] See the HBO series “The Pacific” produced by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks.
[4] Actually, Taiwan has a bigger say on this question, peaceful or non-peaceful re-unification?
- Chiu Yu’s answer to How is it possible that some Chinese say they aim to reunify Taiwan and China peacefully, without war? How would they do that?
- Chiu Yu’s answer to Why do the mainland Chinese hate Taiwan so much?
[5] Some more insights on this:
- Chiu Yu’s answer to Most Chinese Mainlanders believe that Taiwan will give up without a fight if China invades, but what do most Taiwanese believe?
- Chiu Yu’s post in China – World Leader.
When one gets to the very bottom of the DPP party in Taiwan, the word is: MONEY. No pride, no bravery, just Money.
- Chiu Yu’s answer to Is Taiwan geared up to take on China?
- Chiu Yu’s answer to What can mainland Chinese, Singaporeans and Hong Kongers learn from the Taiwanese people’s achievement of democracy?
- Chiu Yu’s answer to Why do the mainland Chinese hate Taiwan so much?
I also have a recent, somewhat long post about today’s real Taiwan, with no reference to China, if you have the time.
I am perfectly sure that once China reclaims Taiwan, it can prosecute all the DPP members without ever resorting to anti-China charges (and these DPP members will be the first ones to lay down arms and run away or greet the PLA, mark my words). They can prosecute basically all of them on charges of sexual misconduct, forgery, and money laundering. That will be more than enough to keep them locked up for life.
[6] There is only one such person I can think of in the entire Taiwan, Mr. Shih Ming-Teh (施明德,), the only real Taiwan secessionist willing to die for his cause. He has my deepest, 100% respect. He has been humiliated and ostracized over decades by his own DPP party for having too much integrity, because the rest of DPP are all sleazy crooks and thieves. News coming out today (10/31/2021): Mr Shih asked the ruling DPP party to disclose some old official documents to vindicate his reputation and substatiate his accusation of some DPP leaders for betrayal and treachery. The DPP government’s answer: These documents will be classified for 80 years. No, I am not joking.
Note Added 11/14/2021
But How About Texas?
Does the State of Texas have more legal justification to seek independence from the US than the Province of Taiwan from China?
A State in the US Federal system is very different from a Province in a centralized government system such as China, France, or to an extent Canada. A state (or a Bund in Germany) is an independent entity enjoying much more sovereignty and autonomy than a province, which is just an administrative region of convenience. Of all the US states, Texas stands out as the only independent country that chose to join the Union, of its own accord, on more favorable terms than other states. Even now, the electrical power grids in the US are divided into the Eastern Grid, the Western Grid, and the Texas Grid.
So, can Texas secede if it wants to? According to US Federal law, it cannot!
Even during the American Civil War, when Texas declared secession from the USA, the US Federal law still adjudicated the secession as illegal, and so far as the US was concerned, Texas never seceded for a single day since it first joined in 1845!
To secede, Texas needs more than a referendum among all Texans, but one among All Americans!
Surprise! Are you aware of this?
And now, a Province of China, not a State, with much less claim of sovereignty than a State or a Bund to begin with, with its own government’s Constitution saying it is only a province of China, and with every single one of the 195* countries of the world saying the same, can secede more than Texas can?
Actually, it can (as can Texas), if it follows the recipe I prescribed in the main text above.
Or, if China is really nice, and willing to accord Taiwan the same status within China as Texas has within the US, although as I explained, Taiwan is not entitled to this same status, then this can happen with a referendum among all 1.4 billion people in China. That would be extremely kind of China, for going out of its way to accommodate this.
* How many countries are there in the world? (2021) – Total & List
Note Added 07/05/2022
I would like to append here another answer, which I consider relevant, especially the note added at the end on 07/04/2022, which should dispel objections from some people who have a more in-depth understanding of the Taiwanese situation. I also want to bring this into a more humanistic perspective.
What do you think Taiwan should do? Reunify with mainland China, or double down on its independence? Any other possibilities?
I was born and grew up in Taiwan. I have never lived in mainland China and do not consider myself enamored with the CCP. What do I think Taiwan should do? I want Taiwan to be honest with itself, and with its own history. This means Taiwan, which is a province of China by any political or legal criterion one can find in this world, should come clean of its mendacity about its non-existent claim to sovereignty, and its cowardly sleaze to manipulate the situation, creating a scarecrow of China and a collateral of the US, all for its politicians to solidify their grips on power so that they can steal more money. In my view, the only paths that a leader of Taiwan, honest to his/her conscience and to history, are the following. * Conduct peaceful negotiations with the PRC to bring the ongoing civil war to an end, followed by negotiations on the terms for the province of Taiwan to be re-integrated into China, under whatever flag is agreed by both sides. * Make good on the sacred ROC mission, always in the Constitution and never abandoned, of defeating the CCP in the ongoing civil war by militarily recovering the Chinese mainland and fulfill Dr. Sun Yat-sen’s vision on China. * Abolish the ROC Constitution and declare independence for the Republic of Taiwan. Be prepared to defend and die for your honor and dignity like a man, the way the Americans did in their own Independence War, and their Civil War, and not hide behind your protectors like a slimy mouse with the only desire of stealing more money, green cards at the ready, while letting others fight and die for you. All three paths are honest and honorable in my opinion. The leaders and people will have my utmost respect, and I fully support any one of the above if it is the choice of the Taiwanese people. I should remind you that the fact that Taiwan is a province of China was a direct consequence of the Chinese people taking the honest and honorable path, earning it with their lives through a test by fire and blood. You need to do at least as much to change that. There is no getting-around. In other words, I want Taiwan to have honor and dignity, and be honest with itself, and with its history. This is all I care. As to which of the above three paths Taiwan will take, that will not affect my opinion of the Taiwanese people in any way. For elaboration and explanation of the above, check out the nested links inside these answers. Chiu Yu's answer to Should the United States defend or ditch Taiwan? Chiu Yu's answer to Do you want Taiwan to be free from China and become an independent country? Chiu Yu's answer to A recent poll said that 70% of Taiwan's youths are willing to die for Taiwan's independence. Is that true? Chiu Yu's answer to If China invaded Taiwan, what would the inflation be in the US?
Note Added 07/08/2022
I got a comment recently, like this, “This article is just CCP propaganda! The US needs to publicly commit to defending Taiwan! Taiwan and the South China Sea are strategic areas of control. That’s why China is so keen to conquer these areas! This will make it easy for China to intimidate and to control all Asian nations.”
This is my response:
Unfortunately, other than name-calling, hot air and hubris, which all kindergartners can do, you are incapable of coming up with a single coherent argument based on logic and facts to dispute any of my points. This is typical of the practice of a country like say, North Korea, where all different voices are simply labeled “from the enemy” without a rational debate because otherwise you would lose. I believe this gives a good idea of the kind of background you are coming from.
I repeat. You are incapable of refuting a single point in all my posts, other than name-calling and hot air. Frankly, I am quite disappointed by the quality of some Quora comments.
The “logic” you used, if it can be so called, is also quite infantile. It can be easily paraphrased as follows if it could stand:
“China needs to publicly commit to defending Florida independence! Florida and the Caribbeans are strategic areas of control. That’s why the US is so keen to conquer Florida! This will make it easy for the US to intimidate and to control all Caribbean nations.”
“Russia needs to publicly commit to defending Anatolia independence! Anatolia and the Bosporus are strategic areas of control. That’s why Turkey is so keen to conquer these areas! This will make it easy for Turkey to intimidate and to control all Mediterranean nations.”
“South Korea needs to publicly commit to defending Hokkaido independence! Hokkaido and the Tsugaru Strait are strategic areas of control. That’s why Japan is so keen to conquer these areas! This will make it easy for Japan to intimidate and to control all East Asian nations.”
“I need to grab John’s wife! John’s wife is so beautiful. That’s why John is so keen to marry her! This will make it easy for John to boast about her in front of our friends.”
“I need to steal from Mike! Mike is so rich! That’s why Mike is so keen to make money! This will make it easy for John to intimidate me and my poor friends.”
This is the kind of pathetic logic I see in your comment, and the exactly equivalent arguments to your comment, one completely ignoring history, justice and morality, international law and treaties, and wellbeing of people, and resorting only to naked geopolitical zero-sum thinking, only to Jungle Rule. It is infantile and uneducated, and does not deserve to be taken serious in a rational and civilized world.
The reason why these are exactly equivalent arguments is that Taiwan is a province of China, the same way Florida, Anatolia, and Hokkaido are of their respective countries. This is a fact recognized by 100% of the countries in the world, with zero exception, including the US and Taiwan/ROC itself, full stop.
You are welcome to come up with an exception to the above assertion. I am waiting.
Note Added 08/08/2022
Magdalene Tan reminded me of another example, excellent for the thesis above, where a people had to put their lives on the line, incurring heavy loss, to achieve independence. That people were, of course, the Israelis, who had to face a coalition of seven Arab nations and two independent armies all by itself in 1947-49, with little outside help. I have read some accounts of the many hardships faced by the Israelis then, and the resourceful get-arounds they crafted. This was the requisite price any nation has to pay to be worthy of its statehood. Hiding behind some master never works.
Israel’s precarious independence was again challenged in 1967 in the Six-Day War, well known and requiring no elaboration. I’ll just mention an anecdote in relation to Taiwan, concerning the words of the DPP veteran and party elder (大老), Mr. Shen (沈富雄):
During the Six-Day War, American Jews sold their homes and properties to donate to Israel, and sent their children to Israel to serve in the army. These acts greatly energized Israel’s morale and contributed non-trivially to its victory.
What about those Taiwan independence advocates in the US during the 1996 Taiwan Strait crisis?
Mr. Shen was too polite to point out the detail himself.
During the 1996 Taiwan Strait crisis, many, many Taiwan independence advocates in Taiwan emigrated to the US, Australia, and Canada in desperation. If you were a Canadian in BC or an Australian in Sydney in 1996, you know what I mean. In the meantime, none of the Taiwan independence advocates in the US returned to Taiwan to fight, but all cowered in the US like dogs, busy making ever more money, their children buying luxury homes, and their grandchildren going to Harvard and Yale in droves.
In this regard, the prospect for Taiwan independence does not look good to me.
Note Added 09/10/2022
There are comments closely echoing the narrative I see from some Taiwan independence extremists, as well as their American and Japanese supporters obviously with ulterior motives, especially Japanese. Some of these people even petitioned for Taiwan to become the 51st state of the USA. Their argument is based on translating the US contribution to Allied victory in the Pacific to a US claim on the sovereignty of Taiwan. This is totally irrelevant and blind to the history of WWII, out of both ignorance and a blind trust in American propaganda about WWII for Cold War purposes.
My response to a recent such comment is quoted below.
________________________________________
Of people taking exception to my above assertions on the sovereignty over Taiwan, basically none, including Westerners with minimal knowledge of WWII, would do it on the grounds you mentioned, that since the US was the main driving force in defeating Japan in the Pacific, it also has the claim to sovereignty over Taiwan. Nobody is trivializing US war contributions in the Pacific. But by your logic, the US should also claim France, Greece, Holland, Poland, Korea, Philippines, Malaysia, etc.. And China should have some claim of Myanmar and even some neighboring areas too. That is sheer nonsense. I suggest you do some study and see what FDR and Truman, the American presidents at the time, not the Chinese, signed onto in the Cairo Declaration and the Potsdam Proclamation. You need to take your attention away from US propaganda serving Cold War agendas, and get some real information and truth about WWII.
Also, your point about the US having the claim of Taiwan due to its war effort is also preposterous. Nobody is trivializing US war contributions. But by your logic, the US should also claim France, Greece, Holland, Poland, Korea, Philippines. And China should have some claim of Myanmar too. That is sheer nonsense. I suggest you do some study and see what FDR and Truman, the American presidents at the time, not the Chinese, signed on in the Cairo Declaration and the Potsdam Proclamation before coming here to make your comments.
By the way, it is true that the US role in defeating Japan in WWII has been tremendous, but the Chinese WWII sacrifice and contribution have been seriously downplayed and trivialized in Western and American Cold War narratives for obvious reasons*. The US and UK are not known for altruistic charities in the international arena. If FDR, Churchill etc. had not seen enough convincing contributions and sacrifices from the Chinese side, they would not have voluntarily signed onto the Cairo and Potsdam Treaties out of kindness of heart, and there is nothing wrong with that either. It is a cold-blooded world.
Kraphong Khao Priao Wan
(Sweet and Sour Fish – Thai)
This is prepared from steaks of kraphong khao (sea bass), but you could easily use another fish (it works very well with shark steaks). You can cook the fish in a electric deep fryer if you wish (high heat is not required). The sweet pepper (prik wan) is a Thai equivalent of the bell pepper, but is slightly less bitter. If you can’t get rice wine, use a drinkable dry sherry.
Ingredients
Fish
- 4 half inch thick fish steaks
Marinade
- 2 tablespoons rice wine
- 2 tablespoons light soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons wheat flour
- 2 tablespoons rice flour
Sauce
- 1 onion, chopped
- 1 sweet pepper, chopped
- 1/3 cup granulated sugar
- 2/3 cup tomato ketchup
- 1/4 cup rice vinegar (or other white vinegar)
- 4 tablespoons rice wine
- 1/2 cup fish stock (or water)
- 1/2 cup pineapple pieces
Instructions
- Marinade: Dredge the fish in Marinade, and let stand for about an hour so that the fish is infused with the flavor.
- Heat oil for deep frying in a deep skillet or large wok over medium heat, and when it is hot, add the fish, turning once, until cooked through.
- Remove the fish, drain the excess oil, and place on the serving platter.
- Sauce: In a small pan sauté the onion and sweet pepper, add the remaining ingredients, except the pineapple, and simmer until slightly reduced.
- Add about a tablespoon of cornstarch or rice flour to thicken the sauce, then add the pineapple and heat through.
- Pour over the fish, and serve with steamed jasmine rice.
Did the Neocons Save the World from the Thucydides Trap?
Ron Unz • April 18, 2023
Over the last couple of years I’d begun seeing our growing conflict with China described as an inevitable consequence of “the Thucydides trap” but hadn’t been entirely sure of the source of that idea. Decades ago, I’d had a very strong interest in Classical Greek history, so the reference was obvious to me: the bitter rivalry between a dominant Sparta and a rising Athens that had led to the decades long Peloponnesian War that devastated Greece. But only recently did I discover that the term had been popularized in Destined for War, a 2017 national bestseller by Harvard’s Graham Allison, which had followed his earlier 2015 Atlantic article on the same subject.
- The Thucydides Trap: Are the U.S. and China Headed for War?
In 12 of 16 past cases in which a rising power has confronted a ruling power, the result has been bloodshed
Graham Allison • The Atlantic • September 24, 2015 • 3,700 Words
Although I’d never read any of Allison’s previous works, he’d become the founding dean of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government just a couple of years before I’d entered the college as a freshman so I’d been quite familiar with his name for decades. His topic concerned me so I decided to read his relatively short book as well as his original article on the same subject.
Allison’s entire academic career has been extremely sober and respectable, and this surely magnified the impact of his incendiary title and dramatic prediction. The front of the paperback edition was packed with a remarkable ten pages of glowing endorsements by a long list of the West’s most prestigious public figures and intellectuals, ranging from Joe Biden to Henry Kissinger to Gen. David Petraeus to Klaus Schwab. It seemed obvious that his message had struck a deep chord, and his national bestseller received enormous acclaim, being selected as a book of the year by the New York Times, the London Times, the Financial Times, and Amazon. So even as far back as six years ago, the serious possibility of an American war with China had become a very hot topic to our political and intellectual elites.
Allison’s reasoning was simple yet compelling. As he explained in the opening of his original 2015 article, although war between China and America might seem unlikely or even unthinkable, a broad consideration of historical analogues suggested otherwise, with the unexpected outbreak of World War I being the most obvious example.
Following the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union more than three decades ago, America had emerged as the sole, unchallenged global superpower. But over the last generation, the tremendous growth rate of the Chinese economy had propelled it past America’s in real size, the first such transition since our own country had overtaken Britain near the end of the 19th century. China’s technological progress had been equally rapid, and in our modern world these constitute the raw elements of global power, while China had also begun bolstering its military, not previously a high priority.
I’d certainly been well aware of these same trends and several years earlier I’d published a long article of my own on the contrasting trajectories of China and America, but I’d never considered military conflict as a realistic possibility.
- China’s Rise, America’s Fall
Which superpower is more threatened by its “extractive elites”?
Ron Unz • The American Conservative • April 17, 2012 • 6,600 Words
However, when Allison and his associates sifted the last 500 years of history to locate cases in which the rapidly growing power of a rising nation had threatened to overtake that of a dominant reigning one, they discovered that in well over half the examples—12 out of 16— the result had been war.
Some of these individual historical cases may easily be disputed—and indeed a couple of the ones provided in his 2015 article differed from those in his 2017 book—but the general pattern seemed quite clear.
Even the oldest and deepest cultural and political ties hardly prevented this outcome. Prior to World War I, Britain and Germany had never fought a war against each other, and indeed the latter’s Prussian predecessor had traditionally been Britain’s staunchest Continental ally. The two imperial families were also deeply interwoven, with the British monarchy having multiple German antecedents, while Queen Victoria’s favorite grandchild was Kaiser Wilhelm II, and she’d died in his arms. The English language itself had German roots, hardly surprising since the Angles and the Saxons had originally been Germanic tribes. Yet all these centuries of close ties counted for little compared to the simple geopolitical fact that Germany’s growing industrial and military power threatened to overshadow that of its kindred nation on the other side of the Channel.
By contrast, the political, cultural, and racial gulf separating America from a rising China seems immense, easily lending itself to the crudest demonization, the sort of populist demagoguery able to stoke national hatred. Not only is China’s language and culture totally different from our own, but for three generations that country has been governed by a Communist Party whose official ideology is utterly contrary to our own democratic constitutionalism. Many hundreds of thousands of Chinese troops had fought against American forces during the Korean War, inflicting most of our 36,000 combat deaths.
Obviously, all of these points of past hostility had been set aside after President Richard Nixon’s historic opening to China in 1972, and our two countries had become quasi-allies against the military might of the Soviet Union during the latter stages of the Cold War. But with geopolitical realities now apparently driving us into likely confrontation, these facts would provide an easy means of resurrecting and focusing popular hostility against our rising, rival power, with a confrontation over the independently-ruled Chinese province of Taiwan in the South China Sea providing a natural flash-point.
According to most accounts of World War I, the formation of two rival alliances had transformed Europe into a tinder-box, eventually ignited by the spark of a Balkan assassination and resulting in a cataclysmic war that neither side had sought nor expected; and this is Allison’s model for how a military clash between China and America might occur. One of his later chapters is entitled “From Here to War” and he provides various scenarios of how hostile conflicting naval patrols in the South China Sea might easily result in a collision involving loss of life, prompting several rounds of face-saving escalation on both sides and eventually erupting into full-scale warfare.
Allison’s most famous previous work had been his landmark 1971 study of the Cuban Missile Crisis and he had later spent a number of years as an advisor in the Reagan and Clinton Defense Departments, so he was well-versed in the realities of such military decision-making. His concerns seem reasonable and he described several such Chinese-American naval incidents that had been narrowly averted in the recent past. When the military forces of two large, hostile powers are aggressively patrolling the same region, an eventual clash hardly seems unlikely, which political pressures might then escalate in dangerous ways.
The provocative title of Allison’s book probably should have included a question-mark—Destined for War?—but otherwise I unfortunately found his historical and geopolitical analysis all too plausible.
Allison has hardly been alone among prominent academics in thinking along those same lines. In 2001, eminent political scientist John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago had published The Tragedy of Great Power Politics, providing a theoretical framework for his doctrine of “offensive realism,” which he claimed best explained the behavior of nations. Under his conception, all great powers aspired to become hegemons—countries far more powerful than any of their regional rivals—and for hundreds of years wars had been fought either to establish or to block such hegemony, with the Napoleonic Wars and the First and Second World Wars being obvious examples of this.
Although such hegemony was regional in scope, he argued that there was also a strong incentive for an established hegemon in one part of the world to block the rise of any potentially rival hegemon elsewhere. Thus, once the U.S. had achieved a hegemonic position in the Western hemisphere, it had naturally intervened in the two world wars to prevent Germany from gaining a similar status in Europe or Japan from doing so in East Asia.
According to Mearsheimer, typical strategies involved the creation and support of local balancing coalitions, alliances of other regional powers used to prevent the rise of a local hegemon. Thus, America had supported Britain and France in order to prevent Germany from gaining European hegemony in World War I, and did the same for those two powers along with the Soviets in World War II. Similarly, our country had blocked Japan’s drive for East Asian hegemony by allying ourselves with China, Australia, and Britain in the Far East theater of that latter conflict.
The updated 2014 edition of his book included a long last chapter focused upon China, whose large and rapidly growing power seemed likely to establish it as a potential Asian hegemon. Therefore, under Mearsheimer’s theoretical framework, a clash with America was almost inevitable, and our country would naturally foster an anti-China coalition of other local powers to forestall China’s regional dominance. A decade earlier, he had already hotly disputed this same issue against famed geopolitical strategist Zbigniew Brzezinski in the pages of Foreign Policy, with these two leading figures of the “realist” school debating whether an American military conflict with China was likely to occur.
- Clash of the Titans
Is China more interested in money than missiles? Will the United States seek to contain China as it once contained the Soviet Union? Zbigniew Brzezinski and John Mearsheimer go head-to-head on whether these two great powers are destined to fight it out.
Zbigniew Brzezinski vs. John Mearsheimer • Foreign Policy • Jan.-Feb. 2005 • 2,600 Words
The crucial point emphasized by both Allison and Mearsheimer is that the particular characteristics of America and China—their political systems, cultures, histories, and national leaderships—were largely irrelevant in predicting their likely military confrontation. Instead, all that mattered was America’s status as a reigning global power and China’s as a rising one, with all those other differences merely serving as convenient means of mobilizing popular support behind a conflict driven solely by considerations of power politics. This sort of framework constitutes geopolitical “realism” in its purest form.
Although such a basis for conflict or alliance might seem alien to many Americans, it has actually been quite common in the modern era. After all, arch-republican France was the closest military partner of Czarist Russia’s absolute monarchy in their balancing alliance against Germany prior to World War I. The liberal democracies of Britain and America later allied themselves with Stalin’s Soviet Union against Germany, and die-hard anti-Communist Winston Churchill was a leading advocate of that policy. More recently, America had joined with Maoist China to oppose the far less ideologically extreme Soviet Union because the latter was viewed as a powerful military threat to both. Political differences—or similarities—have often been swamped by more practical considerations in international relations.
Neither Allison nor Mearsheimer makes an ironclad case that war with China is inevitable, nor do they claim to do so. But the historical evidence they present is sufficiently extensive to be quite worrisome. And as Allison sketches out, under a tense, confrontational situation, relatively minor military incidents in the South China Sea could easily escalate, perhaps even eventually reaching the threshold of nuclear war.
Mearsheimer’s updated volume had appeared in 2014 followed by Allison’s national bestseller in 2017, and the unfortunate situation they predicted has become more and more plausible every year, marked by a steady increase in the rhetoric of America’s political leadership as amplified by the mainstream media. I suspect that their books and other public presentations may have fostered this trend, transforming the notion of such a global war with China from the unthinkable to the plausibly realistic. Several senior figures in the Trump Administration, most notably National Security Advisor John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, were certainly hostile towards China, a country they portrayed as our leading international adversary, and much of the Republican Party has also adopted that same rhetoric.
After the Democrats regained the White House in 2020, many had expected these trends to reverse, but instead they have actually accelerated, with the Biden Administration imposing unprecedented economic sanctions on China’s crucial microchip industry as well as loud saber-rattling over Taiwan, and the Democrats and Republicans have now begun competing over which party can be tougher on China. The huge recent media flap over an errant Chinese balloon is the most extreme example of this.
As Mearsheimer and Allison both emphasized, a central component of America’s anti-China geopolitical strategy has been to organize a local balancing coalition to support our containment efforts, and Anglophone Australia has been a charter member of that group. We share a British colonial heritage with that country, which fought as our staunch ally in World War II, and its politics is heavily influenced by native son Rupert Murdoch’s powerful right-wing media empire. So given these factors, Australia’s once very friendly relations with China have rapidly shifted in this new direction, marked by episodes of intense public hostility and trade embargoes.
Naively optimistic Americans might hope that any future war with China could be kept far from our shores, with our own large country protected by the width of the Pacific Ocean. But no rational Australian could feel the same way, since his nation is located in that region and is dwarfed by a China more than fifty times larger in population, likely ensuring that any war would have devastating consequences. Thoughtful Australians have surely recognized such facts and grown alarmed at these dangerous international trends, so it was hardly surprising that one of the first major responses to the Allison-Mearsheimer framework came from an Australian.
Kevin Rudd had served two terms as Prime Minister of his country (2007-2010 and 2013), and afterward relocated to America, where he later became President of the Asia Society based in New York City prior to being named Australia’s ambassador to our country a few weeks ago. In March 2022, he published The Avoidable War, bearing the grimly accurate subtitle “The Dangers of a Catastrophic Conflict between the US and Xi Jinping’s China.” Although I had only been very slightly familiar with his career, I decided to read his book for his insights on averting that looming global conflict.
Rudd seems to possess an ideal background for the important task he has set himself, having majored in Chinese studies in college and being completely fluent in Mandarin, a language he began learning at age 18. As he explained in his introduction, he has lived and traveled extensively in both China and America, has many friends in each country, and very much hoped they could avert what he considers their unnecessary conflict. I found his book excellent and it certainly merited the glowing praise it received from Allison himself, a personal friend of the author, as well as from Kissinger and other leading American military and academic figures. The work was published in English and obviously aimed primarily at an American audience, so it appropriately devoted the bulk of its pages to explicating China’s perspective, but the American side of the conflict also received considerable coverage.
Personalities may often matter little in geopolitics, but there are also some exceptions. Following the 1997 death of Deng Xiaoping, China had been run by a collective leadership, with several jostling factions and important figures usually sharing political power with its top leader. But Rudd emphasized that this situation has now drastically changed, and Chinese President Xi Jinping had successfully established his personal authority in China to an unprecedented extent, sidelining all his potential Communist Party rivals and making himself the most powerful Chinese leader since Mao. Xi also managed to remove the reelection term limits for his office and although he is now 69, his father lived to 88 while his mother is still alive at 96, so he could still remain China’s paramount leader through the 2020s and into the 2030s.
Given these realities, any current analysis of Chinese goals and strategies should necessarily focus on those of President Xi, who therefore constitutes the central figure of Rudd’s book. Indeed, the work seemed to heavily overlap with the author’s Oxford doctoral dissertation on “Xi Jinping’s Worldview” that he had also been preparing during those same years
Rudd seems uniquely qualified to provide this analysis. Prior to becoming Prime Minister, he had had a long career as an Australian diplomat, eventually rising to become Foreign Minister, and he had first met Xi more than 35 years ago, when both were very junior figures; over the years he has spent a total of ten hours in conversation with him on six separate occasions, including some that were quite informal. Add to this his multitude of other personal sources acquired over the decades, both Chinese and Western, and I doubt that there are many outsiders who can match his understanding of the goals of China’s top leader. Therefore, we should take the author quite seriously when on a couple of occasions he described these in dramatic terms: “Xi wants to secure a place for himself in Chinese party history that is at least equal to Mao and greater than Deng.”
Rudd presents Xi’s major goals in a series of ten chapters, representing the concentric circles of his strategic objectives, and these occupy half the book. Xi places the greatest importance upon maintaining political power and securing national unity, followed by economic development, modernizing the military, and then increasing China’s influence in its neighborhood, along its Asian periphery, and eventually worldwide. I found Rudd’s organizational approach helpful and his analysis quite plausible.
Obviously, major nations often possess conflicting interests, and the rise of Chinese power would necessarily produce a relative decline in America’s, but across all those chapters I found few deep-seated, inherent conflicts between our two continental-scale countries. Just a few weeks ago, I had reread Zbigniew Brzezinski’s influential 1997 book The Grand Chessboard. That author had similarly laid out a set of strategies and goals intended to secure America’s influence and position at the head of our global community, but his plans were hardly aimed at threatening the vital interests of our leading competitors, let alone provoking a war. I had very much taken Brzezinski’s side during his 2004 debate with Mearsheimer on China, and to the extent that Rudd has correctly analyzed Xi’s worldwide goals and plans, I would put those into much the same category. International rivalry even occasionally involving sharp elbows should not necessarily produce international conflict any more than domestic political rivalry must lead to civil war.
However, nations that are seeking to provoke a conflict can usually find a means of doing so, and I think our current Taiwan flash-point with China clearly falls into that category. For half a century, the American government had officially recognized that Taiwan was part of China, but some high-ranking American political leaders, both Democrat and Republican, have recently called this settled matter into question, thereby directly challenging China on what it regards as a core national interest.
Rudd’s own take on these dangerous developments was much less one-sided than mine, and he emphasized that the changes in our Taiwan policy had partly been prompted by Chinese heavy-handedness, notably the 2019 police crackdown on massive street protests in Hong Kong. The author’s expertise dwarfs my own and perhaps he was entirely correct, but there had also been widespread speculation that the protests themselves were actually orchestrated by Western intelligence services along the lines of a deliberately provocative Color Revolution, and Rudd might be reluctant to take a position that fell too far outside the boundaries of his elite establishment social circle. I also noticed that he was surprisingly critical of Xi for his recent crackdown on Chinese tech giants, real estate and financial services firms, and the private tutoring industry, all economic sectors near and dear to Wall Street investors and our reigning neoliberal establishment, although Rudd did explain that China’s leader regarded these activities as often parasitical.
America’s approach to China has undergone a drastic shift over the last few years, under both the Trump and the Biden Administrations. Rudd described these changes and then provided a chapter entitled “The Decade of Living Dangerously,” sketching out ten different scenarios of potential military confrontation, half of them involving armed conflict, sometimes with disastrous political consequences for one or the other of our two countries. He himself hoped that we would instead follow a policy of “managed strategic competition,” whose elements he outlined in his long final chapter, and this is obviously my own preference as well. All the suggestions he made were excellent ones, but I wonder whether our ruling political elites are paying much attention to his sensible words.
Although I found his book very useful and I would highly recommend it to others, I saw little that effectively refuted the cold geopolitical logic previously presented by Allison and Mearsheimer. Rudd’s work hardly dissuaded me from the concern that the world may be locked into the Thucydides Trap, with the likely result being a severe global confrontation between China and America, possibly leading to war.
Rudd had opened his book by discussing the tragic legacy of World War I, which together with its second round twenty years later destroyed so much of Europe, and I fear the analogy is a strong one. Just as the political and military leaders of 1914 severely misjudged the dangers they were confronting and were carried along to war on a tide they felt unable to resist, I think that today’s situation may be much the same. The title of Mearsheimer’s book rightly emphasized the word “tragedy.”
Moreover, we are actually facing a double peril. Even if the deep historical forces propelling the world toward war were not already so strong, over the last three decades the arrogant and often incompetent Neocons have gained control of the foreign policy establishments of both our political parties. Their dangerous adventurism has entirely replaced the sober realism of a Brzezinski, who probably would have played his cards in a very different manner.
Yet oddly enough, under fortuitous circumstances the vector-sum of different threats may sometimes cancel out rather than reinforce each other, and this might be one of those rare occasions. It is possible that the deep ideological flaws of the Neocons running American foreign policy may actually help to avert the global clash between America and China on non-ideological grounds that had been predicted by those different authors.
Allison and Mearsheimer focused on historical trends over centuries and their books were published within the last decade, while Rudd’s book was released only a year ago. Under normal circumstances, these works could hardly be considered dated. But Russia’s Ukraine war began in late February 2022, and the geopolitical consequences over the last year have been enormous, even transformational.
When Mearsheimer had written his long final chapter in 2014, he had naturally envisioned Russia as a central element of the balancing coalition that America would construct against the Chinese, together with India and Japan as well as smaller powers such as South Korea and Vietnam. Any rational American geopolitical strategist seeking to contain a rising China would have taken that approach.
But the Neocons running the foreign policy of the Obama Administration were remarkably arrogant rather than rational, and that same year they orchestrated an anti-Russian coup in Ukraine, followed by the loss of Crimea and ongoing fighting in the Donbas, all of which permanently poisoned Russian relations. Not long afterward, Mearsheimer gave his prophetic talk on the looming future risks of a NATO-Russia conflict in Ukraine, a presentation that over the last year has been viewed some 29 million times on Youtube, perhaps more than any academic lecture in the history of the Internet.
Thus, by the time Allison published his 2017 book, any possibility of an American-Russian alliance against China had evaporated and Russia scarcely featured in his discussion. These trends continued and a year ago Rudd’s book already characterized China and Russia as strategic partners, mentioning that Xi had described Russian President Vladimir Putin as “his best friend” and that the two countries regularly collaborated on a variety of different political, military, and economic issues. But Russia still remained a minor factor in Rudd’s analysis, with its role discussed in just a couple of pages together with scattered references elsewhere in his text.
The outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war completely changed everything, as did the unprecedented wave of resulting Western sanctions targeting Russia and the massive amount of financial and military aid provided to Ukraine, already totaling $120 billion, a sum far larger than the entire annual Russian defense budget. Over the last year, American-led NATO has been fighting a proxy-war against Russia on Russia’s own border, a war that many American political leaders have declared can only end with Russia’s defeat and the death or overthrow of Putin. The Hague in Europe has already issued an arrest-warrant against the Russian president for alleged war-crimes.
Just prior to the beginning of the Ukraine war, Xi had held this 39th personal meeting with Putin, and had declared that China’s partnership with Russia “had no limits.” The subsequent all-out Western assault on Russia has inevitably produced a tight alliance between the two huge countries.
China’s industrial strength is enormous, with its real productive economy already larger than the combined total for America, the European Union, and Japan. But add to that the enormous energy supplies and other natural resources of its remarkably complementary Russian neighbor, and the two together probably outweigh the power of America and its allies. Last October, I described some of the developments that had subsequently unfolded:
At the start of the war, most observers believed that the unprecedented sanctions imposed by America and its NATO allies would deal a crippling blow to the Russian economy. Instead, Russia has escaped any serious damage, while the loss of cheap Russian energy has devastated the European economies and severely hurt our own, resulting in the highest inflation rates in forty years. The Russian Ruble was expected to collapse, but is now stronger than it was before.
Germany is the industrial engine of Europe and the sanctions imposed on Russia were so self-destructive that popular protests began demanding that they be lifted and the Nord Stream energy pipelines reopened. To forestall any such potential defection, those Russian-German pipelines were suddenly attacked and destroyed, almost certainly with the approval and involvement of the U.S. government. America is not legally at war with Russia let alone Germany, so this probably represented the greatest peacetime destruction of civilian infrastructure in the history of the world, inflicting enormous, lasting damage upon our European allies. Our total dominance over the global media has so far prevented most ordinary Europeans or Americans from recognizing what transpired, but as the energy crisis worsens and the truth gradually begins to emerge, NATO might have a hard time surviving. As I discussed in a recent article, America may have squandered three generations of European friendship by destroying those vital pipelines.
- American Pravda: Of Pipelines and Plagues
Ron Unz • The Unz Review • October 3, 2022 • 3,900 WordsMeanwhile, many years of arrogant and oppressive American behavior towards so many other major countries has produced a powerful backlash of support for Russia. According to news reports, the Iranians have provided the Russians with large numbers of their advanced drones, which have been effectively deployed against the Ukrainians. Since World War II, our alliance with Saudi Arabia has been a linchpin of our Middle Eastern policy, but the Saudis have now repeatedly sided with the Russians on oil production issues, completely ignoring America’s demands despite threats of retaliation from Congress. Turkey has NATO’s largest military, but it is closely cooperating with Russia on natural gas shipments. India has also moved closer to Russia on crucial issues, ignoring the sanctions we have imposed on Russian oil. Except for our political vassal states, most major world powers seem to be lining up on Russia’s side.
Since World War II one of the central pillars of global American dominance has been the status of the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency and our associated control over the international banking system. Until recently we always presented our role as neutral and administrative, but we have increasingly begun weaponizing that power, using our position to punish those states we disliked, and this is naturally forcing other countries to seek alternatives. Perhaps the world could tolerate our freezing the financial assets of relatively small countries such as Venezuela or Afghanistan, but our seizure of Russia’s $300 billion in foreign reserves obviously tipped the balance, and major countries are increasingly seeking to shift their transactions away from the dollar and the banking network that we control. Although the economic decline of the EU has caused a corresponding fall in the Euro and driven up the dollar by default, the longer-term prospects for our continued currency hegemony hardly seem good. And given our horrendous budget and trade deficits, a flight from the dollar might easily collapse the US economy.
Soon after the outbreak of the Ukraine War, the eminent historian Alfred McCoy argued that we were witnessing the geopolitical birth of a new world order, one built around a Russia-China alliance that would dominate the Eurasian landmass. His discussion with Amy Goodman has been viewed nearly two million times.
In a Foreign Policy article last month, Allison certainly recognized the momentous importance of these new developments. As he suggested in his closing paragraphs, they drastically changed the geopolitical landscape he had previously assumed in his 2017 bestseller:
An elementary proposition in international relations 101 states: “The enemy of my enemy is my friend.” By confronting both China and Russia simultaneously, the United States has helped create what former U.S. National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski called an “alliance of the aggrieved.” This has allowed Xi to reverse Washington’s successful “trilateral diplomacy” of the 1970s that widened the gap between China and the United States’ primary enemy, the Soviet Union, in ways that contributed significantly to the U.S. victory in the Cold War. Today, China and Russia are, in Xi’s words, closer than allies.
Since Xi and Putin are not just the current presidents of their two nations but leaders whose tenures effectively have no expiration dates, the United States will have to understand that it is confronting the most consequential undeclared alliance in the world.
- Xi and Putin Have the Most Consequential Undeclared Alliance in the World
It’s become more important than Washington’s official alliances today
Graham Allison • Foreign Policy • March 23, 2023 • 1,300 Words
Furthermore, as I discussed a couple of weeks ago these trends have continued apace:
Last Wednesday the Wall Street Journal reported that Saudi Arabia was joining China’s Shanghai Cooperative Organization, a decision that came just a few weeks after the announcement that it had reestablished diplomatic relations with arch-enemy Iran following negotiations held in Beijing under Chinese auspices. For three generations, the oil rich kingdom had been America’s most important Arab ally, and the lead sentence of the Journal article emphasized that this dramatic development reflected our waning influence in the Middle East.
That same day, Brazil declared that it was abandoning the use of dollars in its transactions with China, its largest trading partner, following an earlier statement that its president planned to meet with China’s leader in support of that country’s efforts to end the Russia-Ukraine war, a diplomatic initiative strongly opposed by our own government. Geopolitical dominoes seem to rapidly falling, taking down American influence with them.
Given our country’s horrendous budget and trade deficits, America’s continued standard of living is heavily dependent upon the international use of the dollar, especially for oil sales, so these are extremely threatening developments. For decades, we have freely exchanged our government script for goods and commodities from around the world, and if that becomes much more difficult, our global situation may grow dire. During the 1956 Suez Crisis, the threatened collapse of the British pound marked the end of Britain’s influence on the global stage, and America may be rapidly approaching its own “Suez moment.”
I summarized the situation by harshly suggesting that the Neocons had played a game of “Fool’s Mate” on the geopolitical chessboard.
- Playing “Fool’s Mate” on the Grand Eurasian Chessboard
Ron Unz • The Unz Review • April 3, 2023 • 3,000 Words
These geopolitical trends have further accelerated in the two weeks since then, with French President Emmanuel Macron traveling to Beijing and declaring that Europeans must not remain “just America’s followers” and “get caught up in crises that are not ours.” Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has challenged the leadership of the United States and asked for support from China. Despite American opposition, leading German companies are strengthening their ties with China and the Brazilian government is doing the same, with a long piece in yesterday’s Asia Times summarizing a week of triumphs for Beijing. The Saudis struck another blow against America by meeting to reestablish relations with Hamas, a Palestinian organization officially classified by the U.S. as terrorists.