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China Apologist : U.S. Must Decline as China Returns to Former Greatness
US Business & Industry Council ^ | April 6, 2007 | William R. Hawkins

Posted on 04/09/2007 10:26:55 AM PDT by Paul Ross

China Apologist : U.S. Must Decline as China Returns to Former Greatness

By William R. Hawkins
Friday, April 06, 2007

The CNA Corporation is a non-profit organization that is best known for operating the Center for Naval Analysis, which for over 50 years has worked closely with the U.S. Navy to develop strategies and weapon systems to defend American security.  It opened a new China Study Center on March 27, which seems like a natural evolution of its work given Beijing’s rise as a global geopolitical rival to the United States.  China has the world’s third largest shipbuilding industry and its rapidly expanding its navy.  However, by choosing devoted Beijing apologist Chas Freeman to deliver its inaugural lecture, it raised doubts about the direction its research will take.  

Chas Freeman was Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs during the first term of the Clinton Administration, and had been Director for Chinese Affairs at the State Department at the end of the Carter administration.  In between, he had been ambassador to Saudi Arabia under President George H. W. Bush.  He is Co-Chair of the United States-China Policy Foundation, a group “founded to ensure the continued improvement of U.S.-China relations.” Freeman embraces this mission, even though he was the diplomat chosen in October 1995 by Chinese General  Xiong Guangkai to convey a threat to use nuclear weapons against the United States over Taiwan.  

Freeman is also on the board of Projects International, Inc., a Washington-based firm that has helped broker a cross-investment agreement between major Chinese and Brazilian oil companies; set up joint ventures for American firms in China; and has provided advice to Chinese venture capital funds.  In his remarks to CNA, Freeman stressed business over any other consideration in China relations.  He argued, “Contrary to repeated forecasts, the many imperfections of China's legal system have neither prevented it from developing a vigorous market economy nor inhibited foreign investment – of which China continues to attract more than any other country, including our own.  China's failure to democratize and its continuing censorship of its media, including the Internet, have not stifled its economic progress or capacity to innovate, which are increasingly impressive.  China's perverse practices with respect to human rights have not cost China's Communist Party or its government their legitimacy.  On the contrary, polling data suggests that Chinese have a very much higher regard for their political leaders and government than Americans currently do for ours.”

If Freeman was polled, he would say the same.  Indeed, his speech was filled with criticism of the United States along side praise for China, taking on bizarre dimensions at times.  He claimed, “At the birth of the United States of America, what some then called ‘the Celestial Kingdom’ loomed large in our imagination....We knew little of China itself, but we had inhaled the European idealization of it as the most ethically advanced and orderly, as well as the most populous, realm on the planet.  As they designed our system of government, the brilliant political engineers who were our founding fathers drew on Leibniz' and Voltaire's musings on the secrets of the good society China exemplified to its Jesuit admirers.”

In Freeman’s view, “our founding fathers' ambitions to build a better system of government than those in Europe” led them to look to China for guidance! What an absurd notion! While there is mention of several European states in The Federalist Papers, there is no mention of China, which for all its opulence and stability, was ruled by a Emperor far more brutal than the British monarch against who the Founders rebelled.  The musings of the foolish Voltaire should be swept into the same dustbin as those of Hollywood dimwits like Shirley MacLaine, who once gushed over the blood-soaked reign of Mao Zedong for creating a more egalitarian and happy society than America.

But it is China’s future which beguiles Freeman.  “China had a couple of bad centuries, but it is back, and it is on the way to the center of global affairs.  As China restores itself to wealth and power, its leaders display a resolute confidence in the future,” he proclaims.  And in what should be a warning, he intones with optimism: “Our country came into being as the age of Atlantic dominance and the industrial revolution began to eclipse China and India.  Americans therefore have no experience with the more normal condition of human history, in which Asia was for millennia the global center of gravity.  One way or another, in the 21st Century, China and its neighbors will determine what the resumption of Asian leadership in more and more fields of human endeavor means for an emerging post-industrial world, including for us Americans.”

Anyone who might think there is danger ahead for the United States is treated disdainfully by Freeman.  “Sometimes, for example, in the matters of Taiwan, Tibet, or the democracy movement in Hong Kong, Americans are enlisted by lobbyists acting on behalf of separatist or dissident movements in greater China.  Those who wish America to go abroad in search of monsters to destroy can always find one worthy of our attention there.  China has become a screen on which Americans can project both our reveries and our nightmares,” he says.

On the question of China’s “authentic aspirations,” which Americans need to understand, looms the national security issue.  Freeman told his audience, “No one still dismisses the PLA as a ‘junkyard army.’ China's recent anti-satellite test, growing participation in UN peacekeeping missions, and near tripling of defense spending since 2000 mark its emergence as a considerable military power.” Yet, we should not react to this.  Indeed, he urged the CNA, whose job it is to worry about such things, to reject “our apparent nostalgia for the aggressive expansionism of our now inconveniently vanished Soviet rivals” and to avoid “writing narrowly focused and highly tendentious reports mandated by Congress to justify the single-issue agendas of our military-industrial complex or, for that matter, our humanitarian-industrial complex.”

He believes China is behaving as a “responsible stakeholder.....This is already the case with respect to the world monetary system, in which the Renminbi yuan is poised to emerge as a major trading and reserve currency within the coming decade.” This assessment flies in the face of reality.  Beijing sets the value of its currency by fiat, undervaluing it by 40 percent or more to gain competitive advantages in world trade.  It is not a convertible currency like the dollar or the euro.  China has built up a trillion dollar hard currency reserve through its trade surpluses, but maintains control of these funds for purely national purposes.  

“I am optimistic,” Freeman proclaims. “China's leaders are trying hard, in connection with the 17th Chinese Communist Party Congress to be held this fall, to develop a restatement of ideological principles that emphasizes the imperatives of societal and international harmony and the sinicization of Western-originated theories of innovation in science and technology.” Toward that end, the U.S. should not try to restrict the transfer of technology to Beijing, but welcome China’s further success.

Freeman seems to have fallen into that school of dissident thought that is looking for a foreign alternative to what his liberal sensibilities find distasteful about American preeminence.  

In a speech to other retired diplomats in February, he launched a marathon assault on every aspect of American policy and society.  “We have sought to exempt ourselves from the jurisdiction of international law.  We have suspended our efforts to lead the world to further liberalization of trade and investment through the Doha Round.  We no longer participate in the UN body charged with the global promotion of human rights.  We decline to discuss global climate change, nuclear disarmament, or the avoidance of arms races in outer space.”

His talk was in accord with his position as head of the Middle East Policy Council.  His twisted view of that region of the world matches his view of Asia.  He denounced the U.S. provision of “military support and political cover for Israeli operations entailing intermittent massacres of civilian populations in Lebanon and Gaza.”  No mention is made of the China-Iran-Hezbollah terrorist connection that is pushing Lebanon towards civil war, and which not only Israel and the U.S., but also most of the Arab world, are trying to contain.

Freeman also told his audience, ”There will be no American imperium.  The effort to bully the world into accepting one has instead set in motion trends that threaten both the core values of our republic and the prospects for a world order based on something other than the law of the jungle.”  Freeman is hopelessly deluded, however, if he thinks China’s rise under its current Communist regime will not continue to be conducted by the law of the jungle.  That is the nature of both economic and geopolitical competition, which Beijing’s leaders know very well from China’s long and violent history.





William R. Hawkins is Senior Fellow for National Security Studies at the U.S. Business and Industry Council.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: china; communist; fifthcolumnists; freetraitors; newchinalobby; quislings
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1 posted on 04/09/2007 10:26:57 AM PDT by Paul Ross
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To: Paul Ross
Freeman also told his audience, ”There will be no American imperium. The effort to bully the world into accepting one has instead set in motion trends that threaten both the core values of our republic and the prospects for a world order based on something other than the law of the jungle.”

So, no more attacks on Serbia? ;)

2 posted on 04/09/2007 10:28:29 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves ("Wise men don't need to debate; men who need to debate are not wise." -- Tao Te Ching)
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To: Paul Ross
"Freeman seems to have fallen into that school of dissident thought that is looking for a foreign alternative to what his liberal sensibilities find distasteful about American preeminence."

When, oh when, are we going to make treason a capital offense again? People like this make me sick to my stomach. They have not one ounce of loyality to their country nor to their fellow citizens, and no appreciation for the freedom and liberty we enjoy. Freeman should get to live out the rest of his life in China.

3 posted on 04/09/2007 10:31:19 AM PDT by 3AngelaD
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To: Paul Ross

China won’t return to greatness until they become democratic.


4 posted on 04/09/2007 10:32:38 AM PDT by Brilliant
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To: Paul Ross
You elect a Chinese-money-grabbing Dhimmocrat again to the Presidency and you'll get your decline.

And much, much more...

5 posted on 04/09/2007 10:33:03 AM PDT by kromike
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To: Paul Ross

Former greatness? As in thousands of years ago?


6 posted on 04/09/2007 10:34:03 AM PDT by relictele
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To: A. Pole; chimera; Jeff Head; Travis McGee; ALOHA RONNIE; maui_hawaii; tallhappy; JohnHuang2; ...
On the question of China’s “authentic aspirations,” which Americans need to understand, looms the national security issue. Freeman told his audience, “No one still dismisses the PLA as a ‘junkyard army.’

Gee, I guess Freeman hasn't seen some of the posts here where there are always a few who still do....

China's recent anti-satellite test, growing participation in UN peacekeeping missions, and near tripling of defense spending since 2000 mark its emergence as a considerable military power.”

That's only what they have admitted to, Freeman.

Yet, we should not react to this. Indeed, he urged the CNA, whose job it is to worry about such things, to reject “our apparent nostalgia for the aggressive expansionism of our now inconveniently vanished Soviet rivals” and to avoid “writing narrowly focused and highly tendentious reports mandated by Congress to justify the single-issue agendas of our military-industrial complex or, for that matter, our humanitarian-industrial complex.

This China apologist has a little bit of trouble with the Law. And he gets his knickers in a twist when rejected by those people who are concerned for AMERICAN national security...and true liberty for the oppressed around the globe...and so he attempts to misrepresent and demean them when he calls them "Complexes".

H'mmmmm. Dwight Eisenhower he isn't. Seems to me that the guy has a "complex" of his own...

7 posted on 04/09/2007 10:35:43 AM PDT by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: relictele

They fantasize of China’s “greatness” during Mao’s “culture revolution”.


8 posted on 04/09/2007 10:35:48 AM PDT by SolidWood (Islam is an insanity cult that makes everyone act Arab)
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To: Paul Ross

The Chinese will never surpass the US. They have neither the technology nor the ability to think outside the box like we can.


9 posted on 04/09/2007 10:36:36 AM PDT by stm (Believe 1% of what you hear in the drive-by media and take half of that with a grain of salt)
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To: Paul Ross
Here is an interview with this Washington, D.C. based POS, in which he compares the Bush administration to Nazis:

Freeman’s view: "Calling our campaign against terrorists a "war" is a transparent deception, intended to ensure that political correctness will preclude questioning about either the conduct of the campaign or the governance of the nation. To an unconscionable extent, this has worked.

"As a political technique, what the administration has done is not in the least original. Herman Goering testified at his trial: "...the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders..." http://www.niemanwatchdog.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=ask_this.view&askthisid=179

10 posted on 04/09/2007 10:37:45 AM PDT by 3AngelaD
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To: Paul Ross
China has become a screen on which Americans can project both our reveries and our nightmares,” he says.

He then continued: "I've decided to project my fantasies of a benevolent Chinese Empire sweeping over the globe leading us into a new age of enlightenment."

11 posted on 04/09/2007 10:38:03 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Enoch Powell was right.)
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To: stm

The Panda is not tame. It is merely the Smiley face that the Dragon wears to hide its barbarism.


12 posted on 04/09/2007 10:38:42 AM PDT by massgopguy (I owe everything to George Bailey)
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To: Paul Ross

When the Chinese can help 95% of their population that live in abject and horrible poverty and bring them to 30% of the standards of living level of the poorest people in the US, then we may consider talking about China as a real Super Power.


13 posted on 04/09/2007 10:39:14 AM PDT by jveritas (Support The Commander in Chief in Times of War)
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To: relictele

The last time China contributed to civilization on its own was 2000 years ago.


14 posted on 04/09/2007 10:40:04 AM PDT by jveritas (Support The Commander in Chief in Times of War)
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To: 3AngelaD
When, oh when, are we going to make treason a capital offense again?

Isn't it still...at least in theory, if not practice? Just unenforced.

People like this make me sick to my stomach.

Ditto.

They have not one ounce of loyality to their country nor to their fellow citizens, and no appreciation for the freedom and liberty we enjoy.

Which really calls me to question whether or not his affinity for China is the very thing which he would likely deny if asked...the fact that it is in fact the last major bastion of the Communist conspiracy. And becoming a real superpower. Which he says we shouldn't worry about...

Freeman should get to live out the rest of his life in China.

He, and a number of other Quislings likely have this very thought in mind...I just don't think, once the balloon goes up, that they are going to be getting the kind of treatment they expect...

15 posted on 04/09/2007 10:41:27 AM PDT by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: stm

Agree 100%, and anyone who thinks otherwise is an IDIOT and a Knee Jerk Reactionary. The Chinese are not as closely as innovative as the Russians were, not by a long shot, and the Soviet Union is no more.


16 posted on 04/09/2007 10:42:21 AM PDT by jveritas (Support The Commander in Chief in Times of War)
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To: Paul Ross; Mr. Jeeves

Got waylaid into a rather hostile political argument at lunch last week with a Chinese expat co-worker.

“What gives you the right to invade another country?” she demanded, referring to Iraq.

“Numerous violated and ignored UN resolutions,” I replied, though a better retort might’ve been, “That’s nice, coming from the occupiers of Tibet.”


17 posted on 04/09/2007 10:42:57 AM PDT by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: Paul Ross

Two words: Cultural Revolution.


18 posted on 04/09/2007 10:43:18 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: ClearCase_guy
He [Freeman] then continued: "I've decided to project my fantasies of a benevolent Chinese Empire sweeping over the globe leading us into a new age of enlightenment."

This is indeed, an undeniable "Smoking Gun".

It is an abject admission of his irrationality...and mental illness.

19 posted on 04/09/2007 10:43:29 AM PDT by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: jveritas

And just like the Russians, they build their stuff on the cheap. No self respecting US Submariner would ever set foot in a Rickshaw Rick or Ruskie submarine, they are just plain too dangerous.


20 posted on 04/09/2007 10:44:42 AM PDT by stm (Believe 1% of what you hear in the drive-by media and take half of that with a grain of salt)
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