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The China Thread

Started by Jacob, September 24, 2012, 05:27:47 PM

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Jacob

#2175
FT on China re: Russia, Ukraine, etc: https://www.ft.com/content/50aa901a-0b32-438b-aef2-c6a4fc803a11

One thing I hadn't considered was the potential impact on China from the massive increase in both oil & gas and commodity (esp. food) prices. China is the biggest global importer of both oil & gas and food, China is struggling to meet tepid financial targets, and China's upcoming harvest is apparently going to be really bad due to weather. That could put some real inflationary and quality of life pressures on the population and thus the regime.

The other thing that's standing out is that there are two possible stories about how much Xi and the PRC knew, and neither are particularly flattering. Either they knew of Putin's planned anschluss of Ukraine and did nothing, countenancing it with total inaction. That makes Xi somewhat complicit. Alternately, Xi and his regime were caught as flatfooted as the rest of us, which indicates that his the Chinese-Russian friendship "with no limits" in fact does have limits and Chinese intelligence is pretty useless when it comes to Russia.

Jacob

Found the piece I was referencing earlier:

The twitter summary here.

The actual article here:
QuotePossible Outcomes of the Russo-Ukrainian War and China's Choice

Update on March 13, 2022: The following article was submitted by the author to the Chinese-language edition of the US-China Perception Monitor. The article was not commissioned by the US-China Perception Monitor, nor is the author affiliated with the Carter Center or the US-China Perception Monitor.

Hu Wei is the vice-chairman of the Public Policy Research Center of the Counselor's Office of the State Council, the chairman of Shanghai Public Policy Research Association, the chairman of the Academic Committee of the Chahar Institute, a professor, and a doctoral supervisor. To read more by Hu, click here to read his article on "How did Deng Xiaoping coordinate domestic and international affairs?"

Written on March 5, 2022. Translated by Jiaqi Liu on March 12, 2022.


The Russo-Ukrainian War is the most severe geopolitical conflict since World War II and will result in far greater global consequences than September 11 attacks. At this critical moment, China needs to accurately analyze and assess the direction of the war and its potential impact on the international landscape. At the same time, in order to strive for a relatively favorable external environment, China needs to respond flexibly and make strategic choices that conform to its long-term interests.

Russia's 'special military operation' against Ukraine has caused great controvsery in China, with its supporters and opponents being divided into two implacably opposing sides. This article does not represent any party and, for the judgment and reference of the highest decision-making level in China, this article conducts an objective analysis on the possible war consequences along with their corresponding countermeasure options.

I. Predicting the Future of the Russo-Ukrainian War

1.  Vladimir Putin may be unable to achieve his expected goals, which puts Russia in a tight spot. The purpose of Putin's attack was to completely solve the Ukrainian problem and divert attention from Russia's domestic crisis by defeating Ukraine with a blitzkrieg, replacing its leadership, and cultivating a pro-Russian government. However, the blitzkrieg failed, and Russia is unable to support a protracted war and its associated high costs. Launching a nuclear war would put Russia on the opposite side of the whole world and is therefore unwinnable. The situations both at home and abroad are also increasingly unfavorable. Even if the Russian army were to occupy Ukraine's capital Kyiv and set up a puppet government at a high cost, this would not mean final victory. At this point, Putin's best option is to end the war decently through peace talks, which requires Ukraine to make substantial concessions. However, what is not attainable on the battlefield is also difficult to obtain at the negotiating table. In any case, this military action constitutes an irreversible mistake.

2.  The conflict may escalate further, and the West's eventual involvement in the war cannot be ruled out. While the escalation of the war would be costly, there is a high probability that Putin will not give up easily given his character and power. The Russo-Ukrainian war may escalate beyond the scope and region of Ukraine, and may even include the possibility of a nuclear strike. Once this happens, the U.S. and Europe cannot stay aloof from the conflict, thus triggering a world war or even a nuclear war. The result would be a catastrophe for humanity and a showdown between the United States and Russia. This final confrontation, given that Russia's military power is no match for NATO's, would be even worse for Putin.

3.  Even if Russia manages to seize Ukraine in a desperate gamble, it is still a political hot potato. Russia would thereafter carry a heavy burden and become overwhelmed. Under such circumstances, no matter whether Volodymyr Zelensky is alive or not, Ukraine will most likely set up a government-in-exile to confront Russia in the long term. Russia will be subject both to Western sanctions and rebellion within the territory of Ukraine. The battle lines will be drawn very long. The domestic economy will be unsustainable and will eventually be dragged down. This period will not exceed a few years.

4. The political situation in Russia may change or be disintegrated at the hands of the West. After Putin's blitzkrieg failed, the hope of Russia's victory is slim and Western sanctions have reached an unprecedented degree. As people's livelihoods are severely affected and as anti-war and anti-Putin forces gather, the possibility of a political mutiny in Russia cannot be ruled out. With Russia's economy on the verge of collapse, it would be difficult for Putin to prop up the perilous situation even without the loss of the Russo-Ukrainian war. If Putin were to be ousted from power due to civil strife, coup d'état, or another reason, Russia would be even less likely to confront the West. It would surely succumb to the West, or even be further dismembered, and Russia's status as a great power would come to an end.

II. Analysis of the Impact of Russo-Ukrainian war On International Landscape

1. The United States would regain leadership in the Western world, and the West would become more united. At present, public opinion believes that the Ukrainian war signifies a complete collapse of U.S. hegemony, but the war would in fact bring France and Germany, both of which wanted to break away from the U.S., back into the NATO defense framework, destroying Europe's dream to achieve independent diplomacy and self-defense. Germany would greatly increase its military budget; Switzerland, Sweden, and other countries would abandon their neutrality. With Nord Stream 2 put on hold indefinitely, Europe's reliance on US natural gas will inevitably increase. The US and Europe would form a closer community of shared future, and American leadership in the Western world will rebound.

2. The "Iron Curtain" would fall again not only from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea, but also to the final confrontation between the Western-dominated camp and its competitors. The West will draw the line between democracies and authoritarian states, defining the divide with Russia as a struggle between democracy and dictatorship. The new Iron Curtain will no longer be drawn between the two camps of socialism and capitalism, nor will it be confined to the Cold War. It will be a life-and-death battle between those for and against Western democracy. The unity of the Western world under the Iron Curtain will have a siphon effect on other countries: the U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy will be consolidated, and other countries like Japan will stick even closer to the U.S., which will form an unprecedentedly broad democratic united front.

3. The power of the West will grow significantly, NATO will continue to expand, and U.S. influence in the non-Western world will increase. After the Russo-Ukrainian War, no matter how Russia achieves its political transformation, it will greatly weaken the anti-Western forces in the world. The scene after the 1991 Soviet and Eastern upheavals may repeat itself: theories on "the end of ideology" may reappear, the resurgence of the third wave of democratization will lose momentum, and more third world countries will embrace the West. The West will possess more "hegemony" both in terms of military power and in terms of values and institutions, its hard power and soft power will reach new heights.

4. China will become more isolated under the established framework. For the above reasons, if China does not take proactive measures to respond, it will encounter further containment from the US and the West. Once Putin falls, the U.S. will no longer face two strategic competitors but only have to lock China in strategic containment. Europe will further cut itself off from China; Japan will become the anti-China vanguard; South Korea will further fall to the U.S.; Taiwan will join the anti-China chorus, and the rest of the world will have to choose sides under herd mentality. China will not only be militarily encircled by the U.S., NATO, the QUAD, and AUKUS, but also be challenged by Western values and systems.

III. China's Strategic Choice

1. China cannot be tied to Putin and needs to be cut off as soon as possible. In the sense that an escalation of conflict between Russia and the West helps divert U.S. attention from China, China should rejoice with and even support Putin, but only if Russia does not fall. Being in the same boat with Putin will impact China should he lose power. Unless Putin can secure victory with China's backing, a prospect which looks bleak at the moment, China does not have the clout to back Russia. The law of international politics says that there are "no eternal allies nor perpetual enemies," but "our interests are eternal and perpetual." Under current international circumstances, China can only proceed by safeguarding its own best interests, choosing the lesser of two evils, and unloading the burden of Russia as soon as possible. At present, it is estimated that there is still a window period of one or two weeks before China loses its wiggle room. China must act decisively.

2. China should avoid playing both sides in the same boat, give up being neutral, and choose the mainstream position in the world. At present, China has tried not to offend either side and walked a middle ground in its international statements and choices, including abstaining from the UN Security Council and the UN General Assembly votes. However, this position does not meet Russia's needs, and it has infuriated Ukraine and its supporters as well as sympathizers, putting China on the wrong side of much of the world. In some cases, apparent neutrality is a sensible choice, but it does not apply to this war, where China has nothing to gain. Given that China has always advocated respect for national sovereignty and territorial integrity, it can avoid further isolation only by standing with the majority of the countries in the world. This position is also conducive to the settlement of the Taiwan issue.

3. China should achieve the greatest possible strategic breakthrough and not be further isolated by the West. Cutting off from Putin and giving up neutrality will help build China's international image and ease its relations with the U.S. and the West. Though difficult and requiring great wisdom, it is the best option for the future. The view that a geopolitical tussle in Europe triggered by the war in Ukraine will significantly delay the U.S. strategic shift from Europe to the Indo-Pacific region cannot be treated with excessive optimism. There are already voices in the U.S. that Europe is important, but China is more so, and the primary goal of the U.S. is to contain China from becoming the dominant power in the Indo-Pacific region. Under such circumstances, China's top priority is to make appropriate strategic adjustments accordingly, to change the hostile American attitudes towards China, and to save itself from isolation. The bottom line is to prevent the U.S. and the West from imposing joint sanctions on China.

4. China should prevent the outbreak of world wars and nuclear wars and make irreplaceable contributions to world peace. As Putin has explicitly requested Russia's strategic deterrent forces to enter a state of special combat readiness, the Russo-Ukrainian war may spiral out of control. A just cause attracts much support; an unjust one finds little. If Russia instigates a world war or even a nuclear war, it will surely risk the world's turmoil. To demonstrate China's role as a responsible major power, China not only cannot stand with Putin, but also should take concrete actions to prevent Putin's possible adventures. China is the only country in the world with this capability, and it must give full play to this unique advantage. Putin's departure from China's support will most likely end the war, or at least not dare to escalate the war. As a result, China will surely win widespread international praise for maintaining world peace, which may help China prevent isolation but also find an opportunity to improve its relations with the United States and the West.

I don't think Xi is going to heed this advice. But it's interesting to see an analysis focused on "what's best for China", IMO.

mongers

Quote from: Jacob on March 14, 2022, 01:18:32 AMFound the piece I was referencing earlier:
... snip ...
I don't think Xi is going to heed this advice. But it's interesting to see an analysis focused on "what's best for China", IMO.

Thanks for that interesting article, Jacob.
"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"

Eddie Teach

Quote from: Jacob on March 14, 2022, 12:30:43 AMFT on China re: Russia, Ukraine, etc: https://www.ft.com/content/50aa901a-0b32-438b-aef2-c6a4fc803a11

One thing I hadn't considered was the potential impact on China from the massive increase in both oil & gas and commodity (esp. food) prices. China is the biggest global importer of both oil & gas and food, China is struggling to meet tepid financial targets, and China's upcoming harvest is apparently going to be really bad due to weather. That could put some real inflationary and quality of life pressures on the population and thus the regime.

The other thing that's standing out is that there are two possible stories about how much Xi and the PRC knew, and neither are particularly flattering. Either they knew of Putin's planned anschluss of Ukraine and did nothing, countenancing it with total inaction. That makes Xi somewhat complicit. Alternately, Xi and his regime were caught as flatfooted as the rest of us, which indicates that his the Chinese-Russian friendship "with no limits" in fact does have limits and Chinese intelligence is pretty useless when it comes to Russia.

Of course they knew. Vlad telegraphed that shit for months.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

crazy canuck

Quote from: Eddie Teach on March 14, 2022, 06:46:49 AMOf course they knew. Vlad telegraphed that shit for months.

Then they are smarter than everyone else.  If people are now saying they knew for sure an invasion of all Ukraine was going to happen months before it did - they are likely bullshitting you.

Jacob

I'd be pretty amazing if they knew months ahead when it looks like most of Russia's administration - and most of the people involved in the actual invasion - didn't know until a few days before.

Eddie Teach

We've been talking about it since November.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

crazy canuck

Quote from: Eddie Teach on March 14, 2022, 12:32:01 PMWe've been talking about it since November.


"It"?  Who here since November knew that an invasion of this type would occur.  There was a lot of talk about attempts to take the so called separatist areas similar to what occurred with Crimea.  But if you can point to one person who predicted what actually happened I would be obliged if you could point that truly prescient person out. 

I believe it was Berkut who came closest but even he, amongst Languishites, did not predict this.

Jacob

I guess the CIA should've been reading languish instead of trying to do their own analysis of China's knowledge and reaction.

QuoteThe brutality of President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine has "unsettled" President Xi Jinping and spurred fissures between Russia and China, U.S. intelligence believes, undermining concerted public efforts by the two powers to appear aligned in their respective efforts to grab power internationally.

Despite heavy Chinese investments in its partnership with Russia in recent years, "the Chinese leadership, President Xi in particular, is unsettled by what he's seeing" in Europe, CIA Director William Burns told Congress on Thursday, following Russia's invasion of Ukraine on a scale unseen on the continent since World War II.

"His own intelligence doesn't appear to have told him what was going to happen," Burns said of Xi, citing also the Chinese Communist Party leader's new concerns about "the reputational damage that China suffers by associating with the ugliness of Russia's aggression with Ukraine."

Burns' comments to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, as a part of annual hearings regarding threats to the U.S., represent the first major public assessment of what China knew in advance of Russia's assault on its former Soviet ally. And they signal troubling tensions between Moscow and the Chinese financial juggernaut that Putin appears to have believed would bail out Russia in the wake of predictable Western economic sanctions.

https://www.usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2022-03-10/u-s-intel-china-alarmed-by-russian-brutality-in-ukraine

Jacob

Quote from: mongers on March 14, 2022, 05:32:31 AMThanks for that interesting article, Jacob.

So apparently the author has now been completely scoured from Chinese social media, so I guess that was a little too honest for the regime.

grumbler

Quote from: Jacob on March 14, 2022, 07:05:19 PM
Quote from: mongers on March 14, 2022, 05:32:31 AMThanks for that interesting article, Jacob.

So apparently the author has now been completely scoured from Chinese social media, so I guess that was a little too honest for the regime.

Yes, it was interesting that the Chinese critiques centered around (1) the government cannot follow this advice without losing face, and (2) many Western commentators on the piece overestimated Hu's importance.  None of them seemed to address the substance of his arguments.

The article had ben published in China for a week without pushback.  It was only when the Carter Center translated and published it that it became incorrect.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

jimmy olsen

China has apparently completed wasted the last two years of ironclad lockdowns and is probably going to melt down as badly as India.

https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1503420660869214213
QuoteNEW: I'm not sure people appreciate quite how bad the Covid situation is in Hong Kong, nor what might be around the corner.

First, an astonishing chart.

After keeping Covid at bay for two years, Omicron has hit HK and New Zealand, but the outcomes could not be more different. 1

After accounting for lag between infection & death, *1 in 20* cases in Hong Kong currently ends in death.

To put that into context, HK's case fatality rate (NB different to infection fatality rate) is currently higher than England's pre-vaccine peak. Two years into the pandemic. 2

Hong Kong doesn't just look grim when compared to its Asia-Pacific peers.

In March 2020 we saw awful pictures from northern Italy. Last winter, UK & Portugal saw huge mortality spikes, and last summer it was Namibia, but Hong Kong has now set a new global record for daily deaths 3

e cumulative view almost looks like a glitch in the data.

Hong Kong's total death toll has risen almost vertically in the last two weeks, shooting past not only its Asia-Pacific peers, but now European countries including Norway and Finland. And that line will keep rising. 4

Comparing Hong Kong to its peers, all of whom kept Covid largely at bay for the best part of two years, it's extraordinary the extent to which it is an outlier in terms of the lethality of this wave.

So what's driving this? 5

Vaccines.

Or more specifically: the elderly vaccination rate.

When Omicron hit, *more than two-thirds of people aged 80+ in Hong Kong were still unvaccinated*, compared to a couple of percent in New Zealand and Singapore. This was a year after vaccines became available. 6

Exacerbating this is that most of Hong Kong's elderly vaccinees had China's non-mRNA Sinovac shot, which is less effective than Pfizer etc at blocking infection.

Sinovac does fare better against severe disease, but overall this is likely to have contributed to the poor outcomes. 7

Now you might think, well, the over-80s are only a small share of the population, so surely this can't have such an enormous impact on overall fatality rates? 8

But that would be to miss the fact that, all else being equal, older people are at far *far* higher risk of death from Covid than younger 9

So vax rates by age are better understood like this, with bars sized according to each age group's baseline mortality risk.

That is a helluva lot of red, unvaxxed people. And in Zero Covid countries there are no prior infections, so these people are completely immuno-naive. 10

In a situation grimly reminiscent of England in March 2020, outbreaks have torn through Hong Kong's care homes, killing more than 1,000 vulnerable residents in a matter of days.

Again, this is two years into the pandemic. 11

Here's our full story, from @mroliverbarnes, @primroseriordan, @imandylin2 and me, on the crisis in Hong Kong and how it got there https://ft.com/content/6e610cac-400b-4843-a07b-7d870e8635a3

But there's more...
It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

Jacob

Looks like the Chinese are actively spying and attempting to influence the US through various covert means:

QuoteUnsealed files have revealed a plot by five people working on behalf of Chinese secret police to stalk and harass a US military veteran running for Congress, and to spy on an artist.

It is the first time, they say, a federal election campaign has been undermined in this way in America.

The perpetrators went to "outrageous and dangerous" lengths to do so, the Department of Justice said.

Three of the accused have been arrested, but two are at large.

According to court documents, they are accused of "transnational repression schemes" to target American residents whose political views and actions were "disfavoured by the People's Republic of China (PRC) government".

The co-conspirators allegedly tried to "interfere with federal elections" by orchestrating a campaign to undermine the US congressional candidacy of a military veteran who was once a leader of the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations in Beijing.

In another plot, they planned to destroy the work of a Chinese artist, living in Los Angeles, who had been critical of his home government, and allegedly planted spy equipment in the artist's workplace and car.

Fan "Frank" Liu, Matthew Ziburis and Shujun Wang were all arrested in the Eastern District of New York earlier this week.

Two other suspects, Qiang "Jason" Sun and Qiming Lin are at large.

Breon Peace, US attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said the plots had involved campaigns to "silence, harass, discredit and spy" on US residents for "simply exercising their freedom of speech".

More here: https://www.bbc.com/news/60773595

This can't be good for US - Chinese relations at this delicate time...

CountDeMoney

I'm surprised they haven't thrown a bag over your head and spirited you to Shanghai on a tramp steamer by now, Xiacob.

Jacob

Quote from: CountDeMoney on March 17, 2022, 12:16:47 AMI'm surprised they haven't thrown a bag over your head and spirited you to Shanghai on a tramp steamer by now, Xiacob.

Heh. That's funny for a number of reasons I'm not going to discuss in a publicly searchable forum.