It’s no secret that relations between
the People’s Republic of China and the United States are beyond strained.
Notwithstanding that legendary dinner between Presidents Xi Jinping and Donald
Trump at the late November G-20 summit in Argentina, little in the way of
rapprochement and accommodation has taken place between the two nations. A
90-day moratorium between the two countries regarding tariffs didn’t reinforce
Trump’s “Tariff Man” image and did not seem to provide much else that Trump was
demanding. Oh, Trump announced lots of stuff, but China yawned and refused to
confirm anything. The U.S. stock markets crashed. 799 points in one day.
We know China’s goals are to replace
the United States as the world’s number one superpower. She is starting in her
own backyard. We know her navy totally controls the region anywhere near her
shores, notwithstanding U.S. efforts to treat the waters there as open and
completely international. Her Belt and Road initiative seeks to rebuild the
Silk Route, giving China a trade advantage across Asia. We also are aware that
the Trump tariff wars are hugely detrimental to both economies and will slam
middle and lower earning Americans particularly hard. Sinologists tell us that
if Xi does not hold firm against Trump’s big asks, he will jeopardize his own
tenure at the helm of China. Uh oh. Nothing good is happening here.
The proposed and actual dollar tariff
numbers are particularly high and would have a horrific impact on the global
economy if totally implemented. But a couple of token concessions, regarding
cars and agricultural goods, could easily put those threats to rest without a
significant loss in “face,” although Trump will probably proclaim victory no
matter the reciprocity of the concessions.
But the elephant in the room is
China’s massive proclivity to steal intellectual property – especially patents
– and then offer little in the way of judicial enforcement against the
offenders. China’s prosperity is built in no small way on such purloined
industrial theft, whether through spies working for American companies, PRC
requirements to share technology information on companies that want to work in
China, software hacks that funnel information to PRC masters or the down and
dirty repatriation (with big bucks) of Chinese-born scientists with major
American educations and experience.
Further, as the United States
unilaterally withdrew from the U.N.-sponsored six party anti-nuclear accord
with Iran, it announced the reimposition of sanctions against countries, people
and businesses choosing to do business in Iran. Several of those nations
balked, since they believe that they were still bound to open their trading
doors based on their commitment to that accord. It was the United States, not
the countries who chose to abide by their agreement with Iran, that was, in
their eyes, the wrongdoer. China did not believe that the U.S. position was
legally justified.
But an extradition request by the U.S.
government was made to Canada. The charges, never clear and not publicly
announced, were assessed against Ms. Meng Wanzhou, Chief Financial Officer of
PRC-based Huawei (corporate headquarters
pictured above), a huge global telecommunications equipment and services
provider, recently passing Apple to become the second-biggest smartphone maker
after Samsung. She also happens to be the daughter of “[t]he firm's founder Ren Zhengfei, a former People's
Liberation Army officer, [who] started Huawei in 1987. It's based in Shenzhen,
Guangdong and is owned by 80,000 of its 180,000 employees.” BBC.com, December 7th.
She was arrested in Vancouver prompting an immediate protest from China,
claiming a human rights violation and demanding to know the specific charges
against Meng.
“Whereas the U.S. accuses China of
getting hold of high-tech American intellectual property by bullying companies
wanting to trade in China or by stealing trade secrets, China is convinced that
Washington’s true objective is to contain its rise as a leading global power… ‘The
detention of Meng Wanzhou demonstrates to the world yet again America’s
unabashedly authoritarian nature,’ wrote Chinese economist Mei Xinyu in a blog
post for the People’s Daily , a Communist Party mouthpiece.
“‘America is trying to use its
powerful alliance system to turn domestic laws into ‘international laws,’
shamelessly imposing its own aims and standards onto other countries’ systems,’
Mei continued. ‘This should remind all Chinese and other countries’ scientific
or technological personnel and corporate figures to watch out for personal safety
and freedom before going to the United States.’” Los Angeles Times, December 7th.
Journalists outside of the PRC began to
speculate as to the basis for the arrest. A few pointed out that Huawei’s
global empire embraced doing business in Iran, in contravention of U.S.
sanctions, which imposed criminal liability on officers of companies which make
such decisions. But tech savvy writers suggested the obvious and more
pernicious possibility: that Huawei’s telecommunications equipment and even
their smart phones were engineered with “back doors” that enabled access to all
kinds of sensitive information that might processed or transmitted by that
technology. Was Huawei instrumental in industrial espionage… or worse? Ren Zhengfei’s PRC military connections only amplified
the speculation.
“Some Western governments fear
Beijing will gain access to fifth-generation (5G) mobile and other
communications networks through Huawei and expand its spying ability, although
the firm insists there is no government control.
“US lawmakers have repeatedly accused
the company of being a threat to US national security… Japan is expected to ban
government use of products made by Huawei and ZTE, local media reported on
Friday, over cybersecurity concerns. It would follow moves by New Zealand and
Australia to block Huawei.” BBC.com, December 7th. The U.K. is still
trying to work with Huawei engineers to eliminate the issues, but their concern
is equally obvious.
When challenged directly by the PRC,
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responded that the arrest did not
involve any unique decision-making on the part of the Canadian government.
Serious or not? To well-informed
experts, the arrest following a U.S. request for extradition was a major
escalation in the growing cold war between China and the United States. Writing
for the December 7th BBC.com, BBC Asia business correspondent, Karishma Vaswani opined: “It
is hard to overstate the symbolism and significance of this event. Huawei is
the crown jewel of Chinese tech and Ms Meng is effectively its princess.
“Even though it's still not clear what the
charges against her are, this is not simply a case about the arrest of one
woman, or just one company… This arrest could materially damage the
relationship between the US and China at possibly one of the most sensitive
times between the two countries in their long and torrid history… The gloves
are off. Things have taken a dramatic turn for the worse.” Escalating trade
tensions into a criminal indictment appears to be a clear slap in China’s face.
Indeed, China officially
seems to see this as America’s throwing down the gauntlet: “Whereas the U.S. accuses China of
getting hold of high-tech American intellectual property by bullying companies
wanting to trade in China or by stealing trade secrets, China is convinced that
Washington’s true objective is to contain its rise as a leading global power…
‘The detention of Meng Wanzhou demonstrates to the world yet again America’s
unabashedly authoritarian nature,’ wrote Chinese economist Mei Xinyu in a blog
post for the People’s Daily, a Communist Party mouthpiece.
“‘America is trying to use its
powerful alliance system to turn domestic laws into ‘international laws,’
shamelessly imposing its own aims and standards onto other countries’ systems,’
Mei continued. ‘This should remind all Chinese and other countries’ scientific
or technological personnel and corporate figures to watch out for personal
safety and freedom before going to the United States.’” Los Angeles Times,
December 7th.
Is this, as some have said, “a shot into the
heart” of China’s tech industry? “Now any trade agreement has to overcome what will probably be
viewed as a provocation in the eyes of China’s leadership, given Huawei’s
importance… ‘Huawei embodies the existential angst of China hard-liners in the
U.S. concerned about China’s ostensible grand plan for global domination of new
high- tech industries,’ said Eswar Prasad, a professor of trade policy at
Cornell University. ‘Meanwhile, such actions by U.S. and other governments
crystallize fears among Chinese leaders that the real intention is to hold back
China’s economic progress and transformation.’… China demanded the immediate
release of Meng, who is among the cream of China’s corporate elite.” LA Times.
Whatever else is said and done, the strained
relations between the United States and China, heavily reflected in the
stare-down/slap-down trade war escalating between the two nations, does not
augur well for future stability and global prosperity. There will be no
winners… but lots and lots of losers. The precipitous fall of the U.S. markets
after Trump doubled down says it all.
I’m Peter Dekom, and in a strange way, even
if China loses billions of dollars in a trade war, if she simply refuses to
kowtow to Trump’s “Art of the Deal” bullying, she will more than make up for
that loss in her enhanced global prestige and knowledge that ordinary Americans
will pay a dear price for a trade war with no winners.
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