Posted on 04/19/2020 8:52:47 AM PDT by nuconvert
The Forbidden City
On November 8, 2017, Air Force One touched down in Beijing, marking the start of a state visit hosted by Chinas president and Communist Party chairman, Xi Jinping. From my first day on the job as President Donald Trumps national security adviser, China had been a top priority. The country figured prominently in what President Barack Obama had identified for his successor as the biggest immediate problem the new administration would facewhat to do about North Koreas nuclear and missile programs. But many other questions about the nature and future of the relationship between China and the United States had also emerged, reflecting Chinas fundamentally different perception of the world.
Since the heady days of Deng Xiaoping, in the late 1970s, the assumptions that had governed the American approach to our relationship with China were these: After being welcomed into the international political and economic order, China would play by the rules, open its markets, and privatize its economy. As the country became more prosperous, the Chinese government would respect the rights of its people and liberalize politically. But those assumptions were proving to be wrong.
(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...
It should be required reading for all government workers, all business owners & CEO's doing business in China, and anyone who wants a scary look at what China is really doing & what it really wants.
chicom bump for later... .
Bkmrk
Ping
This is from the Atlantic Magazine?
From NWO shill McMaster and the Atlantic! No thanks!!
It’s a good article except for the very end where he calls for more visas etc... for Chinese in America. I guess he is trying to remain viable for some future administration.
One day we’ll actually understand the evil that lurks behind the innocuous wish that China, or any other Third World country “open her markets”. Something to do with “money” markets and borrowing and manufacture. China is self sufficient in raw materials, just like the US colonies were self sufficient in raw materials. That worries the globalist banking elite who don’t like it when countries don’t come crawling to them for loans to build infrastructure or compensate for manipulated commodity prices.
He's only calling china out because the Davos types assumed that they themselves would be the Acadians at the top controlling the global fascist order, not the chinee.
He is an NWO neocon who got fired!! Need we say more!
Excellent read!
Great read will definitely get this book
Great read. Thank you for posting.
“Its a good article except for the very end where he calls for more visas etc”
That bothered me too, though he did say, “with proper safeguards in place”. I’m not sure the liberals would allow that. If you think that we may be about at the point of no return, so to speak, because we’ve already given China all the tools & information to be able to continue to advance on their own, then using the Chinese diaspora to turn against the Chinese gov’t may be a strategy worth using - it hasn’t been effectively utilzed
McMaster is an idiot who should have never been allowed more than running a tank battalion. Hes right about the Chinese worldview. But his idiotic conclusion is to bring more Chinese into America. Of course with the obligatory carefully vetted disclaimer.
This damned traitor screwed and resisted President Trump all he could. Eff him.
I would say they see the world as a bunch of idiots who will buy their cheap junk, then die in an engineered pandemic to clear the land for their settlers.
Maybe that’s a bit harsh. Maybe it’s just Chairman Xi and a few of his pals. Maybe some more sensible people will push him out of power. We shall see.
A must read article...thanks for posting it.
“Our last meeting of the state visit, in the Great Hall of the People, was with Li Keqiang, the premier of the State Council and the titular head of Chinas government. If anyone in the American group had any doubts about Chinas view of its relationship with the United States, Lis monologue would have removed them. He began with the observation that China, having already developed its industrial and technological base, no longer needed the United States. He dismissed U.S. concerns over unfair trade and economic practices, indicating that the U.S. role in the future global economy would merely be to provide China with raw materials, agricultural products, and energy to fuel its production of the worlds cutting-edge industrial and consumer products.”
Safeguards are not just not practical. We have something like 15,000 FBI agents. We have hundreds of thousands of Chinese students in the US plus other visa holders etc. How could our government (!) possibly keep a handle on that?
How does any publicly traded US company justify having anybody employed that is a Chinese national?
They are by definition spies - why hire people who are known spies?
“Its a good article except for the very end where he calls for more visas etc
That part raised a bit of red flag too.
I think he’s coming from the point of view that our way is so much superior that once the Chinese get exposed to our way of life they would not want to go back to their old way and would promote our way if they went back.
There’s some truth to that, after all the Soviets were very leery at exposing their people to our living standards and freedoms in the west, and eventually it was that that brought down the USSR.
But China today doesn’t seem to be afraid to expose its people to the western life style, because having adopted a certain level of capitalism, they have achieved a good standard of living themselves.
So China today is not so much about exporting communism as about Nationalism. They, like us, are looking out for their national interests first and foremost. There’s nothing inherently wrong with that, as long as we are cognizant of it and safeguard our own interests.
So in letting in so many people from China to study and work here we must not discounts how much national pride and identity politics plays into this equation.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.