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Monday, March 27, 2023

Craig Murray: Why Would China Be An Enemy?




Volume 28, Number 84 — Sunday, March 26, 2023

Craig Murray: Why Would China Be An Enemy?
March 24, 2023



To react to Beijing’s growing economic power by increasing Western military power is hopeless. It is harder to think of a more stupid example of lashing out in blind anger.




British Prime Minister Rishi Surnak and U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin greeting at the AUKUS bilateral meeting in San Diego, March 13, 2023. (DoD/Chad J. McNeeley)


By Craig Murray
CraigMurray.org.uk



I am completely at a loss as to why the U.K. should seek to join in with the U.S. in considering China an enemy, and in looking to build up military forces in the Pacific to oppose China.

In what sense are Chinese interests opposed to British interests? I am not sure when I last bought something which wasn’t manufactured in China. To my astonishment that even applies to our second-hand Volvo and it also applies to this laptop.

I have stated this before but it is worth restating:

I cannot readily think of any example in history, of a state which achieved the level of economic dominance China has now achieved, that did not seek to use its economic muscle to finance military acquisition of territory to increase its economic resources. In that respect China is vastly more pacific than the United States, United Kingdom, France, Spain or any other formerly prominent power.

Ask yourself this simple question. How many overseas military bases does the U.S. have? And how many overseas military bases does China have? Depending on what you count, the United States has between 750 and 1100 overseas military bases. China has between 6 and 9.

The last military aggression by China was its takeover of Tibet in 1951 and 1959. Since that date, we have seen the United States invade with massive destruction Vietnam, Cambodia, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya.

The United States has also been involved in sponsoring numerous military coups, including military support to the overthrow of literally dozens of governments, many of them democratically elected. It has destroyed numerous countries by proxy, Libya being the most recent example.



Feb. 27, 2011: A Libyan refugee at a transit camp in Choucha Ras Djir, near the Tunisian border. (U.N. Photo/UNHCR/Alexis Duclos)



China has simply no record, for over 60 years, of attacking and invading other countries.

The anti-Chinese military posture adopted by the leaders of U.S., U.K. and Australia as they pour astonishing amounts of public money into the corrupt military industrial complex to build pointless nuclear submarines, appears a deliberate attempt to create military tension with China.


[Related: Caitlin Johnstone: Australia’s Real Fear Isn’t China]


Rishi Sunak, the U.K.’s prime minister, recited the tired neoliberal roll call of enemies, condemning: “Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, China’s growing assertiveness, and destabilising behaviour of Iran and North Korea.”.

What precisely are Iran and China doing, that makes them our enemy?

This article is not about Iran, but plainly Western sanctions have held back the economic and societal development of that highly talented nation and have simply entrenched its theological regime. Their purpose is not to improve Iran but to maintain a situation where Israel has nuclear weapons and Iran does not. If accompanied by an effort to disarm the rogue state of Israel, they might make more sense.

On China, in what does its “assertiveness” consist that makes it necessary to view it as a military enemy?


[Related: Joe Lauria – A Sane Voice Amidst the Madness]


Maritime Jurisdiction Disputes

China has constructed some military bases by artificially extending small islands. That is perfectly legal behaviour. The territory is Chinese. As the United States has numerous bases in the region on other people’s territory, I truly struggle to see where the objection lies to Chinese bases on Chinese territory.

China has made claims which are controversial for maritime jurisdiction around these artificial islands — and I would argue wrong under the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea. But they are no more controversial than a great many other UNCLOS claims, for example the U.K.’s behaviour over Rockall.



An Irish naval vessel at Rockall conducting routine maritime security patrols 230 nmi, or 430 km, off the north-west coast of Ireland, 2012. (Irish Defence Forces, Flickr, CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons)



China has made, for example, no attempt to militarily enforce a 200-mile exclusive economic zone arising from its artificial islands, whatever it has said. Its claim to a 12-mile territorial sea is I think valid.

Similarly, the United States has objected to pronouncements from China that appear contrary to UNCLOS on passage through straits, but again this is no different from a variety of such disputes worldwide. The United States and others have repeatedly asserted, and practised, their right of free passage, and met no military resistance from China.

So is that it? Is that what Chinese “aggression” amounts to, some UNCLOS disputes?

Aah, we are told, but what about Taiwan?


Unresolved Civil War



Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong met in Chongqing in 1945. (Public domain, Wikimedia Commons)



To which the only reply is, what about Taiwan? Taiwan is a part of China which separated off under the nationalist government after the Civil War. Taiwan does not claim not to be Chinese territory.

In fact – and this is far too little understood in the West because our media does not tell you – the government of Taiwan still claims to be the legitimate government of all of China. The government of Taiwan supports reunification just as much as the government of China, the only difference being who would be in charge.

The dispute with Taiwan is therefore an unresolved Chinese civil war, not an independent state menaced by China. As a civil war the entire world away from us, it is very hard to understand why we have an interest in supporting one side rather than the other.

Peaceful resolution is of course preferable. But it is not our conflict.

There is no evidence whatsoever that China has any intention of invading anywhere else in the China Seas or the Pacific. Not Singapore, not Japan and least of all Australia. That is almost as fantastic as the ludicrous idea that the U.K. must be defended from Russian invasion.

If China wanted, it could simply buy 100 percent of every public listed company in Australia, without even noticing a dent in China’s dollar reserves.

Which of course brings us to the real dispute, which is economic and about soft power. China has massively increased its influence abroad, by trade, investment, loans and manufacture. China is now the dominant economic power, and it can only be a matter of time before the dollar ceases to be the world’s reserve currency.

China has chosen this method of economic expansion and prosperity over territorial acquisition or military control of resources.

That may be to do with Confucian versus Western thought. Or it may just be the government in Beijing is smarter than Western governments. But growing Chinese economic dominance does not appear to me a reversible process in the coming century.

To react to China’s growing economic power by increasing Western military power is hopeless. It is harder to think of a more stupid example of lashing out in blind anger. It is like peeing on your carpet because the neighbours are too noisy.

Aah, but you ask. What about human rights? What about the Uighurs?

I have a large amount of sympathy. China was an imperial power in the great age of formal imperialism, and the Uighurs were colonised by China. Unfortunately the Chinese have followed the West’s “War on Terror” playbook in exploiting Islamophobia to clamp down on Uighur culture and autonomy. I very much hope that this reduces, and that freedom of speech improves in general across China.


[Related: Brian Berletic — The Hidden Proxy War Washington Wages against China]


But let nobody claim that human rights genuinely has any part to play in who the Western military industrial complex treats as an enemy and who it treats as an ally. I know it does not, because that is the precise issue on which I was sacked as an ambassador.

The abominable suffering of the children of Yemen and Palestine also cries out against any pretence that Western policy, and above all choice of ally, is human rights based.

China is treated as an enemy because the United States has been forced to contemplate the mortality of its economic dominance. China is treated as an enemy because that is a chance for the political and capitalist classes to make yet more super profits from the military industrial complex.

But China is not our enemy. Only atavism and xenophobia make it so.



Craig Murray is an author, broadcaster and human rights activist. He was British ambassador to Uzbekistan from August 2002 to October 2004 and rector of the University of Dundee from 2007 to 2010. His coverage is entirely dependent on reader support. Subscriptions to keep this blog going are gratefully received.

This article is from CraigMurray.org.uk



10 comments:

  1. "China has constructed some military bases by artificially extending small islands. That is perfectly legal behaviour. The territory is Chinese
    ....China has made...no attempt to militarily enforce a 200-mile exclusive economic zone arising from its artificial islands, whatever it has said. Its claim to a 12-mile territorial sea is I think valid."

    This Craig Murray is a typical Stupid ignorant Englishman....
    with one stroke of his pen, he just cedes the entire South China Sea to China....

    China claims James Shoal ....83 km from the Malaysian coast...1,796 km from Hainan Island.
    And China has been using armed "Coast Guard" ships to intimidate Petronas contractors which have been carrying out oil exploration work in the area. It is a matter of time before those armed China ships open fire.

    So this stupid idiot Craig Murray says it belongs to China...

    Orang Putih Bodoh...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "China claims James Shoal ....83 km from the Malaysian coast...1,796 km from Hainan Island."???

      When did this happen?

      Delete
    2. https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2014/01/31/china-claims-its-vessels-patrolled-james-shoal#.ZCFfxDXqJ8U.whatsapp

      China warships have regularly exercised their sovereignty claim over James Shoal.

      Delete
    3. By the way this was the incident around which the putative traitor Superman Hew stated the South China Sea belongs to China.

      DAP very reluctantly let Hew go for cosmetic purposes.
      I have been very suspicious of the loyalty of many in DAP since then.

      Delete
    4. https://amti.csis.org/tracking-chinas-coast-guard-off-borneo/

      This report on nearby Luconia Shoals.
      The Malaysian Government has been cowered into silence, as it can see how Australia has been punished for speaking up in a way that irritates China.

      China, of course, knows its warships are there, and I am sure interpretes the Malaysian position (correctly )as supine Weakness.

      Delete
    5. my question was "Has China claimed James Shoal?"

      Delete
    6. https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202008/03/WS5f2794b1a31083481725dcfb.html

      Direct From the horse's mouth.

      China Daily's assertion why China's claim to Zengmu Ansha reef (James Shoal ) is valid.
      "China has made territorial claims to four island groups in the South China Sea, including the entire the Nansha Islands, encompassing both the archipelago and all other components.....features like Ren'ai Reef, Meiji Reef , or Zengmu Ansha reef, all of which are natural terrain of the Nansha Islands."

      Of course , Ktemoc's brain is already owned by China

      Delete
    7. R u trying to educate this recalcitrant know-nothing dickhead?

      Time wasted!

      It is digging its sopo burrow as it likes it to be.

      Delete
    8. Know-nothing mfer, WHY didn't u quote the whole article as yr source?

      The https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202008/03/WS5f2794b1a31083481725dcfb.html

      was a source mentioned in 台毒 mouthpiece!

      & Didn't u know that the tricks played by these mfering liers?

      Ooop… u r all from the same lair!

      Delete
  2. The original article in The China Daily was disputing a lie mentioned by Pompeo.

    "Pompeo painstakingly picked out the Huangyan Island, Meiji Reef, Zengmu Ansha reef and several other maritime features where he believes China has no lawful sovereignty claim. By doing this, he can insist the US still does not take any position on sovereignty issues in the waters while tarnishing China's claims in the South China Sea and demonstrating US support for other claimant states. But in reality, the arbitral tribunal has made a series of mistakes regarding jurisdiction, admissibility and the nature and content of the disputes. Under the pretext of interpreting and applying the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, it has violated the spirits and principles of the UNCLOS almost every step of the way.

    China has made territorial claims to four island groups in the South China Sea, including the entire the Nansha Islands, encompassing both the archipelago and all other components. As stipulated in Article 46 of the UNCLOS and general international law, "archipelago" means a group of islands and reefs, including "interconnecting waters and other natural features." China has never claimed any separate maritime entitlement to such features like Ren'ai Reef, Meiji Reef , or Zengmu Ansha reef, all of which are natural terrain of the Nansha Islands."

    Yet those 台毒 mfers & u, twisted the story to suit yr fart!

    Didn't u mfers acknowledge that Yankee lier as of " We lied, we cheated, we stole" fame?

    ReplyDelete