What we are learning is that the people generally have freedom of expression except it is limited to your own social environment. On top of that the individual is acutely aware of just how many voices there are. This allows government repression to be localized at worst and targeted against emergent organizations that can be political in nature. Thus the sudden anti religious movement.
Government meddling from the top down is still a real threat but also can be evaded as well.
Improvement will remain difficult to implement. Because of this we need to become insistent in our trade relations..
America’s Dangerous ‘China Fantasy’
Throughout
the 1990s and early 2000s, American business executives and political
leaders of both parties repeatedly put forward what I label the “China
fantasy”: the view that trade, foreign investment and increasing
prosperity would lead to political liberalization in the world’s most
populous country.
“Trade
freely with China, and time is on our side,” said President George W.
Bush. He was merely echoing his Democratic predecessor, Bill Clinton,
who called the opening of China’s political system “inevitable, just as
inevitably the Berlin Wall fell.”
To say the least, things in China haven’t turned out that way.
Over
the past few years, the Chinese regime has become ever less tolerant of
political dissent — to such an extent that, these days, American
leaders have become far more reluctant to make claims about China’s
political future or the impact on it of trade and investment. The “China
fantasy” got the dynamics precisely wrong: Economic development, trade
and investment have yielded greater political repression and a more
closed political system.
This
amounts to a new China paradigm: an intensely internationalized yet
also intensely repressive one-party state. China provides the model that
other authoritarian regimes, from Russia to Turkey to Egypt, may seek
to replicate. As a result, the United States will find itself struggling
with this new China paradigm again and again in the coming years.
In
using the word “repression,” I am talking about organized political
activity, not private speech. Visitors to China are sometimes surprised
to find that cabdrivers, tour guides or old friends may speak to them
with candor, even about political subjects. However, what such people
can’t do is to form an organization independent of the Chinese Communist
Party or take independent action to try to change anything.
Indeed,
over the past two years the Chinese government has been moving in new
ways against people and institutions that might, even indirectly,
provide support for independent political activity. It has tightened the
rules for nongovernmental organizations. More recently, it has been
arresting Chinese lawyers. It has also been staging televised
confessions, a practice reminiscent of Stalin’s show trials.
Why
is it that trade and investment have led to a Chinese regime that
represses dissent more than it did five, 10 or 20 years ago? The answer,
put simply, is that the regime thinks it needs to do so, can do so and
has fewer outside constraints inhibiting it from doing so.
First,
it needs to because as the economy develops and grows more complex,
Chinese citizens are having new grievances of the sort that would
otherwise lead to organized political activity. Environmental problems
have multiplied. Consumers worry about product safety (tainted milk, for
example) and accidents (like train wrecks). And at least to educated
Chinese, internet censorship can be an annoyance, if not an insult.
Second,
China’s security apparatus has a much greater capacity to repress
dissent than it did in the past. Technology gives it greater capacity to
control both physical space (the streets) and cyberspace (the
internet).
Finally,
the world’s increased commercial involvement with China over the past
two decades has made foreign leaders more reluctant to do anything in
response to Chinese crackdowns, lest the Chinese regime retaliate. This
is in large part a problem of perception: In fact, the Chinese regime
cares about its standing in the world and would seek to avoid
international condemnation if world leaders took stronger stands and
worked together.
Almost
forgotten now is that in the 1990s, the United States, possessing far
greater economic leverage in dealing with China than it has today,
threatened trade restrictions if Beijing did not improve the human
rights climate. After intense debate, the Clinton administration
eventually backed away from threats to limit trade with China.
The
aftermath of that debate was disastrous. American leaders overreacted
by deciding to avoid any further strong actions in support of human
rights in China. Instead, they offered the “China fantasy”: the idea
that change would come inevitably.
At
one point, giving voice to the optimism and the false assumptions about
how trade would liberalize China, President Clinton told China’s
president, Jiang Zemin, at a Washington news conference, “You’re on the
wrong side of history.” History, however, is rendering its own judgment —
that America’s confidence in the political impact of trade with China
was woefully misplaced.
Looking
forward, we are obliged to deal with a China capable of moving
endlessly from one crackdown to another, no longer interrupted by the
occasional easings or “Beijing Springs” of the past. It will be a
different China, in which educated, middle-class people may be less
loyal, but their views also less influential.
What
we can do is to keep expressing as forcefully as possible the values of
political freedom and the right to dissent. Democratic governments
around the world need to collaborate more often in condemning Chinese
repression — not just in private meetings but in public as well. We
should also find new ways to single out and penalize individual Chinese
officials involved in repression. Why should there be a one-way street
in which Chinese leaders send their own children to America’s best
schools, while locking up lawyers at home?
The
Chinese regime is not going to open up because of our trade with it.
The “China fantasy” amounted to both a conceptual failure and a
strategic blunder. The next president will need to start out afresh.
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