TRADING WITH OUR FRIENDS, THE ENEMY
At some point, we're going to have to face down China, or be faced down by China, over the status of Taiwan. China's national and international stature and military power are all on the rise. Unless we have some super-secret weaponry the government has not yet told us of, and that China hasn't managed to get from us on the sly (or purchase it from former President Clinton), China will eventually be the military master of Asia. Pridger
Forty years ago it was against American law to make innocent purchases in Red Chinese department stores in Hong Kong and elsewhere. I did it anyway, of course, purchasing an abacus and a copy of Chairman Mao's "Little Red Book" of quotations. Man! I felt wicked, and a little guilty, when I did that dastardly deal! Now this big, wicked, enemy enjoys a multi-billion dollar trade surplus with the United States. All we have to do is go to Wal Mart to get any number of things from the same Red China. If Communism is still the enemy, then we're trading with the enemy in a big way — and shopping at Wal Mart is the way that most of us trade with the enemy. Pridger
The Peoples' Republic of China, though it has moderated its rhetoric considerably (i.e., having become receptive to American capital), and all modesty aside, is still the biggest, baddest, "Evil Empire" in the world (meaning it is very big, has the largest military establishment on the planet, and is still officially communist). China has a long memory, lots of patience, and plenty of time. Pridger
Thanks to the transfer of our military hardware, secrets, and militarily useful electronics and rocket technology to China (both directly and by "friendly" proxies), China has both "the bomb" and the rocketry to deliver. In other words, nuclear blackmail is no longer the sole prerogative of the United States and Russia. Pridger
It's okay to trade with China now because the profit and market potential for American corporations is so tremendous. Pridger
Ninety short miles from the Florida keys is big, bad, Fidel Castro's communist Cuba. A little over forty years ago, we helped Castro come to power in Cuba, stabbing our old dictator friend, Batista (who had happily permitted American multi-national corporations, and the Mafia dominate the Cuban economy for decades), in the back. Castro was whooped up as a great popular liberator, and several flashy pro-Castro magazines appeared on American news stands. Then (surprise!), our brilliant "intelligence" services, and astute politicians, found out Castro was an evil Marxist-Leninist! Pridger
In our official posturing, we apparently consider Castro much, much, badder than Mao and the Peoples' Republic of China, though Castro is probably a saint compared to Mao-Tse-Tung. Here it is 2003, and we still can't even legally purchase Cuban Havana Cigars — the ones that are reputed to be the best in the world. Americans can't even legally travel to Cuba. But we can get all the Chinese goods we want. Finally, I could safely dig up my abacus and of Mao's Little Red Book of quotations. This is a most peculiar circumstance. Pridger
We became "friends" with China long before Chairman Mao died — while he was still supporting Ho Chi Minh and the Viet Cong in their struggle against the evil imperialists (us), in Vietnam. We decided to trade with Mao because of China's vast market potential. Cuba wasn't so lucky. We can forgo its puny market for some time yet. Pridger
I just dug up my Little Red Book of Mao's quotations. Here are a few samples which make appropriate reading, and provide a warning, for today's world:
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"WORKER
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Quotes from Mao Tse Tung's "Little Red Book"
"...U.S. imperialism has not yet been overthrown and it has the atom bomb. I believe it also will be overthrown. It, too, is a paper tiger... The United States has set up hundreds of bases in many countries all over the world. China's territory of Taiwan, Lebanon and all military bases of the United States on foreign soil are so many nooses round the neck of U.S. imperialism. The nooses have been fashioned by the Americans themselves and by nobody else, and it is they themselves who have put these nooses round their own necks, handing the ends of the ropes to the Chinese people, the peoples of the Arab countries and all the peoples of the world who love peace and oppose aggression. The longer the U.S. aggressors remain in those places, the tighter the nooses round their necks will become.
"Riding roughshod everywhere, U.S. imperialism has made itself the enemy of the people of the world and has increasingly isolated itself. Those who refuse to be enslaved will never be cowed by the atom bombs and hydrogen bombs in the hands of the U.S. imperialists. The raging tide of the people of the world against the U.S. aggressors is irresistible. Their struggle will assuredly win still greater victories.
"If the U.S. monopoly capitalist groups persist in pushing their policies of aggression and war, the day is bound to come when they will be hanged by the people of the whole world. The same fate awaits the accomplices of the United States.
"...There is a Chinese saying, 'Either the East Wind prevails over the West Wind or the West Wind prevails over the East Wind..."...It is the spirit of internationalism, the spirit of communism, from which every Chinese Communist must learn. ...We must unite with the proletariat of Japan, Britain, the United States, Germany, Italy and all other capitalist countries, before it is possible to overthrow imperialism, to liberate our nation and people and to liberate the other nations and peoples of the world. This is our internationalism, the internationalism with which we oppose both narrow nationalism and narrow patriotism.
...In another forty-five years, that is, in the year 2001, or the beginning of the 21st century, China will have undergone an even greater change. (than in the previous forty-five years) She will have become a powerful socialist industrial country. And that is as it should be. China is a land with and area of 9,600,000 square kilometres and a population of 600 million people, and she ought to have made a greater contribution to humanity. Her contribution over a long period has been far too small. For this we are regretful.
"But we must be modest — not only now, but forty-five years hence as well. We should always be modest. In our international relations, we Chinese people should get rid of great-power chauvinism resolutely, thoroughly, wholly and completely." Chairman Mao Tse Tung's Little Red Book of Quotations (1967 edition, Foreign Language Press, Peking).
China has never threatened to invade nor conquer the United States through force of arms. Nor did the former Soviet Union ever make such a threat. While the Soviet Union failed and collapsed, Red China learned, and thrives. Just what it has learned, and what it's long-term goals are, remains to be seen. Naturally, China has awakened to a new reality that it didn't foresee forty years ago. But it has adapted to it and will allow that new reality to fashion the future they plan for themselves. Unless Pridger is sorely mistaken, one thing is fairly certain. That is that China has Chinese interests at heart, not ours, nor the "Global Village" of international capital. It will use our own capitalists, with our eager and active assistance, to make us so economically dependent and strategically vulnerable that, by slow degrees, we will awaken to a new global reality, not in the least of our planning. Pridger
China will continue to be modest as it builds itself, with our help, into the world's largest superpower. We will continue to trade with the enemy until that enemy decides it is strong enough to bring Taiwan to heel. Then, we'll either have to knuckle to a new reality, or allow Wal Mart and many other American multi-national corporations to suffer a breakdown in their trade life-line and probable bankruptcy. The latter would cause a stock market crash, the likes of which we have never before seen. Pridger
China has already built a world class merchant marine that will become the world's largest in only a few short years. They are working at building a world class navy, capable of challenging our own. They have established strategic "commercial" outposts which encircle the United States. Their military intelligence network permeates our nation, invisibly imbedded among the millions of Chinese immigrants in our nation. While we fret (and correctly worry) about Mexican illegal immigration, Chinese illegal immigrants are arriving by the boat and container-loads. Chinese-Americans are among our most valuable citizens, but their increasing numbers provide cover for a large and growing Red Chinese intelligence presence. Pridger
Is China really the enemy? No, of course not. The real enemy is much closer to home. Perhaps the real enemy could be defined as a deadly combination of stupidity and avarice in high places — not in Beijing, but in New York, Washington, etc. Pridger
China was the paper tiger forty years ago, in international terms. It was also a sleeping giant, only beginning to awaken. We have gone out of our way, not only to wake it up more fully, but to turn it into a real tiger. Pridger
In the mean time we're spending our national capital (as if we'll never have to pay the piper), using the world's greatest military machine, to spar with a few scattered rabid Islamic Fundamentalists. Pridger
13 December, 2003