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COMPETING
INTERESTS
DIVIDE U.S. CHINA POLICY
By William R. Hawkins *
The Jamestown Foundation
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
July 3, 2006
The National
Security Strategy of the United States (NSS) released in March states,
"The United States will welcome the emergence of a China that
is peaceful and prosperous and that cooperates with us to address
common challenges and mutual interests." President George W.
Bush used the same phrase when meeting with Chinese President Hu
Jintao on April 20, adding that the two countries are "connected
through a global economy that has created opportunity for both our
peoples." In doing so, President Bush seemed to juxtapose economic
cooperation with security concerns, a priority also mentioned in
the NSS, which states, "Our strategy seeks to encourage China
to make the right strategic choices for its people, while we hedge
against other possibilities." These statements provided the
impression of a unified concept animating U.S. policy. Events this
spring, however, revealed the rivalry within the Bush administration
between a "business wing" that favors increased trade
and investment ties with China, and a "defense wing" that
is very concerned that the capital and technology flowing to China
is creating a dangerous rival with global ambitions.
The Office of
the Secretary of Defense issued its annual report on the Military
Power of the People's Republic of China on May 23. The first paragraph
of the executive summary contained familiar phraseology: "U.S.
policy encourages China to participate as a responsible international
stakeholder by taking on a greater share of responsibility for the
health and success of the global system from which China has derived
great benefit." Interestingly, the "stakeholder"
term did not appear elsewhere in the text of the Pentagon report;
its sole appearance in the summary suggests that it was likely inserted
during the interagency review process. The term was formulated by
former Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick in a speech to
the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations last September. He
contrasted the "stakeholder" concept and the "tightly
woven" global economy to the Cold War and "the distant
balance-of-power politics of 19th Century Europe," which he
said no longer applied in the 21st century [1].
Yet, balance-of-power
considerations are evident in other branches of the administration,
including parts of the Department of State. In March, just before
leaving for tripartite talks with Australia and Japan, Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice suggested that "those of us who are
longstanding allies, have a joint responsibility and obligation
to try and produce conditions in which the rise of China will be
a positive force in international politics, not a negative force"
(The Australian, March 11). In regard to the new agreement with
India over civilian nuclear power cooperation, Under Secretary of
State Nicholas Burns stated on March 22, "This deal is positive
for United States national security interest because it will help
us first cement our strategic partnership with India, which is very
important for our global interests." The most important global
security interests served by closer U.S. ties to both traditional
allies and to India is the balancing of China's rising power in
Asia.
The Pentagon's
Military Power report challenges the arguments of the "business
wing" that U.S.-China relations are primarily a function of
"win-win" economic integration. China's military buildup
supports a foreign policy at odds with the security interests of
the United States on many fronts. This is summed up nicely on page
9 of the report: "China continues to dispute sovereignty claims
in the South and East China Seas and is preparing for potential
conflict over Taiwan. Chinese companies continue to play a negative
role in the proliferation of advanced military capabilities, and
continue to supply countries such as Iran with critical military
technologies. Beijing has refused to join the Proliferation Security
Initiative. China has not fully leveraged its close ties with Pyongyang
to stem North Korean nuclear ambitions, and continues to maintain
or strengthen political, economic and military ties with Iran, Sudan,
Burma, Zimbabwe, Cuba and Venezuela, undercutting international
efforts to influence those states."
The report continues
by discussing the roles that businesses and economic growth have
played in Beijing's rise to world power, noting, "The extraordinary
economic success of the PRC is a central factor in its emergence
as a regional and global power, and is the basis for China's increasingly
capable military. The Party has also relied on the successful transformation
of the economy as a primary source of legitimacy." This last
sentence questions the claims of those who have argued that prosperity
will promote liberalism and tame the Communist Party.
Rather than
shifting toward political liberalization, states the report, Beijing
has utilized foreign companies to build its strength: "Most
of China's defense industries rely on foreign procurement and development.
The exceptions are few, e.g., ballistic missiles and some space
and aviation programs." The report continues, "Foreign
investment in physical plants, management, technical and marketing
expertise in some basic manufacturing sectors, such as strategic
metals and electronics, has increased the prospect for spin-off
with military and dual-use industries." Quoting Hu Jintao himself,
the report documents China's strategy to "build an innovative
system of defense science and technology...to create a good structure
under which military and civilian high technologies are shared and
mutually transferable."
To prevent Beijing
from exploiting U.S. technology successfully to modernize its military,
last year the Bush administration proposed new export controls to
limit the transfer of "dual-use" technology that could
be used to strengthen Chinese capabilities. Certain items would
be prohibited, while special licenses would be needed for other
products. In addition, there would be more stringent background
checks and oversight of transactions. While the international business
community has publicly stated its commitment to bolstering national
security, its actual behavior has been to oppose any new barriers
to trade or investment. As the U.S. Chamber of Commerce admits in
its 2005-2006 Policy Priorities, it seeks to "contain the proliferation
of counterproductive sanctions against incoming foreign investment,
as well as new restrictions on U.S. exports, that may be miscast
as homeland security or national security imperatives" [2].
While China
has protested U.S. export controls, and President Hu raised the
issue at the April summit, former U.S. Ambassador to Beijing James
Sasser has pointed out that "The Chinese really don't do any
lobbying." Instead, Sasser argues, "The heavy lifting
is done by the American business community" (Bloomberg, December
9, 2003). The computer, aerospace and machinery industries have
all lobbied the Commerce Department for less restrictive rules and
a shorter list of controlled products. Among the items that were
taken off the export control list were aircraft engines, ball bearings,
machine tools and virtual-reality systems (Bloomberg, May 3). These
new regulations were drafted in May and are currently being circulated
through the interagency review process. Given these realities, it
seems that the original concerns for national security have been
lost. Acknowledging that the current draft restricts only approximately
40 items as opposed to the hundreds of items listed in earlier proposals,
Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security David McCormick
told the Wall Street Journal, "The policy I've described is
a very different approach than was being discussed just six months
ago. There are some philosophical shifts here" (Wall Street
Journal, May 23).
A report by
the Government Accountability Office (GAO) disclosed that "the
current export control system has not effectively slowed China's
ability to obtain billions of dollars worth of advanced semiconductor
equipment as part of its national strategy to modernize its semiconductor
industry" (GAO, September 2005). The GAO found that licenses
were routinely approved with inadequate, if any, follow up inspections
by U.S. officials to verify promises by China's Commerce Ministry
that items would not be used for military purposes.
In China, President
Hu's system is already in place. In The Outline of the Development
Program of Science and Technology for National Defense for 2006
to 2020, the Chinese government readily admits to their intent to
share technology between military and civilian institutions and
businesses (Xinhua, May 25). Furthermore, one-third of the economy
is still in the hands of the government and much of the private
sector is run by elites with direct ties to the Chinese Communist
Party. Foreign firms are locked into joint ventures with Chinese
partners [3]. The Commerce Department's notion of a large "legitimate"
commercial sector to which technology can be safely sold seems mistaken.
As the Pentagon's report declares, "China continues a systematic
effort to obtain dual-use technologies through trade, commercial
transactions and joint ventures, particularly in the areas of software
and integrated circuits industries that are vital for information-based,
network-centric warfare." A recent study by the RAND Corporation
corroborates the Pentagon's suspicions over joint ventures and other
commercial technology transfers aiding the Chinese military. The
study stated that although not officially classified as part of
the weapons industry, Beijing's IT establishment "is probably
the most organizationally innovative and economically dynamic producer
of equipment for China's military" [4].
In a separate
report, the GAO also found that the Committee on Foreign Investment
in the United States (CFIUS), the institution responsible for policing
foreign acquisitions of U.S. assets that have security implications,
has a "reluctance to initiate an investigation due in part
to concerns about potential negative effects on the U.S. open investment
policy" (GAO, September 2005). Last year, China's state-owned
China National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC) attempted to purchase
the American-owned Unocal oil company, setting off a furor in Congress
over whether CFIUS would sign off on the acquisition. The House
of Representatives intervened in the process and passed a resolution
that deterred the deal. The incident also spurred Senate action
to strengthen the CFIUS process, as Beijing's enormous dollar reserves
allow it to make strong bids for any number of U.S. firms. It is
doubtful that CFIUS's performance will improve substantially, however,
as the proposed "Foreign Investment and National Security Act
of 2006" still leaves Treasury as the CFIUS chair, something
strongly favored by corporate lobbyists (The Hill, October 18, 2005).
The recent appointment
of Henry Paulson as secretary of the treasury could compound the
problem. Paulson, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, led his firm in representing
several of China's state-owned firms as well as the Beijing regime
itself. Indeed, Goldman Sachs was involved in financing the aborted
CNOOC-Unocal deal. Paulson will be a powerful new addition to the
"business wing" of the Bush administration.
While its own
policy has become more assertive, Beijing has capitalized upon the
competing worldviews and interest group coalitions to play the two
wings against one another and to prevent the formulation of a resolute
U.S. policy. When a Chinese interceptor collided with a U.S. Navy
EP-3 reconnaissance plane over international waters in April 2001,
the Chamber of Commerce was in the middle of its own private diplomacy
project, "A National Conversation with the Chinese Ambassador,"
a 10-city tour for Beijing's ambassador to the United States, Yang
Jiechi. The tour's planned stop in Chicago on April 25 continued,
giving Beijing another forum to explain its side of the dispute.
After the crisis was resolved, the Chamber's president, Thomas Donahue,
revealed his ranking of the issues, declaring, "We must strive
to see the day when an occurrence like the spy plane incident last
spring doesn't unravel our entire relationship" [5].
On his trip
to the United States this April, President Hu did not get a state
dinner at the White House. He did, however, have two lavish dinners
held in his honor by the business community, first in Seattle before
the summit, and then in Washington DC after the summit. The Chinese
Foreign Ministry referred to the Washington dinner as an event hosted
by "12 friendly organizations" led by the Chamber of Commerce
and the U.S.-China Business Council (USCBC). As USCBC President
John Frisbie remarked afterwards, "The high turnout for the
dinner demonstrates the strength of support for advancing U.S.-China
relations through engagement" [6].
Strategist Sun
Tzu might see this situation and the opportunities it presented
differently. As he advised, when making plans against an opponent,
"if his men are harmonious, split them."
Notes
1. Robert
B. Zoellick, "Whither China: From Membership to Responsibility?"
Remarks to National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, New York
City, September 21, 2005.
2. U.S. Chamber of Commerce, International Trade and Investment
Priorities for 2005-2006.
3. For a study of how family, clan and cultural norms reinforce
formal organization in the of spread technology across sectors in
China see: George T. Haley, Usha C. V. Haley and Chin Tiong Tan,
The Chinese Tao of Business: The Logic of Successful Business Strategy
(John Wiley and Sons, 2004).
4. Evan Medeiros, Roger Cliff, Keith Crane and James Mulvenon, A
New Direction for China's Defense Industry, (RAND Corporation, December,
2005), p. viii.
5. Statement by Thomas Donahue, July 2001.
6. Press Release, U.S.-China Business Council, April 20, 2006.
* William R.
Hawkins is Senior Fellow for National Security Studies at the U.S.
Business and Industry Council.
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