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Vince Cable 中國 朋友還是敵人 全麵辯論 | 牛津辯論社

(2026-03-10 01:59:13) 下一個

與龍共舞—中國:朋友還是敵人 | 牛津辯論社

 

Dancing With The Dragon - China: Friend or Foe? | Full Head to Head | Oxford Union

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nEchkn3unl8&t=644s

  Oxford Union  Jan 16 2022

 

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中國作為新興經濟超級大國,其增長和外交政策正在迅速重塑國際政治格局,並日益成為新聞焦點。本次辯論將探討中國在世界上的地位、全球力量平衡是否向中國傾斜,以及中英和中美關係的本質。中國贏了嗎?對中國而言,勝利究竟意味著什麽?兩位演講者將探討這些問題以及更多內容,並深入探究中國如何重塑現代世界。 --------------------------------------

1. 尊敬的文斯·凱布爾爵士

文斯·凱布爾爵士是英國自由民主黨政治家,曾任該黨領袖,並在聯合政府內閣中擔任商業、創新與技能大臣五年。他著有《中國難題》一書,探討了中國與西方之間的關係。

2. 邁克爾·皮爾斯伯裏博士

邁克爾·皮爾斯伯裏博士是哈德遜研究所中國戰略中心主任。他曾在美國政府擔任多個國防和外交政策顧問職位,被認為是特朗普對華政策的製定者。

3. 拉納·米特教授(主持人)

米特教授是現代中國曆史與政治學教授。他曾任牛津中國中心主任。他著有多部關於中國的著作,包括《苦澀的革命:中國與現代世界的鬥爭》。

關於牛津辯論社:牛津辯論社是世界上最負盛名的辯論社團,在邀請國際嘉賓和演講者來牛津方麵享有無與倫比的聲譽。自1823年以來,辯論社不僅在牛津大學,而且在全球範圍內推廣辯論和討論。<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

邁克爾·皮爾斯伯裏博士發言

女士們、先生們,感謝各位的到來。我隻有12分鍾的時間,我將用其中的一部分來讚揚文斯·凱布爾爵士,也希望他能同樣讚揚我。

 

他在殼牌公司任職期間,幫助開創了情景規劃的先河。這是一種在當時獨一無二的思維方式,它能夠思考那些難以想象的事情。後來,美國五角大樓和中央情報局竊取了這個概念。我自己也在自己的著作《百年馬拉鬆》中運用了這一概念。這個概念極其簡單:嚐試思考決定未來的各種因素,製定一個計劃,假設其中有四五個因素構成所謂的“情景族”,然後改變一些變量,看看在中國可能會發生哪些難以想象的事情。據我所知,在1970年和1971年,當基辛格和尼克鬆準備打開中國大門時,華盛頓特區沒有人這樣做。

 

如果當時(1970年)有人做過殼牌公司的情景規劃…… 71,我對這個決定也有一些發言權,所以我部分地責怪自己,盡管我更責怪基辛格博士。當時的情況可能是:我們是不是被騙了?難道不是美國在向中國開放關係嗎?我們之前以為是這樣。還是中國為了自身利益向美國開放關係?當時一份最近解密的文件顯示,亨利·基辛格知道中國有激進分子。1970年7月,他收到一份高度機密的報告,稱中國戰鬥機已經起飛,可能是為了擊落一架美國偵察機。順便說一句,這不是1990年,而是1970年。基辛格給尼克鬆寫了一份備忘錄,說中國領導層中顯然有一些激進分子不希望與美國開放關係。也許我們應該確保我們的偵察機不要飛得太靠近中國海岸線。關鍵在於,美方已經意識到北京高層存在政治因素,存在能夠調動戰鬥機的激進分子。後來,在一段非常著名的評論中……毛主席對尼克鬆說的話,尼克鬆承認當時他並沒有完全理解。毛主席說話的方式幾乎像詩人一樣,有時他的年輕翻譯無法準確翻譯。毛主席對尼克鬆說的其中一句話是:“這裏有人不想讓你來中國,別擔心。”

 

幾個月前,中國十大將領因反對對外開放而被擊斃或逮捕,並被判處無期徒刑或死刑。最近,中國人出版了一些回憶錄,表明開放美國是他們的主意。所以,如果你看到像夏主席選擇的“與龍共舞”這樣的標題,你首先需要明白是誰邀請誰來跳舞。我們一直以為是我們,高尚寬宏的美國人,尋求全球化方案,看到了憤怒敵對的封閉中國,決定開放中國,融入世界。這種觀點現在已經過時了。人們認識到中國的新舉措,甚至基辛格在他的中國著作中也提到,這花了他……他花了40年時間寫這本書,現在卻放棄了美國打開中國大門的說法。在他的新書《中國》(書名就叫《中國的一切》)中,他聲稱中國領導層內部也曾有過類似的努力,試圖與美國接觸。這徹底改變了西方試圖將中國納入新世界秩序的固有觀念。

 

如果我快進到幾年前,大家都知道,世界上許多國家都指責中國在日內瓦侵犯知識產權。有一個組織,內部人士簡稱它為“世界知識產權組織”(WIPO),聽起來不太好聽,對吧?誰知道WIPO是什麽意思?舉手!哦,天哪!WIPO是世界知識產權組織。

 

 

它是聯合國專門機構體係的一部分,該體係共有16個機構,而聯合國專門機構體係又可以追溯到國際聯盟,國際聯盟的曆史則更為久遠。WIPO旨在構建一個世界秩序,並以一種涉及資源共享的方式來管理知識產權保護等各種職能問題。一百多個國家競選世界知識產權組織新任總幹事,如果你認為最終當選的是英國人,請舉手。美國人呢?最終勝出的是一位中國公民兼黨員。被指控犯下人類曆史上最大的知識產權盜竊案,然後還推舉候選人領導聯合國專門機構,這需要多大的膽量啊!他本來很有可能勝出。特朗普總統聽說了這件事,覺得不對勁,於是谘詢了許多人。突然,一位來自新加坡的候選人——新加坡有著悠久的知識產權保護曆史——報了名並當選了。所以,從1970年到2020年,美國是不是一直計劃著與中國共舞,把中國拉進聯合國體係?

 

世界秩序、世界銀行和國際貨幣基金組織都在運作,沒錯,這就是我們計劃的嗎?不。在文斯·凱布爾爵士的著作《金錢與權力》中,你會發現有一章專門講述鄧小平,這位偉大的中國領導人如今在某種程度上被習近平的光芒所掩蓋。書中講述了他如何從在俄羅斯的經曆,以及後來從世界銀行和一位名叫詹姆斯·圖賓的諾貝爾獎得主那裏學習,最終掌握了將中國變成經濟強國的計劃。美國、西方和日本都參與其中,再次假設“與龍共舞”會是一次美好的約會。

 

然而,事實證明,中國存在著侵犯人權、審查製度、永久性的一黨製以及對本國人民使用恐怖手段等問題。這種中國,正是基辛格在1970年提到的那種中國,當時他提到激進分子或派遣戰鬥機出動。這種中國似乎才是北京的贏家。我的書《百年馬拉鬆》運用了文斯·凱布爾開創的情景分析技巧,探討了如果我們真的錯了,這意味著什麽。過去20到40年中國的野心究竟是什麽?是像希特勒和納粹德國那樣吞並波蘭和捷克嗎?不,絕對不是,中國沒有任何此類行為的跡象。

 

是像日本20世紀30年代那樣暗殺領導人,試圖建立一個東亞共榮圈嗎?也不是,完全沒有。正如他們自己解釋的那樣,中國的野心隻是回到過去的樣子,大多數美國人,當然還有一些牛津大學的學生,都知道過去的樣子,但並非所有人都清楚。

 

這促使我在下一本書中探討習近平經常提及的中國古代政治模式。他用一種類似密碼的方式,引用諺語和古代人物的故事。你可能覺得這些沒什麽大不了,但實際上,習近平很坦率地表示,他需要第三個任期,他可能會在我們這個第三個五年任期內完成他必須完成的工作——讓中國回歸正軌。這是一個任期。他們用的那種感覺有點像文藝複興時期的福辛格·盧克。你們當中有多少人?

 

這是我最後幾秒鍾了。你們當中有多少人認為自己清楚地了解習近平設想中的中國回歸正軌後的世界圖景?舉手!這意味著你必須買我的下一本書。非常感謝。

 

尊敬的文斯·凱布爾爵士發言

女士們、先生們,感謝各位的到來。我隻有12分鍾的時間,我將用這12分鍾中的一些時間來讚揚文斯·凱布爾爵士。我隻希望他也能同樣讚揚我。他在殼牌公司任職期間,幫助開創了情景規劃的先河。這是一種在當時獨一無二的思維方式,一種思考難以想象之事的思維方式。後來,美國五角大樓和中央情報局竊取了這個概念。我自己在我的著作《百年馬拉鬆》中也運用了這一概念。這個概念極其簡單:

嚐試思考決定未來的各種因素,製定一個計劃,比如說四到其中四到五個因素構成所謂的“情景族”,然後改變一些變量,看看在中國,可能會發生哪些難以想象的事情。據我所知,在1970年和1971年,華盛頓特區沒有人這樣做。

當時基辛格和尼克鬆正準備打開中國大門。如果當時有一個殼牌公司的情景規劃……當時是1970年和1971年我對這個決定也有一些參與,所以我部分地責怪自己,盡管我更責怪基辛格博士。當時的情況可能是我們被欺騙了。難道不是美國在向中國開放關係嗎?我們之前以為是中國在向美國開放關係。這對中國來說有很多好處。

一份最近解密的文件顯示,亨利·基辛格知道中國有激進分子。1970年7月,他收到了一份高度機密的報告。報告稱,中國戰鬥機已經起飛並正在飛行。可能是為了擊落一架美國偵察機。順便說一句,這不是1990年,而是1970年。

基辛格給尼克鬆寫了一份備忘錄。說中國領導層中顯然有一些激進分子,他們不希望與美國開放關係。也許我們應該確保我們的偵察機不要飛得太靠近中國海岸線。關鍵是,美方已經明白這一點。政治北京高層有一些激進分子,他們日後能夠派出戰鬥機。

毛主席曾對尼克鬆說過一句非常著名的話,尼克鬆承認他當時並沒有完全理解。毛主席說話的方式幾乎像個詩人。他有時會說一些連他的年輕翻譯都無法準確翻譯的話。他對尼克鬆說的其中一句話是:這裏有一些人不希望你來中國,別擔心。

幾個月前,中國十大將領被處決或被捕,並將被判處無期徒刑或死刑。因為他們反對對美國開放。最近,中國人出版了一些回憶錄,表明開放美國是他們的主意。

所以,如果你有一個像夏主席選擇“與龍共舞”這樣的頭銜,你需要先了解是誰邀請誰來跳舞。我們一直認為是我們這些高尚寬宏的美國人尋求全球化方案看到憤怒、敵對、封閉的中國,決定開放它融入世界。這種觀點現在已經過時了。人們認識到中國的新麵貌,甚至基辛格在他的中國問題著作中也提到,他花了40年時間寫這本書。他現在放棄了美國開放中國的說法。在他的新中國問題著作中,書名就叫《中國》,他現在說,中國領導層內部也曾進行過類似的努力,試圖與美國接觸。這改變了人們對西方試圖將中國納入新世界秩序的看法。

如果我快進到幾年前,你們都知道,世界上許多國家都指責中國侵犯知識產權。在日內瓦,有一個組織,它是一座宏偉美麗的藍綠色玻璃摩天大樓,內部人士簡稱它為世界知識產權組織(WIPO)。聽起來不太好聽,對吧?WIPO,誰知道它代表什麽?

舉起你們的手!哦,天哪,WIPO世界知識產權組織是聯合國專門機構體係的一部分,該體係共有16個專門機構,而這些機構又可以追溯到國際聯盟,國際聯盟的曆史則更為久遠。它代表著世界秩序的理念以及諸如此類的各種職能問題。

知識產權保護的管理方式涉及匯集一百多個國家的主權,這些國家都曾競選世界知識產權組織的新任總幹事。

如果你認為最終當選的是英國人,請舉手。

美國人呢?

最終勝出的是一位中國公民和黨員。

被指控犯下人類曆史上最大的知識產權盜竊案,然後還推舉候選人競選聯合國專門機構的負責人,這需要多大的勇氣?他本來會贏的。

特朗普總統聽說了這件事,說等等,這不對勁。於是他谘詢了許多其他人,突然,一位來自新加坡的候選人…新加坡有著悠久的知識產權保護曆史,他毛遂自薦。並最終獲勝。所以,讓我們回到……從1970年到2020年美國的計劃是與龍共舞,將中國納入聯合國體係和世界秩序嗎?

世界銀行和國際貨幣基金組織,這計劃奏效了嗎?當然!這就是我們計劃的嗎?不。在文斯·凱布爾爵士的著作《金錢與權力》中,你會發現有一章專門講述鄧小平,這位偉大的中國領導人,如今他的光芒在某種程度上被習近平所掩蓋。書中講述了他如何從在俄羅斯的經曆中學習,後來又從世界銀行和一位名叫詹姆斯·圖賓的諾貝爾獎得主那裏學習。

他學習了如何將中國變成經濟強國的計劃。美國、西方和日本都參與其中,再次假設與龍共舞會是一次美好的約會。結果證明,中國存在人權問題、審查製度、永久性的一黨製,以及對本國人民使用恐怖手段。

基辛格在1970年提到激進分子或派遣戰鬥機時,想到的就是這種情況。這種中國似乎在北京取得了勝利。我的書《百年馬拉鬆》運用了文斯·凱布爾開創的情景分析技巧。書中寫道,如果我們過去20到40年都錯了,這意味著什麽?

中國的野心究竟是什麽?是希特勒和納粹德國吞並波蘭和捷克嗎?絕對不是,中國沒有任何此類行為的跡象。這更像是……日本在20世紀30年代暗殺領導人,試圖建立一個東亞共榮圈。完全沒有這方麵的跡象。

正如中國自己解釋的那樣,他們的野心隻是回歸過去的秩序。大多數美國人,當然還有一些牛津大學的學生都知道,但並非所有人都清楚過去是什麽樣的。這促使我去探索在我的下一本書中,探討習近平經常提到的中國古代政治模式。

他用一種類似密碼的方式,引用諺語,講述古代人物的故事。你以為這些故事無害,但實際上……習近平非常坦率他說他需要第三個任期,而且他可能在我們第三個五年任期內就能實現為了完成他必須讓中國重回正軌的工作,他們用這個詞有點像文藝複興時期的福辛格盧克,在座各位,這是我最後幾秒鍾了,在座各位有多少人認為你們清楚地了解習近平設想的中國回歸正軌後的世界圖景?

舉手

這意味著你們必須購買我的下一本書,非常感謝

感謝你們邀請我回到聯盟,很榮幸能在帕爾斯伯裏博士之後發言,他可能是世界上對中國問題最有權威的兩三個人之一,而且是一位思想深刻的人,他說的和寫的很多東西都很有智慧而且正確 嗯,但我有點和他意見相左 嗯,事實上,我在本書的開篇文章中開始與他意見相左,那篇文章談到了中國的秘密戰略取代美國作為全球中心超級大國,然後為什麽還要保密?

嗯,皮爾斯伯裏博士在他的書中描述了一個故事:一位中國叛逃者來到美國,警告說有一個秘密計劃,要在到2020年使中國經濟規模與美國相當。這令人震驚,你知道,這是個大秘密。好吧,我得告訴他,25年前,我坐在倫敦一家跨國公司裏,手裏拿著一些統計數據、一個計算器和一點常識,你隻要在信封背麵就能算出來,中國幾乎肯定會在2020年成為世界最大的經濟體。

這根本不需要保密就能理解,而且其實算術很簡單。我的意思是,中國的人口是美國的四倍,你知道,當中國的生活水平達到美國的四分之一時,從定義上講,它的經濟規模將與美國相當。我的意思是,為什麽這是一個問題?我的意思是,這實際上應該是一件值得歡迎的事情,很多非常貧困的人將會受益。體麵的生活水平,你知道,這是基本的算術,當中國繼續增長(幾乎肯定會如此),並且達到美國一半的生活水平時,他們的經濟規模將是美國的兩倍。

他們必須適應這一點,我們也正在適應。實際上,到本世紀中葉,不僅僅是中國,印度也將成為經濟超級大國,其經濟規模將超過美國。所以你知道,現在的問題在於,當前的霸主,你知道,超級大國,正在適應另一個國家擁有與之相當甚至可能更強大的經濟實力這一事實。我的意思是,你知道,英國曾經是100年前的世界第一,所以我們有一個世紀的時間來適應排名下滑。

我認為我們現在大概排在第八位,剛剛被印度尼西亞超越。但你知道,我們會適應這些事情。我認為美國是問題的核心。在很多方麵,美國無法適應這一基本事實,也無法適應。它並且要接受中國必須融入世界體係的規則之中,而美國在過去70年裏一直領導並很好地領導著這個體係,這對我們所有人都有利我認為,這種所謂的保密理念與現代中國的許多特征都相悖,現代中國的許多特征現在都隱藏在眾目睽睽之下,它們的意義非常清楚嗯,它並不隱藏,嗯,中國模式,在鄧小平的領導下發展成為現代中國模式,從一開始就非常清楚,有兩個非常基本的原則,第一個是強調穩定和安全,在經曆了一個世紀的混亂之後,呃,革命、內戰、戰爭,為了在專製黨國統治下獲得安全,這從未隱藏,一直非常清楚,這就是他們將要追求的模式第二個方麵是提高中國人的生活水平,這將通過引進資本主義來實現,而這已經實現了,國家資本主義,以及在一些高端領域龐大的私營部門國家控製,但擁有非常活躍的資本主義競爭體係國有企業也包含市場競爭的元素,而這種初創資本主義模式在中國行之有效它非常成功,但現在可能麵臨一些問題存在,許多與消費不足和企業債務相關的經濟問題。當然,如果他們真的遇到麻煩,他們就會像日本一樣,我們就不再擔心他們了。

但實際上,我們現在麵臨的問題是,如果中國模式繼續成功,這種由成功的資本主義體係支撐的快速增長與威權一黨製國家相結合,我們為什麽要嚐試並接受它?你們中的一些人會說,嗯,民主,你知道我們相信民主,為什麽中國不能是民主國家?嗯,這是一個不同的製度,而且到目前為止,你知道我們已經接受了存在不同的製度來處理一個特定的問題涉及英國,即我們在香港的遺留責任,這裏的人們普遍感到非常憤怒,西方人憤怒的是正直的人被投入監獄,報紙編輯被關閉。向下但我必須說,中國人總是非常明確地表明了香港的紅線40年前,當瑪格麗特·撒切爾去與鄧小平談判時,他說,我們本可以像印度人處理殖民地或印尼人那樣處理香港,派軍隊進去,24小時內就能解決問題,但他們沒有這樣做,他們的策略更加巧妙,他們看到了保持這個獨立實體的優勢。

但他說,在某些界限內,你可以暢所欲言,享有言論自由,你可以批評共產黨,但如果出現暴力騷亂,我們將介入製止它而那些在香港以民主和言論自由的名義,開始向警察投擲燃燒彈並破壞立法會,有點扼殺香港民主,因為遊戲規則非常明確,中國人絕不會弄虛作假,也絕不會含糊其辭,明確哪些行為是允許的,我認為我們需要記住這一點。

同樣,在外交政策方麵,葛蘭素史克總統已經執政10年了,他非常10年前就明確闡述了他的方針,我們接受了,並在他在墨西哥城發表的聲明中闡述了這一點。有人問他與西方的關係是什麽,他說,我們不會輸出革命,我們不會輸出饑餓的難民,我們不會招惹你們,你們也不要招惹我們。

這有點粗暴,但與中國交往的方式非常明確,那就是如果你想與他們保持良好的關係,你就必須尊重他們的領土完整和不幹涉原則,這也是他們此後處理外交事務的基礎。這就是為什麽例如,在龍貓問題上,我非常確定存在嚴重的人權侵犯,而且西方國家對此采取了
強硬立場。但很明顯,世界上許多其他國家,包括所有重要的穆斯林國家,包括那些民選國家,如印度尼西亞、馬來西亞、巴基斯坦、孟加拉國和尼日利亞,都站在中國一邊,這符合中國一貫的原則。

與中國打交道,與中國接觸,但要認識到他們有著不同的製度,他們不會容忍幹涉他們的內政,這完全是出於現實主義。我們處理與中國關係的方式,所以讓我試著總結一下我認為這將導致什麽結果。我的意思是,我曾經是政府的一員,我們確實嚐試與中國接觸。

我們的主要動機是經濟,我們當時認為,而且我現在仍然認為,與中國進行經濟接觸對英國和其他西方國家是有利的。由於我們所做的,我們仍然擁有英國鋼鐵工業。中國公司收購了塔塔鋼鐵,塔塔鋼鐵即將關閉。擁有電動汽車產業因為中國人將在英格蘭東北部大力投資電池產業路虎在西米德蘭茲郡的汽車產業非常成功,這得益於利潤和在中國的銷售額,開發我們疫苗的阿斯利康公司也是依靠在中國的利潤和銷售額,包括這所大學在內的英國大學非常依賴,每年12萬名支付全額商業學費的中國學生。

你知道,英國經濟受益於我們與中國的關係,我不會為曾經就其中一些問題進行談判而道歉,但這不僅僅是狹隘的,還有更廣闊的圖景,盡管有種種關於中國不公平做法的抱怨。但他們實際上幫助維持了世界貨幣體係的穩定,他們持有價值4萬億美元的美國資產。

人們一直認為他們會利用這些資產破壞體係,並發動貨幣戰,但這些都沒有發生。他們維持了基本的貨幣體係穩定,並與美國保持著隱性夥伴關係。那些對……虎視眈眈的人基於規則的世界貿易體係組織不是中國造成的,而是特朗普總統試圖扼殺它。

撤回對世貿組織的支持,以及邁克爾相當公正地提及的一些問題,我們與中國在知識產權問題上的分歧,我的意思是所有正在崛起的國家,韓國、台灣、日本,以及我在其早期階段,美國,其發展的基礎是竊取英國的知識產權,這就是他們起步的方式,也是許多國家起步的方式。但現在他們已經引入了知識產權法庭,外國公司現在贏得了訴訟,他們正在適應一個對全球負責的經濟夥伴的要求。我們抱怨,我們過去常常與中國談判,並說,好吧,你們開放市場,表明你們願意互惠,自由貿易。西方和英國的首要清單始終是金融服務。

值得注意的是,在當前中國政策方麵發生的一係列活動中,其中一件事是……總統所做的就是向中國開放金融服務業的領先西方公司,如貝萊德、摩根大通和安進,現在完全依靠在中國的子公司運營,並大量收購中國股票,你知道,他們已經接受了作為一體化經濟體係一部分的義務,但我可以就此總結出比國際貿易更重要的東西,那就是那些常見的經濟難題,即所謂的國際公共產品,各國必須在這方麵進行合作。

。你知道,疫情就是一個例子,另一個例子是目前在格拉斯哥發生的氣候變化,而中國目前被描繪成壞人,他們的排放量非常大當然,但實際上人均排放量或累計排放量並沒有那麽大,但是,是的我們不是如果沒有中國的合作,我們無法解決氣候問題,而他們也承認存在這個問題。

他們剛剛推出了碳定價機製,擁有全球最大的可再生能源產業和日蝕汽車產業。他們曾試圖加速淘汰煤炭,但隨後遇到了電力短缺。所以他們不得不退縮,但他們理解合作的必要性。關鍵在於,除非我們與他們合作開展研究、製定通用標準等等,否則我們無法解決這個問題。而這在冷戰環境下是行不通的。

最後一點,我隻想花一分鍾時間談談核武器擴散。

這可能是我們目前麵臨的最大危險,而且存在一些流氓國家,比如朝鮮、巴基斯坦,還有可能包括伊朗。中國對所有這些國家都有影響力,我們不知道他們是如何運用這種影響力的。

但如果我們願意與中國合作,我們或許可以最大限度地降低相關風險。更嚴重的是,由於與中國的對話破裂,一種偏執情緒已經滋生。導致中國擴充核武器儲備的原因是,他們奉行最低限度威懾政策,不首先使用核武器。

對任何人都沒有威脅。現在他們擔心會遭到美國的攻擊,所以他們正在擴充核武庫。我的意思是,你可以爭論誰該為此負責,但這必須被阻止,這非常非常危險,隻有與他們對話才能阻止它。現在沒有人與他們對話。

我們也必須為了我們自己的利益而參與對話。謝謝。

邁克爾,我可以問你一個問題嗎?我有時覺得這個問題在華盛頓特區問得不夠多。雖然我懷疑你可能已經問過不止一次了。我會這樣問你:這是一個陷阱,這是一個陷阱問題,對吧?

完全不是。這是一個你作為一位傑出的專家,一位最偉大的中國專家的問題。正如特朗普總統所說,沒錯,他可是中國問題專家。天知道他在任期間經曆了多少次……

史蒂夫·班農現在怎麽樣了?在那段時間裏,人們提出了很多問題,比如:我們如何阻止中國?我們如何遏製中國?我們如何才能真正阻止中國做很多事情?

亞洲以外的許多人,甚至包括歐洲人和美國人,都可能擔心南海軍事化,以及台灣是否容易受到攻擊等等。所有這些爭論至今仍然非常熱門。

這些問題經常被問到。另一方麵,我聽到的回答卻少得多,我現在要問的是:中國在其所在地區乃至全球範圍內應該扮演怎樣的明確角色?因為正如文斯所說,中國不會是一個自由民主國家,我們也不應該特別期望它會成為自由民主國家。它是一個非常龐大、強大且有影響力的國家,其經濟已經發展成為世界第二大經濟體,是世界上人口最多的單一市場。它當然有權提出一些關於自身地位的想法,而這些想法不應該完全由其他國家的看法來定義。所以,如果你同意這個前提那麽,如果不是中國現在正在做的事情,華盛頓想要反擊的事情,中國在亞太地區乃至更廣泛地區應該扮演什麽角色?

想象一下1935年的牛津聯盟。這就是我要說的利益相關者。你問過同樣的問題,關於《經濟學人》雜誌當年所說的希特勒先生。順便說一句,希特勒·丘吉爾在30年代被描繪成一個白癡、無知、愚蠢的傻瓜。但人們認為希特勒先生有正當的不滿,他試圖糾正。

當時的英國輿論支持希特勒先生。凡爾賽條約不公平,賠款不公平,還有很多其他不公平的地方。所以當時有一些英國人認為希特勒有正當的目標。我們不能試圖限製他,或者對他刻薄,為什麽?他甚至可能會變得更加邪惡。這種觀點是……錯得離譜,奪去了數百萬人的生命。現在你問我,每個人都應該捫心自問,中國應該扮演怎樣的合法角色?

我們這些身處中國以外的人都能接受的合法角色是什麽?

是的,你們有一份清單,實際上確實有一份清單。

那位中國發言人最近提到了這份清單,這份清單讓美國政府產生了分歧。

美國政府已經向中國提交了一份清單。

中國也向我們提交了一份清單。

同樣的事情也發生在特朗普政府時期的貿易談判中,中國方麵實際上已經向我們提交了一份清單。

其中一個例子是關於數據,這促成了中國版的亞馬遜在美國運營。

清單上有很多項目,將近50項。

我們也有自己的清單。所以,當你提出這類問題時,它引出了一個問題:各國政府應該采取哪些工具、步驟和措施,來實施這種關於中國應該是什麽樣子的願景?

我認為這份清單應該包括:以可核實的方式停止所謂的對維吾爾族的種族滅絕;承認該計劃已經結束;關閉大門;讓維吾爾族人離開。

這有助於中國在價值觀方麵樹立形象,並使其在世界舞台上扮演更重要的角色。我們尊重穆斯林。這份清單還可以包括文斯爵士提到的內容。

我同意他的觀點,關於核武器問題,中國曾受邀1999年6月前往維也納,與美國和俄羅斯代表團會麵,討論一項降低核武器數量上限的三方協議。

中國拒絕出席。美國人甚至在會議室裏掛起了中國國旗。

俄羅斯同意中國應該參加核武器談判,特別是關於戰略穩定以及如何避免核大國之間發生事故。中國拒絕出席。

所以文斯爵士想讓你相信,美國沒有與中國展開對話。不,他們拒絕參加的活動有很多,所以他們目前在地區中的角色非常有限。呃,這在亞洲各國首都都是一個爭議話題。

喬·拜登延續了唐納德·特朗普的大部分對華政策,這其中自有緣由。他和他的團隊上任後,仔細審視了中國的過往記錄。這不僅僅是針對維吾爾族的種族滅絕,也不僅僅是侵犯知識產權,不僅僅是核武器數量翻三倍。

遠不止這些。而我們狹隘自私的美國視角我並不指望英國人會同意這種觀點,那就是我們不想輕易放棄我們的霸主地位。

你們可能會說,哦,就讓中國有機會吧。我們英國人曾經擁有大約一百年的霸主地位,我們製定了規則。美國人曾經一度是世界第一,那就給中國一個機會吧。我的觀點是,這對其他人來說,尤其是對美國人來說,是一件極其危險的事情。

放棄我們的全球霸主地位,很多美國人根本不會這麽做,我們寧願戰鬥也不願放棄。現在,我想提一下一些美國人。呃,是摩根大通的總裁傑米·戴蒙嗎?我正在努力回憶。

他們具體是怎麽說的?不,呃,傑米·戴蒙最近說過一些話。文斯爵士說,我們美國人必須習慣於屈居中國第二,但我們仍然會是人均四倍的法官。我認為,目前傑米·戴蒙的觀點在眾議院和參議院是少數派。你會發現很少有國會議員願意投票支持“哦,是的,我們需要屈居中國第二”。

所以我並不指望歐洲人支持我們維持霸主地位,那是我們自己的事。但是,我們接下來要做的事可能會嚇到很多歐洲人。我們不能讓中國在核武器方麵與我們匹敵。

我們不能讓他們駕駛所謂的核動力噴氣式轟炸機在台灣附近盤旋。隻要台灣人的感情受到傷害,我們就無法回答你關於中國合法地位的問題。隻要中國……參與搜索不當行為極其令人憤慨,大多數人都認為這是不可接受的,這一點必須明確。

邁克爾,從某種意義上說,我問題的答案是,中國的角色首先仍需由美國來定義。是你提出了這個問題,問一個美國人中國應該扮演什麽角色,我怎麽敢回答這個問題?這應該由中國來決定,但是我們美國人有權對我們認為正在發生的事情做出回應。我們已經有很多工具在運作,拜登總統正在繼續推進,我們將阻止中國竊取技術,我們將采取一係列措施來減緩他們的不當行為,拜登完全支持這些措施,這與特朗普無關。

所以,我想請文斯·凱布爾先生回答。文斯,你肯定已經聽到了邁克爾提出的各種觀點,包括與20世紀30年代的相似之處,我相信你會

想要回應這一點。讓我向你提出一個具體的問題,盡管這隻是討論的一部分。就是……

我們不能讓他們駕駛所謂的核動力噴氣式轟炸機在台灣附近盤旋。

隻要台灣人的感情受到傷害,我們就無法回答

你關於中國合法地位的問題。隻要中國……參與搜索

不當行為極其令人憤慨,大多數人都認為這是不可接受的,這一點必須明確。

邁克爾,從某種意義上說,我問題的答案是,中國的角色首先仍需由美國來定義。

是你提出了這個問題,問一個美國人中國應該扮演什麽角色,我怎麽敢回答這個問題?

這應該由中國來決定,但是我們美國人有權對我們認為正在發生的事情做出回應。

我們已經有很多工具在運作,拜登總統正在繼續推進,我們將阻止

中國竊取技術,我們將采取一係列措施來減緩他們的

不當行為,拜登完全支持這些措施,這與特朗普無關。

所以,我想請文斯·凱布爾先生回答。文斯,你肯定已經聽到了邁克爾提出的各種觀點,包括與20世紀30年代的相似之處,我相信你會

想要回應這一點。讓我向你提出一個具體的問題,盡管這隻是討論的一部分。就是……

這並非人們在評估如何與中國接觸時遇到的問題的一部分。

用你書副標題裏的那句話來說,我想,比如說30年前,

雖然當時針對許多異見律師、藝術家以及藏族民眾等群體發生了駭人聽聞的人權侵犯,但這些侵犯幾乎完全發生在

中國境內。然而,諸如南海軍事化之類的問題,

是近年來一直在發生的事情,或者中國似乎正在尋求改變一係列對全球公域構成威脅的事物,例如互聯網主權,中國已經

成為非常強大的國際組織。這些不僅僅是中國的問題,它們也關乎更廣闊的世界。

而自由世界目前實際上需要更加堅定和有力地表明,我們不僅要

與中國接觸,而且實際上我們不同意你們對互聯網的願景,或者我們不同意你們在南海的

軍事化行動,這些對我們來說也同樣重要。

對你來說,我認為完全可以

提出對互聯網的不同看法,但實際上沒有人覺得這種類比

與納粹德國的類比相當冒犯。事實上,兩者之間根本沒有相似之處,而且

我的意思是,這種措辭往往會毒化整個辯論,而且並不恰當。

嗯,同樣地,如果我們從你提出的問題開始討論經濟關係,

就聚焦於秦新疆問題,這實際上解釋了為什麽我們會陷入

這種冷戰氛圍。因為你知道,關於柔術的爭論

柔術可以有,而且那裏發生的事情可能相當糟糕,但如果中國人

說,好吧,除非你們廢除美國憲法第二條賦予人們持槍權的條款,否則我們不會在美國坐下來談貿易

我們中國人對看到

美國發生槍擊事件導致人員死亡感到非常憤怒,這非常令人不安,我們

不喜歡這樣,這侵犯了我們對人權的理解,所以你們要修改憲法,重新定義人權。就我們在??中國看到的而言,我們先談談貿易,我的意思是,這顯然行不通。

當然,人權問題確實存在,我們需要謹慎處理。你知道,我們顯然

價值觀截然不同。但僅僅把這作為開場白,就像巴頓政府所做的那樣,實際上已經扼殺了對話。所以你的問題是,他們

想要什麽?我們應該如何回應?在我看來,如果有兩個

經濟規模大致相當的國家,而且目前大多數衡量標準
世界銀行、國際貨幣基金組織、聯合國都表明,中國在經濟規模和購買力方麵可能已經超過了我們
那麽就必須讓中國參與到體係的運行中來

你知道,他們在國際貨幣基金組織和世界銀行的股份,是為了確保他們在世界貿易組織中的地位

必須把他們當作經濟超級大國,作為規則製定體係的一部分
他們會
固執己見,談判會非常強硬,甚至會做一些不好的事情,但至少他們是
體係的一部分現在必須接受這一點,這是第一點。

抱歉打斷我。我正想請你詳細解釋一下。身處體製內和真正置身體製之外之間並沒有區別。

越來越明顯的是,中國的經濟實力賦予了它對體製大部分的控製權。

你可以說正是中國的經濟實力賦予了它這樣做的權利,但事實仍然是,與中國進行透明度辯論比與體製內的自由派人士進行辯論要困難得多。

原因很簡單,因為不存在司法獨立、媒體獨立等問題。

無論美國或英國有什麽缺點,當然,它們確實存在。當然,這很困難,我並不是想否認這一點,但這就是我們必須看待將它們納入體製的方式。

你選擇了南海作為中國不良行為的例子。

我沒有說它是好是壞,我隻是指出了這一點。

是的,我的意思是兩點要說明。

關於首先,他們違反了海洋法。

他們不接受與菲律賓相關的裁決。

菲律賓像塞普西斯一樣,放棄了自己在該訴訟中的勝訴,這在一定程度上削弱了裁決的效力。

而且,美國並非海洋法締約國,所以在這方麵立場略顯薄弱。

至於軍事化,邁克爾在這方麵比我了解得多,但有兩個事實讓我印象深刻:一是中國將國內生產總值的2%用於國防,這與英國相同,英國是北約的目標。

這與蘇聯不同,蘇聯致力於將經濟和軍事化結合起來。

你知道,蘇聯曾用“上沃爾特”來形容蘇聯的軍事體係,但中國並非如此。

如果你關注海外擴張,美國擁有大約200個國際軍事基地。

我對此沒有異議,他們主要在……好

中國人有兩個,你知道,一個在印度洋,一個在巴基斯坦,另一個在……也許他們還會再建一個,我不知道,但這並不是……你知道的,全球軍事擴張。中國所有政策的重點是……國內政策是經濟,中國的經濟規則……
他們想成為世界經濟的一部分,我們必須找到一種方法將他們融入規則體係。……嗯,邁克爾用不同的形式提到這一點,因為現在每個人都知道一個詞,而10年前沒人聽說過,那就是“一帶一路”倡議。現在我們都知道這是中國的基礎設施項目,它……在某些方麵並非自上而下,而是相當地方性的,而且有很多不同的部分,它有很多缺陷,債務外交,許多……項目

由中國基礎設施建設資金資助的項目並不總是

質量很好或很穩定,但“一帶一路”倡議總體上

為南美洲、撒哈拉以南非洲和東南亞提供了各種各樣的基礎設施能力,

而西方世界對此卻沒有做出恰當的回應。

那麽,當馬來西亞提出想要快速鐵路,當埃塞俄比亞提出想要在亞的斯亞貝巴建設輕軌地鐵,當阿根廷提出他們的互聯網係統崩潰,

需要有人提供5G服務時,自由世界又能說什麽呢?為什麽西方對這些國家提出的完全合理的問題沒有更好的答案?

而中國卻在回答這些問題。我的回答有兩點:

第一,西方確實有回應,那就是啟動“一帶一路”倡議本身

這並非邪惡,問題在於,無論是勞工、環境還是其他方麵的標準,都是由世界銀行和

區域銀行等機構製定並納入貸款協議的。中國設法破壞了所有這些標準,並利用……花哨的

過去幾十年一直在談判的附加條件

他們說很抱歉沒時間,他們願意考慮製定標準,但實際上並非如此

其次,隻有一位國家元首反對“一帶一路”倡議

他拒絕參加北京峰會,而美國至少派了

國家安全委員會工作人員馬特·波廷格,你願意回答一下,反對“一帶一路”倡議的國家元首是誰?

我給你個提示,你提到你來自加爾各答,是的,我猜是。

我猜對了,為什麽印度反對“一帶一路”倡議?

其他國家則更低調地加入了,沒有公開表態。他們想要一些資金,但

不希望看到“一帶一路”倡議中似乎存在的侵犯主權行為

貸款,所以我的意思是,從這個意義上講

這如何回答阿根廷的問題?沒有,沒有。中國將以其模式在全球範圍內擴張

它做得非常好,很多人都喜歡它

什麽?美國人開始這麽做了,實際上這始於奧巴馬總統時期。美國人開始說:

不,你們不能這樣做,你們不能這樣做,你們

違反了太多規範,太多可以追溯到100年甚至200年前的規則。

中國人則說:是的,我們可以,沒人能阻止我們。

我最喜歡的一句中文諺語是“阿傑博利亞”(Ajerbolia),意思是“你們無法阻止我們”。

你們沒有能力阻止我們正在做的事情。中國人是對的。

政治意願,自我造成的癱瘓,美國中國問題專家們

就中國問題展開了激烈的爭論,他們把中國說成是一個令人反感的納粹德國式的地方。

或者,不,與龍共舞對你們來說是件好事。我們有這些自我造成的

癱瘓式的辯論,結果是幾乎沒有采取任何措施來阻止

中國模式的實施。已經采取的措施似??乎產生了一些影響,比如貿易談判。

中國人一開始不打算來華盛頓,他們不會進行任何貿易談判。

壓力是他們來了,然後我們從中國代表團那裏了解到,美國的一些要求

正是中國改革者自己想要做的,禁止某些領域的技術銷售

開始產生效果,我們可以開始看到,回顧奧巴馬時代,有一些對中國施加的壓力是有效的

他們理解壓力,2500年的治國之道

但我們施加的壓力還不夠,最糟糕的是拉納

虛偽的評論,如果你說中國正在發生種族滅絕,你

就不能把中國政府當作正常的政府來對待,然後去參加奧運會

沒有勇氣阻止奧運會,所以無論誰一開始就說種族滅絕

那是在說冒犯性的詞語,說中國犯下種族滅絕是非常冒犯的

顯然沒有人知道有維吾爾人被某種
蓄意機製殺害,那是一個有很多侵犯人權行為的再教育計劃

但它不像納粹大屠殺,所以為什麽要用這個詞關於中國的這類言論

順便說一句,史蒂夫·班農是我最喜歡的反華言論使用者之一,他聲稱中國是人類曆史上最糟糕的國家。

順便說一句,我們在中國投資了一萬億美元。

通過紐約證券交易所,我們向私募股權投資了數千億美元。

在過去的四五十年裏,我們幾乎無限量地向中國出售技術。

中國不是希特勒國家,也不是種族滅絕國家。

中國對我們非常友好,所以我們正試圖施加非常低的壓力。

看看中國是否會消除或減少一些令人發指的做法。目前情況仍然非常……

大概是這樣的:這是我們能對中國施加的壓力水平,這是我們能達到的最大水平。

我們離最大水平還差得很遠。中國人已經在想:哎呀,美國人生氣了。

他們在牛津辯論社有一些支持者。

美國還能做什麽?

嚐試,我們是否應該嚐試滿足他們的一些要求?所以我相信我們現在正處於一個富有成效的對話時期,但氣氛非常緊張。當喬·拜登向習近平發出明確的邀請時,他說:“聽著,我想見你,我現在是總統,不僅僅是副總統,我想見你。”習近平怎麽說?“不,謝謝。”盡管我們理解虛擬峰會正在籌備中,可能會在未來幾周內舉行,但現實情況可能會有所改變,這是另一個問題。我認為,與龍共舞,同時他們也在偷你的錢包。當然,你的錢包已經被中國人購買美國國債幾十年了,所以這是雙向的。但我認為,這裏存在著達成某種協議的危險。文斯,如果可以的話,我想向你提出一個英國的困境,它結合了經濟和價值觀的問題。我們英國現在正在尋找後歐盟的未來,顯然存在著……尤其值得注意的是,我們的金融服務業與中國有著密切聯係。

財政大臣裏希·蘇納克等人至少暗示過,有意提升倫敦在該領域的作用。

然而,許多人指出的例子是澳大利亞,就像我們一樣,
你知道,澳大利亞是英語世界中一個中等規模、實力適中的自由主義國家。

澳大利亞的經濟模式,尤其是在對華出口方麵,與中國有著密切的聯係。

澳大利亞發現,它在國內發表言論的能力,特別是斯科特·莫裏斯和總理談論可能需要進行一項備受矚目的調查的案例,導致了對澳大利亞的嚴厲經濟製裁。

結果,這些製裁的影響或許沒有最初預期的那麽嚴重,

但它確實傳遞了一個信息:與中國達成貿易協議的代價本質上是,

如果你不打算說些好話,就必須對中國保持沉默。

我不確定這是否是某種……像英國這樣愛吹牛的自由派國家真的能承受得住嗎?你覺得呢?

其實,我第一次和中國就貿易問題談判是在2010年,

當時我和卡梅倫一行人會見了徐錦濤主席,

以及他的團隊。其中一個議題就是西藏問題。

我們問中方,我們會提出這個問題,因為英國對此非常重視。他們說,好的,但我們會以恰當的方式進行。

你們說些關於西藏的話,我們也會說些你們不喜歡的話,持續五分鍾,然後你們發布你們的

新聞稿,我們發布我們的,之後我們就可以談生意了。所以我的意思是,如果事情以結構化的方式進行,中國人

完全能夠應對。但是,你覺得這和射殺野豬有什麽不同?顯然,中國的政治家們更具對抗性。嗯,我們交過手,我們不知道,我們沒有和他們進行過那種交流。

但是,你剛才的問題是關於英國的,我想說的是,事實上,我們……你知道英國脫歐的發生,絕對是一個令人信服的理由,說明我們現在必須與中國接軌。如果我們隻想與擁有相同價值觀和標準的國家保持聯係,我們本應該留在

歐盟,但我們已經離開了。我的意思是,你知道,每個人,特別是中國人,都認為我們離開歐盟是一個瘋狂的行為。事實上,我們離開歐盟意味著我們幾乎別無選擇,隻能嚐試與未來的大型增長經濟體合作,例如印度、中國、巴西,可能還有俄羅斯以及其他國家。

你知道,我們身處一個新世界,我們必須務實地看待這個問題。

正如你所說,我的經驗是,我們已經能夠討論人權問題。

我第三次以部長身份訪問中國,

實際上是在G時期。我向部長們提出了關於中國勞工權利的整個問題,

我指出,你們是一個社會主義國家,工人沒有罷工的權利。我代表的是一個邪惡的……資本主義國家

我們的工人有最低工資和工會,你能解釋一下嗎?實際上,我們進行了一次非常文明的

半小時的討論,我給他發了一些關於最低工資執行情況的資料,我注意到在總統的“共同繁榮”

所有這些改革,勞動力市場現在正在中國推行,所以我的意思是,這是一個略帶

諷刺的例子,但人權可以,你知道,你可以

以一種理智的方式與中國對話,你隻要大聲疾呼,他們當然會因為

顯而易見的原因而感到冒犯,這就是為什麽關於種族滅絕的說法如此致命,我的意思是,我不知道新疆發生了什麽

我看到,我讀過那裏的相關文獻,顯然存在嚴重的侵犯人權行為,

但我非常震驚的是,英國的《經濟學人》雜誌,該雜誌非常關注人權,並且非常

批評中國,他們說他們不會使用“種族滅絕”這個詞,因為它顯然不適用於這裏,這是對

語言的錯誤使用,當蓬佩奧最初在美國提出這些指控時,他自己的國務院的律師們都與他撇清關係,所以你知道,如果真有邪惡,我們就用恰當的語言來描述它。

Dancing With The Dragon - China: Friend or Foe? | Full Head to Head | Oxford Union

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nEchkn3unl8&t=644s

  Oxford Union  2022年1月16日

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China has increasingly dominated headlines as a growing economic superpower whose growth and foreign policy are rapidly restructuring international politics. This head-to-head debate will consider China’s place in the world, whether the balance of global power has tilted towards China, and what the true nature of Sino-British and Sino-American relations are. Has China won? What does winning actually mean for China? Our two speakers will consider these questions and more as we explore how China is remaking the modern world.
--------------------------------------
1. Rt. Hon. Sir Vince Cable
Sir Vince Cable is a British Liberal Democrat Politician who served as Party Leader and spent five years in the coalition cabinet as Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills. He authored The Chinese Conundrum, which explores relations between China and the West.

2. Dr Michael Pillsbury
Dr Michael Pillsbury is Director of the Center on Chinese Strategy at the Hudson Institute. He has held numerous defence and foreign policy advisory positions in the US Government and is considered the architect of Trump’s China policy.

3. Professor Rana Mitter (Moderator)
Professor Mitter is a Professor of the History and Politics of Modern China. He has served as the Director of the Oxford China Centre. He is the author of numerous books on China, including A Bitter Revolution: China’s Struggle with the Modern World.

ABOUT THE OXFORD UNION SOCIETY: The Oxford Union is the world's most prestigious debating society, with an unparalleled reputation for bringing international guests and speakers to Oxford. Since 1823, the Union has been promoting debate and discussion not just in Oxford University, but across the globe.                                                                                                       <<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Dr Michael Pillsbury

ladies and gentlemen thank you for coming i only have 12 minutes i'm going to spend some of my 12 minutes praising sir vince cable i can only hope he will do the same for me

while he was at shell he helped to pioneer scenario-based planning this is a way of thinking which was unique at the time it's a way of thinking about the unthinkable later on the american pentagon and the cia stole this concept i myself use it in my own book the 100 year marathon the concept is devilishly simple try to think of different factors that will determine the future make a plan of where let's say four or five of them are so-called family of scenarios and then change some of the variables to see what unthinkable things might happen in the case of china as far as i know nobody in washington dc did this in 1970 1971 as kissinger and nixon were preparing to open china

if there had been a shell company scenario done at the time in 1970 and 71 and i had some input into the decision so i blamed myself in part although i blamed dr kissinger even more the scenario could have been are we being deceived is it not america opening up china which we thought it was is it china opening up america for all kinds of benefits to china and at the time a recently declassified document shows henry kissinger knew there were radicals in china in july 1970 he received a highly classified report that said chinese fighter aircraft have been launched and are flying out possibly to shoot down an american reconnaissance plane by the way this is not 1990 this is 1970. and kissinger writes a memo to nixon saying there are apparently radicals in the chinese leadership who do not want an opening with america perhaps we should be sure our reconnaissance aircraft don't fly too close to the china coast coast the point here is already the american side understood there's politics at the top in beijing there are radicals who are able to launch fighter aircraft later on in a very famous comment chairman mao made to nixon which nixon's acknowledged he didn't fully understand at the time chairman mao had a way of speaking almost like a poet and he would say things sometimes his young translator couldn't accurately translate one of the things he said to nixon was there are some people here who didn't want you to come to china don't worry about it the top 10 generals in china a few months earlier had been killed or placed under arrest and would be sentenced to life in prison or execution for opposing the opening to america more recently the chinese have released a number of memoirs that show how it was their idea to open america so if you have a title like mr president xia has selected dancing with the dragon you need to understand first who invited who to dance we always thought it was us the noble magnanimous americans seeking a program of globalization saw this angry hostile closed china and decided to open it up to join the world that view is now obsolete people recognize the new chinese materials even kissinger in his book on china he says it took him 40 years to write this book he now has abandoned the story that america opened china he now in his new book on china that's the title on china just all by it he now says there was a parallel effort inside the chinese leadership to reach out to us this changes the whole perception that the west has sought to bring china into the new world order

if i skipped forward to just a couple of years ago you all know that many countries in the world have accused china of intellectual property violations in geneva there's an organization it's a big beautiful green and blue glass skyscraper for short among insiders it's called wipo it doesn't sound very nice does it wipo who knows what that stands for put your hands up oh boy five wipo is the world intellectual property

organization it's part of the family of un specialized agencies of which there are 16 which in turn go back to the league of nations which in turn go back even further it's the idea of a world order and various functional issues like the protection of intellectual property will be managed in a way that some that involves pooling the sovereignty of a hundred or more nations who ran to be the new director of the world intellectual property organization put your hands up if you think it was an english person how about an american how about the winning vote was held by a chinese citizen and party member it takes a lot of gall to be accused of the biggest intellectual property theft in the world in the history of mankind and then to run a candidate to head the u.n specialized agencies he was going to win president trump heard about this and said wait a minute this isn't right and consulted with a lot of others suddenly a candidate from singapore the long history of the protection of intellectual property put his name in and won so going back to 1970 all the way to 2020 has the american plan to dance with the dragon and bring china in to the u.n system the world order the world bank imf has it worked you bet is it what we plan for no and in sir vince cable's book called money and power you will find a chapter on deng xiaoping the great chinese leader now somewhat eclipsed by xi jinping and how he learned from his time in russia and later on from the world bank and a nobel laureate named james tubin he learned the plan for how to turn china into an economic powerhouse the united states and the west and japan all help this again with the assumption dancing with the dragon is going to be a good date no it turned out that china with human rights practices censorship practices a permanent one-party system the use of terror against its own people this china the one kissinger thought about in 1970 when he mentioned the radicals or sending the jet fighter out this kind of china seems to be the winners in beijing and my book hundred year marathon using the scenario techniques that vince cable pioneered says what does this mean if we were so wrong the last 20 to 40

years what exactly is the nature of china's ambition is it hitler and nazi germany taking

over poland and czech no absolutely not no indication of that kind of conduct at all from china is it some sort of japan 1930s assassinating leaders trying to set up an east asia co-prosperity sphere no no indication of that whatsoever the chinese ambition as they themselves explain it is just to return to how things used to be and most americans some oxford students of course know but not all well how did things used to be and that's led to an exploration for me in my next book on what are the patterns of ancient chinese politics that xi jinping is talking so much about in a kind of a code he uses proverbs he uses stories about ancient people that you think that's harmless but actually xi jinping is being quite frank that he needs a third term he says which he may have within ours third five-year term to complete the work he has to return china it's a term that they use kind of like renaissance fooshinger luke how many of you here this is my last few seconds how many of you here think you have a good picture of the kind of world xi jinping has in mind when china is restored to its rightful place put your hand up that means you have to buy my next book thank you very much

Rt. Hon. Sir Vince Cable:

ladies and gentlemen thank you for coming i only have 12 minutes i'm going to spend some of my 12 minutes
praising sir vince cable i can only hope he will do the same for me
while he was at shell he helped to pioneer scenario-based planning
this is a way of thinking which was unique at the time it's a way of thinking about the unthinkable later on the american pentagon and the cia stole this concept i myself
use it in my own book the 100 year marathon the concept is devilishly simple
try to think of different factors that will determine the future make a plan of where let's say four or
five of them are so-called family of scenarios and then change some of the variables to see what
unthinkable things might happen in the case of china as far as i know
nobody in washington dc did this in 1970 1971
as kissinger and nixon were preparing to open china
if there had been a shell company scenario done at the time in 1970 and 71
and i had some input into the decision so i blamed myself in part although i blamed dr kissinger even more
the scenario could have been are we being deceived
is it not america opening up china which we thought it was is it china opening up america
for all kinds of benefits to china and at the time
a recently declassified document shows henry kissinger knew there were radicals
in china in july 1970 he received a highly classified report
that said chinese fighter aircraft have been launched and are flying out
possibly to shoot down an american reconnaissance plane by the way this is
not 1990 this is 1970. and kissinger writes a memo to nixon
saying there are apparently radicals in the chinese leadership who do not want an opening with america
perhaps we should be sure our reconnaissance aircraft don't fly too close to the china coast coast
the point here is already the american side understood there's politics
at the top in beijing there are radicals who are able to launch fighter aircraft later on
in a very famous comment chairman mao made to nixon which nixon's acknowledged he didn't
fully understand at the time chairman mao had a way of speaking almost like a poet
and he would say things sometimes his young translator couldn't accurately translate
one of the things he said to nixon was there are some people here
who didn't want you to come to china don't worry about it
the top 10 generals in china a few months earlier had been
killed or placed under arrest and would be sentenced to life in prison or execution
for opposing the opening to america more recently the chinese have released
a number of memoirs that show how it was their idea to open america
so if you have a title like mr president xia has selected dancing with the dragon
you need to understand first who invited who to dance
we always thought it was us the noble magnanimous americans seeking a program of globalization
saw this angry hostile closed china and decided to open it up
to join the world that view is now obsolete
people recognize the new chinese materials even kissinger in his book on china he says it took him
40 years to write this book he now has abandoned the story that
america opened china he now in his new book on china that's the title on china just all by it
he now says there was a parallel effort inside the chinese leadership to reach
out to us this changes the whole perception
that the west has sought to bring china into the new world order
if i skipped forward to just a couple of years ago you all know that many countries in the
world have accused china of intellectual property violations
in geneva there's an organization it's a big beautiful green and blue glass skyscraper for short among insiders it's
called wipo it doesn't sound very nice does it wipo who knows what that stands for put your
hands up oh boy five wipo is the world intellectual property
organization it's part of the family of un specialized agencies of which there are 16 which in turn go back to the league
of nations which in turn go back even further it's the idea of a world order and various functional issues like the
protection of intellectual property will be managed in a way that some that involves pooling
the sovereignty of a hundred or more nations who ran to be the new director
of the world intellectual property organization put your hands up if you think it was an english person
how about an american how about the winning vote was held by a chinese
citizen and party member it takes a lot of gall to be accused
of the biggest intellectual property theft in the world in the history of mankind and then to run a candidate to
head the u.n specialized agencies he was going to win
president trump heard about this and said wait a minute this isn't right
and consulted with a lot of others suddenly a candidate from singapore
the long history of the protection of intellectual property put his name in
and won so going back to 1970 all the way to 2020
has the american plan to dance with the dragon and bring china in to the u.n system the world order the
world bank imf has it worked you bet
is it what we plan for no and in sir vince cable's book called
money and power you will find a chapter on deng xiaoping the great chinese
leader now somewhat eclipsed by xi jinping and how he learned from his time in
russia and later on from the world bank and a nobel laureate named james tubin
he learned the plan for how to turn china into an economic powerhouse the united states and the
west and japan all help this again with the assumption dancing with
the dragon is going to be a good date no
it turned out that china with human rights practices censorship practices a permanent
one-party system the use of terror against its own people this china
the one kissinger thought about in 1970 when he mentioned the radicals or sending the jet fighter out
this kind of china seems to be the winners in beijing
and my book hundred year marathon using the scenario techniques that vince cable pioneered
says what does this mean if we were so wrong the last 20 to 40
years what exactly is the nature of china's ambition is it hitler and nazi germany taking
over poland and czech no absolutely not no indication of that kind of conduct at
all from china is it some sort of um
japan 1930s assassinating leaders trying to
set up an east asia co-prosperity sphere no no indication of that whatsoever the
chinese ambition as they themselves explain it is just to return
to how things used to be and most americans some oxford students of course know but
not all well how did things used to be and that's led to an exploration for me
in my next book on what are the patterns of ancient chinese politics that xi jinping is talking so much about
in a kind of a code he uses proverbs he uses stories about ancient
people that you think that's harmless but actually xi jinping is being quite frank
that he needs a third term he says which he may have within ours third five-year term
to complete the work he has to return china it's a term that they use kind of like renaissance fooshinger
luke how many of you here this is my last few seconds how many of you here think you
have a good picture of the kind of world xi jinping has in mind when china is
restored to its rightful place put your hand up
that means you have to buy my next book thank you very much
[Applause]
well thank you for inviting me back to the union um and it's an honor to speak after dr
palsbury who is probably one of the two or three people in the world who is most authoritative on china and is a
deep thinker um and many of the things he says and writes about are wise
and right um but i i sort of part company um in fact i i start to park company in
the leading article in the book where it talks about china's secret strategy to replace
america as the global superpower and then why why secret
um in his book uh dr pillsbury describes an episode where a chinese defector
comes to the united states and warns that there is a secret plan to make the
chinese economy as big as that of the united states by the year 2020 it's a
big shock you know big secret well i mean i have to tell him that 25 years ago i was sitting in a
multinational company in london uh armed with a few statistics a
calculator and a bit of common sense and you could work out um on the back of
an envelope that china was almost certain to become the biggest economy in the world by 2020.
it didn't require secrecy to understand that and there's a simple arithmetic actually
i mean there are four times as many people in china you know when china gets to a quarter of american living
standards by definition it's going to be equivalent in economic size i mean why
is that a problem i mean it should be something we welcome actually and a lot of very poor people getting a
decent living standards and you know it's basic arithmetic that when china has continued to grow as it
almost certainly will and it reaches half american living standards they will have an economy twice as big
and they're going to have to get used to it and we are and actually it's not just china by the
middle of this century india will also be a economic superpower with a bigger economy in the united states very
probably so you know there is an issue about the the current hegemon you know the
superpower getting used to the idea that there is another country which will have comparable and
potentially significantly more economic heft i mean you know britain used to be
number 100 years ago so we've had a century to get used to sliding down the league table
i think we're about now about number eight we've just been overtaken by indonesia but you know we we get used to
these things and i i think the united states the core of the problem
in many ways is an inability to get used to this basic fact and to adapt to it
and to accept that china is going to have to be integrated within the
the rules of the world system which the united states has led and led well
to our all to our benefit for the last 70 years now
this whole idea of secrecy i think cuts across the idea that many of the features of
modern china are hidden in plain sight now it's very clear what they're about
um it's not hidden um the idea that the chinese model which
was developed to the modern chinese model under deng xiaoping it was very clear from the outset that
there were two very basic principles the first was the emphasis on stability
and security after a century of chaos uh the revolution the civil war the war
mount satan's madness um security under a authoritarian wall party state was never
hidden was always absolutely clear that this was the model that they were going to pursue
and the second aspect was raising chinese living standards which was going to happen by importing
capitalism into china which has happened state capitalism a big private sector at
the top end under some state control but with very dynamic capitalist competitive system
and state enterprises with an element of market competition and the start capitalist model has worked in china
it's been highly successful it may now run into trouble um they've
got a lot of economic problems associated with under consumption corporate debt
but of course if they do run into trouble um they'll become like japan and we no
longer worry about them but actually the issue which we now face is that if the chinese model
continues to be successful this combination of
rapid growth sustained by a successful capitalist system
allied to an authoritarian one-party state what is the problem in our having to try
and live with that now some of you will say um well democracy you know we
believe in democracy why shouldn't china be a democracy well it is a different system and hitherto
you know we've accepted that there is a different system um to take a particular
issue which concerns the british which is our residual responsibilities in hong kong and people here are
routly very upset western angry that
decent people have been bundled off to prison and newspaper editors have been shut down
but i have to say the chinese always made it absolutely clear
what the red lines were in hong kong when margaret thatcher went to negotiate
with deng xiaoping 40 years ago he said look we could have dealt with
hong kong the way the indians dealt with the colonial enclaves or indonesia sent the army in problem solved in 24 hours
but they didn't they were more subtle they saw advantages in keeping this independent entity
but he said look there are certain parameters you can say what you like free speech you criticize the communist party but
if there is violent disorder we will move in and stop it and those people in hong kong who in the
name of democracy and free speech started throwing molotov cocktails at the police
and vandalizing their legislature did their little bit to kill hong kong
democracy because it was very clear what the rules of the game were and the chinese were not in any way dishonest or
inca in clear about what was permissible and i think we need to remember that and
similarly in terms of foreign policy
president g's now been there for 10 years he set out his approach very
clearly 10 years ago and we accepted it and it was set out in a statement he
made in mexico city it was asked about what's your relationship going to be with the
west you said look we're not going to export revolution we're not going to export hungry
refugees we're not going to mess with you don't mess with us
and it's a bit crude but it's very clear how to engage with china which is to
accept if you want to have a good relationship with them you respect their principle of
self of territorial integrity and non-interference and that's the basis on which they've
since conducted their foreign affairs it's why for example in the
issue of chinchilla terrible human rights abuse i'm quite sure but and the west has taken up a
strong position on it but it's very clear that a lot of other countries in the world by the chinese argument every single
muslim country of importance including those that are democratically elected indonesia malaysia pakistan
bangladesh nigeria have lined up on the chinese side so that that principle
of dealing with china engaging with china but recognizing the reality that they have a different system
and they're not going to countenance interference with their internal politics that has to be out of sheer
realism the way we deal with them so let me just try and bring to a head
where i think this leads i mean i was part of the government that where we did try to engage with china
and our primary motive was economic and we took the view and i would still
take the view that it was economically beneficial to britain and other western countries
to engage economically with china as a result of what we did we still have a british steel industry
chinese company bought out tata steel is going to close we will have an electrical vehicle
industry because the chinese are going to invest heavily in batteries in the northeast of england
land rover is a highly successful motor car industry in in the west midlands because of the profits and the
sales in china astrozenica which developed our vaccine did so on the back of profits and sales
in china british universities including this one depend very heavily on
120 000 chinese students every year paying full commercial fees
you know the british economy has benefited from our relations with china and i don't apologize for having
negotiated some of those things but it isn't just parochial there's a broader picture despite all the
complaints about chinese unfair practices they've actually helped to keep the
world monetary system stable they hold four trillion dollars worth of us assets
it was always going to be said that they would use it to sabotage the system and they were going for currency warfare
nothing of the kind has happened they've kept the basic monetary system stable and implicit partnership with the united
states the person who put the boot into the rules-based system the world trade
organization wasn't the chinese it was president trump tried to cut it off at the knees
withdrawing support for the wto and michael refers quite fairly to some
of the grievances which we have with the chinese about intellectual property rights i mean all countries coming up
developing korea taiwan japan and i have to say in its early stages
the united states which based its development stealing intellectual property from britain that
was how they got going and that's how countries start but they have now introduced
intellectual property courts foreign companies are now winning cases they're adapting to the demands of a
globally responsible economic partner we complain and we used to negotiate
with the chinese and say well you open your market show that you're willing to reciprocate
free trade and the top of the western list and the british list was always financial
services and it's worth noting that in the current flurry of uh
activity that's taking place in china on policy that one of the things that the president has done is to open up china
to financial services leading western companies blackrock jp and organ are now
operating fully on subsidiaries in china buying up chinese shares
you know they've accepted the obligations of being part of an integrated economic system but i can
conclude around that with something that's more important than international trade which is those common headaches
economies called international public goods where countries have to cooperate
you know pandemics are one example the other is in glasgow at the moment is climate change and the chinese are
currently being portrayed as the bad guys and they have very large emissions of
course but not in actually per capita terms or cumulatively but yeah
we're not going to solve the work the climate problem without chinese cooperation and they do recognize there's a problem
they've just introduced carbon pricing they've got the biggest renewable energy industry the eclipse vehicle industry in
the world um they tried to accelerate the phasing out of coal and then run into power
shortages so they've had to backtrack but they understand the necessity but the key point is we're not going to
solve this problem unless we work with them on research common standards and so on
and you can't do that in a cold war environment and
i'm just my final point and i'll just take a minute over this is the proliferation of nuclear weapons
probably the biggest danger we face at the moment and there are rogue states north korea
pakistan potentially iran china has influence with all those countries we don't know how they
exercise it but we could potentially minimize the risks associated that if
we're willing to work with the chinese and something even more serious because of the collapse
of conversations with china a sort of paranoia has now developed
which is leading the chinese to build up their stock of nuclear weapons they had a minimum deterrence policy no first
use was no threat to anybody now they fear they're going to be attacked by the united states so they're
building up their nuclear arsenal i mean you can argue about who's to blame but it's got to be stopped it's very
very dangerous and you only stop it if you talk to them nobody is now talking to them
and we have to engage for our our own sex as well as this thank you
[Applause]
so michael can i turn to you and ask a question which i sometimes think
isn't asked enough in washington dc although i suspect that you've probably asked it more than once i'm going to put it to you this way this is a trick this
is a trick question right not at all it's a question to which you as an immense expert the greatest expert in
china according to president trump no uh no less and goodness knows he went through a few during his uh his time how
is steve bannon doing but during that time a lot of questions were asked about how
can we stop china how can we contain china how can we essentially prevent china doing you know lots of things
which many people in the outside world in asia not even europeans or americans might worry about uh militarization of
the south china sea uh the question whether taiwan is vulnerable all of these debates are still very current so
those questions have been asked quite frequently the flip side question which i've heard answered much less frequently and i'll
put to you now is this what would you say is the clearly defined role that china ought to have in
its region and beyond globally because as vince has said you know it's not going to be a liberal democracy and we shouldn't
particularly expect that it will be it is a very large powerful influential country it's built up its economy to the
second biggest economy in the world it is the largest single market in terms of population anywhere in the world it has
surely a right to put forward some sort of idea about its own position that is
not purely defined by what other countries think about it so if you would agree with that premise
what is it that china's role should be in the asia pacific region and beyond if it's not the things it's doing now that
washington wants to push back against [Music] imagine it's
the oxford union 1935. that's the stakeholder i have to say and
you asked the same question about what the economist magazine referred to in those years as mr hitler
mr hitler churchill by the way is portrayed as an idiot ignoramus stupid fool in the 30s
by the economist but mr hitler was assumed to have a legitimate
grievance that he sought to rectify
and british opinion at the time was in favor of mr hitler
the versailles treaty was unfair the reparations were unfair there's quite a long list
so there were some british at the time who said hitler has legitimate goals
we can't just try to constrain him or essentially be mean to him why
he might get even nastier the this view was so wrong that it cost
the lives of millions of people and now you ask me and everybody should ask themselves what is a legitimate role
for china that we could all agree to we people we people outside china
yeah so you have a list there's actually there really is a list
and the chinese spokesman just recently referred to the list that divide the administration has
presented to china there's also a list that china presented to us
the same thing happened in the trump administration during the trade talks the chinese actually physically gave our
side a list one example is had to do with data
facilitating the chinese version of amazon operating inside the united states one of
many many almost 50 items we had our list so when you raise this kind of question
it raises the issue of what tools what steps what measures
do governments have to implement this kind of vision of what china should
be like i would think that list would include stop the so-called genocide of the
uyghurs in a verifiable way admit the program is over close the doors let the uyghurs out
this helps china in terms of values with a role that they can play in the world
we treat our muslims with respect the list could also include sir vince
mentioned i agree with him the nuclear weapons issue china was invited
june 1999 to vienna to meet the american and russian delegations to discuss a
trilateral agreement for a lower cap on nuclear weapons
china refused to attend the americans even put out chinese flags in the conference room the
russians agreed china should come to the nuclear weapons talks specifically on
strategic stability and how not to have accidents among nuclear powers china refused to
come so sir vince wants you to believe that somehow the americans are not opening up a conversation with china no
there's quite a long list of events they won't come to so their regional role right now
is very much uh a matter of controversy in all the capitals in asia
joe biden has continued most of donald trump's china policies there's a good reason for this
when he and his team got into office they examined china's record it's not just genocide against the uyghurs it's
not just intellectual property violation it's not just tripling the number of nuclear weapons
it's much more than that and our narrow selfish american view
which i don't expect anybody in great britain to agree with is we don't want to give up our primacy
and the world lightly you may all say oh let china have a chance we british had a hundred years or
more of primacy we wrote the rules of the road the americans
took were number one for a while let's give china a chance my suggestion is this is a highly
dangerous thing for everybody else but for americans in particular
giving up our global primacy a lot of americans simply won't do it
we'd fight rather than do it now there's some americans i was going to mention
uh jamie dimon head of jp chase is it i'm trying to think of
the exact way they phrase it no uh jamie dimon has said recently something
sir vince said we americans must get used to being number two to china but we'll still be
four times richer per capita i think that right now jamie dimon's view is a
minority in our house and senate you'd find very few members of congress willing to vote oh yes we need to be
number two to china so i don't expect european support for our maintaining our primacy that's our business but what
we're going to have to do may scare a lot of europeans we can't let the chinese try to match us
in nuclear weapons we can't have them flying jet bombers so-called nuclear-equipped jet bombers around
taiwan whenever their feelings are hurt so there's no clear vision to answer
your question of china's legitimate role as long as china is engaging in such
misconduct to be egregiously outrageous most people are just just to be clear
that michael in a sense the answer to my question is the role of china is still to be defined by the united states first and foremost
you're the one who raised the question asking an american what role should china have how dare i answer that
question this is for china to decide however we americans have the right to respond to what we think is happening
and we have a number of tools at work already the president biden is continuing we're going to stop
technology theft by china we're going to carry we're going to use a number of tools to slow them down in
misconduct and biden is all for this it's nothing to do with just trump
so let me turn to sir vince cable and vince you'll have heard various things that michael's put forward including parallels with the 1930s i'm sure you'll
want to address that let me put a specific question to you though as as part of that discussion which is is is
this isn't part of the problem that people have with assessing how to
engage with china to use you know the phrase that's in your book subtitle i think that let's say 30 years ago
although there were you know egregious human rights abuses against um you know many
dissident lawyers and artists and you know the tibetan population and so forth it took place pretty much entirely
within the boundaries of china but issues such as the militarization of the south china sea which is something that
you know has been happening within the last few years or the sense that china is looking to
change a whole variety of things that have issues for the global commons and i'm thinking here of internet sovereignty for instance where china has
become very powerful international organizations these are not just matters for china they are matters for the wider
world and the liberal world at the moment actually does need to say more firmly and strongly not just we have to
engage with china but actually we don't agree with your vision of the internet for instance or we don't agree with your
militarization of the south china sea and these are matters for us as well as for you well i think it's perfectly valid to
offer a different view of the internet um but no i i really found this analogy
with nazi germany quite offensive actually there's not not remotely similar situation and it's
i mean that kind of language tends to sort of poison the the whole the whole debate and isn't right
um and and similarly to say we would start our discussion of economic relationships with your question
by focusing on the issue of qin xinjiang it actually explains why we just run
into this cold war environment because you know that there is a debate about
jiu-jitsu can have it and it's probably pretty bad what's happening there but if the chinese were
to say okay we are not going to sit down with you in the united states and talk about
trade unless you repeal section two of the american constitution
that gives people the right to carry guns we in china are very upset at seeing
people being killed in in america in shooting incidents very upsetting we
don't like it it infringes our idea of human rights so you change your constitution you define human rights the
way we see it in china and then we'll talk to you about trade i mean that that is an obvious non-starter
um there is of course an issue about human rights and we we need to approach it carefully and you know we clearly
have very different values but just making this your your opening gambit which is what the baton
administration has done has effectively closed down the conversation so your question is what what are they
looking for and how do we need to respond to it it seems to me that if you have two
two countries of roughly equal economic size and that most of the current measures
the world bank imf united nations suggest that china probably is now bigger in economic terms purchasing
property then the chinese have to be given a stake in running the system
you know their shareholding in the imf in the world bank um their position in the world to trade
organization has to be treating them as an economic superpower as part of the rulemaking system and they will be
bloody minded and they will be very tough in negotiation and they will do bad things but at least they're part of
the system and that has now to be accepted and that that's the first point
sorry you're interrupting me well i was just going to ask you to expand on that for a second isn't there a difference between being in the system and actually
what is more and more evident which is china's economic weight is giving it control over much of the system you
could argue that it's china's economic weight that's given it the right to do that but the fact remains that levels of
transparency debate discussion are much harder with china than they are with
liberal actors in the system simply because there aren't questions of independent judiciaries media and so forth that whatever the
faults of the united states or the uk yes of course you exist of course it's difficult i'm not trying to pretend it isn't but that's the way
we have to see it of integrating them into the system now you chose the example of the south china sea as an
example of chinese bad behavior i didn't say it was bad or good i just pointed out well yes i mean two points
to make about it i mean first of all there is the breach of the law of the sea which they they've done they
um they would not accept the rulings in relation to the philippines um it's slightly undermined by the fact
that the philippines like sepsis has renounced its own victory in that legal case
and also the united states is not a signature of the law of the sea so slightly sort of weak territory here but
as far as militarization is concerned i mean michael is much more knowledgeable about this than i am but
the the two facts that struck me very strikingly the united that china spends
two percent of its gdp on defense which is the same as the uk it's the nato
target this is not the soviet union which was devoted its economy to militarization
you know upper volta with rockets was what it was described as that's not the chinese system
and if you're looking at overseas expansion um the united states has i think 200
international bases i don't have a problem with that they're mostly doing good
the chinese have two two you know they have one in in the indian
ocean in pakistan another in debut maybe they're getting another one i don't know but that this is not a you
know a global military expansion the chinese for the focus of all their
policy domestically is economic economics rules in china
and they they they want to be part of the world economy and we have to find a way of integrating them into the rule
system well for that to to michael in different form because a phrase that everyone now recognizes which no one
heard of 10 years ago is belt and road initiative now we all know that the chinese infrastructure project and it's
not top down in some ways it's quite provincial and has different parts to it has lots of flaws debt diplomacy many of
the projects that are sponsored by chinese infrastructure payments aren't always
either very well built or very stable but the belt and road initiative overall has
provided a whole variety of infrastructure capacities to south america sub-saharan africa and southeast
asia which the western world simply hasn't provided a sensible sort of response to so
what is there that the liberal world can say when malaysia comes along and says we want fast rail when the ethiopians
say that we want a light uh rail metro in addis ababa when the argentinians say our internet system is breaking down we
need someone to provide 5g why doesn't the west have a better answer to those perfectly legitimate questions being
asked by those countries which the chinese are answering well i answered with two points the
first is the west does have a response it's starting the belt and road initiative in itself
is not evil it's the way that the standards created whether it's labor or environmental or
other standards were built into loan agreements by especially by the world bank and the
regional banks the chinese managed to undermine all of that to use a fancy
word conditionality that had been negotiated for previous decades
they say they're sorry they didn't have time they're willing to consider putting standards in but they're really not
secondly there's only one head of state who opposed the belton road
he refused to come to the summit in beijing the americans at least sent
an nsc staff member matt pottinger do you care to answer who is the head of state who opposed the belt and road
initiative i'll give you a clue you mentioned you mentioned you're from calcutta yeah i'm guessing
i'm guessing right why did india oppose the belton road
and others have joined more quietly not publicly they want some of the money but
not to allow the violation of sovereignty that seems to go on with belt and road
loans so i mean in that sense
how does that answer the argentinians it doesn't it doesn't china is going to expand
globally with its model it's doing very well many people love it they love it
what the americans are starting to do and actually it began under president obama the americans are starting to say
no you can't do it this way you can't do it this way you're
violating too many norms too many rules that date back 100 or even 200 years
in society the chinese are saying yes we can no one's going to stop us one of my
favorite chinese expressions is the ajerbolia you cannot contain us
you don't have the power to stop what we're doing the chinese are right
the political will the self-induced paralysis the american china experts who have
these vicious fights over his china an offensive nazi germany kind of place
or no it's a dancing with the dragon is a good thing for you we have these self-inducing
paralysis debates and the result is very little is being done to stop the
implementation of the china model what has been done seems to have an effect the trade talks
chinese at first they were not coming to washington they're not going to be any trade talks
pressure was applied they came then we learned from the chinese delegation some of the american demands
are what chinese reformers themselves want to do banning technology sales in certain
sectors starts to have an effect we can begin to see looking back since the obama years there are some kinds of
pressure on china that work they understand pressure 2500 years of statecraft
but we haven't mounted enough pressure yet and the worst part of it is rana
hypo hypocritical comments if you say genocide is occurring in china you
simply can't treat the government as a normal government and go to the olympics
the guts to stop the olympics is not there so whoever started saying genocide
in the beginning that's a speaking of offensive words that's pretty offensive to say that china commits genocide
apparently nobody has a dead uyghur who is killed through some kind of
deliberate mechanism it's a re-education program that has a lot of violations of human rights
but it's not like the holocaust so why use this kind of rhetoric about china
and steve bannon by the way is one of my favorite users of rhetoric against china that it's the worst country in human
history this kind of thing by the way we invest one trillion american dollars in china
through our new york stock exchange we invest hundreds of billions in private equity
we've had almost unlimited technology transfer sales to china for 40 or 50
years this is not a hitler country or a genocide country
that's very friendly with us so we're trying to start a very low level of pressure
to see whether china will eliminate or cut back some of these egregious practices things are still at a very i
would go like this run this is the level of pressure we could apply to china this is the maximum level we're
nowhere near the maximum the chinese are already thinking gee the americans are
upset they've got some supporters here at the oxford union society
what more might the americans try and should we try to meet some of their demands so i believe we're in a
productive period now of conversation but it's very tense and when joe biden made an obvious invitation to xi jinping
look i want to meet i'm president now i'm not just vice president i'd like to meet you what did xi jinping say no
thank you although we do understand the virtual summit is now being uh cooked up and may will be happening in the next
few weeks so that may yet uh may yet change in real life is another another question i think dance with the dragon
while they're stealing your wallet well of course that wallet has been
filled with the chinese buying american t-bills for quite some decades so it does go go both ways but i think there's
a danger even a bit of agreement breaking out here let me put a uk dilemma to you if i may um vince which
combines questions of economics and values we the uk are now looking for a post-eu
future clearly there is a great deal of interest in particular in our financial services industry having connections
with china and rishi sunak the chancellor amongst others has at least implied there's an interest in boosting
london's role in this area however the example that many many people have been pointing out is that of australia like
us you know a medium-sized medium powerful liberal state in the anglophone world
and having tied a great deal of their economic style particularly in terms of uh exports to china
australia has found that its ability to say what it once at home in particular the case of scott morris and the prime
minister talking about the need potentially for a coveted investigation has led to very harsh economic sanctions
against australia as a result now the effects those haven't turned out to be perhaps quite as damaging as was
expected at the beginning but it did send a message out that essentially the price of doing a trade deal with china
is essentially that you have to shut up about china if you're not going to say something nice i'm not sure that's
something that a kind of loudmouth liberal nation like the uk could really stand do you think
well actually the first time i went to negotiate with the chinese on trade in 2010
with uh cameron and company we we met the president xu jintao
and his team and one of the issues on the agenda was tibet
um we asked the chinese say we're going to raise this people in
britain feel very strongly about it we're going to raise the issue they said fine but we'll do this in a proper way
you say something about tibet we'll say something that you don't like for five minutes um you put out your
press releases we put out ours and then we can talk business so i mean if things are done in a structured way the chinese
are perfectly able to cope with but would you tell us different from shooting pigs do clearly is a much
more confrontational sort of politician well we've struggled we don't know we haven't had that kind of exchange of
them but i but your particular question was about the uk and i would say that the fact that we
you know brexit has happened is an absolutely compelling reason why we now have to get and go to china if we
wanted to just stick with countries that have the same values and the same standards we should have stuck in the
european union but we've left i mean every everybody you know particularly the chinese just
regarded as an act of madness that the fact that we've now left means we have very little alternative
but to try and engage with the big growth economies of the future which are india china brazil possibly russia and
others uh you know we're in a new world and we have to be pragmatic um my
experience as you say is that we we have been able to talk about
human rights issues i i on the third occasion i went as a minister
in the g period actually um and i raised with ministers um
who is now the politburo the whole issue about labor rights in china and i i made the point to look you
know you're a socialist country and workers don't have the right to strike i'm i'm representing a wicked capitalist
country and our workers have minimum wages and trade unions can you explain and actually we had a very civilized
discussion for half an hour i sent him stuff on minimum wage enforcement and i noticed this under the common prosperity
of president g all these uh reforms the labour market now being introduced in china so i mean it's a slightly
satirical example but human rights can be you know you can
engage with china in an intelligent way you just shout out them of course they take offense for
perfectly obvious reasons and that's why this stuff about genocide is so lethal i mean i i have no idea what's happening
in xinjiang i've seen i've read the literature um there clearly is a serious abuse of
human rights but i was very struck that the economist magazine in the uk which is very hot on human rights and very
critical of china said we will not use the word genocide because it is clearly not applicable here it's a bad use of
language the when pompeo originally made these accusations in the united states his own
lawyers in the state department dissociated themselves from it so you know
let's if there is evil let's use the right language for it  you
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