Making History

By Bill Lee

As the world knows, US President Donald Trump and Workers’ Party of Korea Chairman Kim Jong Un have been engaged in an escalating war of insults. Trump called Kim “little Rocket Man,” and Kim retaliated by calling Trump a “mentally deranged US dotard.” Kim wins that one.

But this mad spiral into acrimony could have serious repercussions, like nuclear war. This brinksmanship heading towards the chasm of disaster brings to (my) mind the old question about whether nations’ leaders can change or create history. Do Great Men (or women) make history, or do the forces of history move inexorably forward, as Marx thought, with individual human agency being just a bug in a gale?

For me, it depends on how we define “history.” And that, friends, is quite a task. I will go out on the limb and say that history is a teleological progression, a process heading toward some goal. That progression need not be linear, and, indeed, it is more likely cyclical or dialectical. The final goal is aspirational. I’m glad we cleared that up.

Now we have to examine some Great Leaders to see if they moved History forward. In the last century, we had Lenin, Roosevelt, Churchill, Hitler. Churchill is roundly considered the greatest leader in the 20th century. But did he make history, did he move it forward? No, his energies were focused on stopping fascism not extending democracy (they booted him out just after the war). Hitler certainly created an impact, but the havoc he caused set history back. The only leader I can see who really propelled history forward is Mao Zedong. The peasant revolution may have been one of the forces of history waiting to happen, but it was Mao who recognized this and led that revolution. Would there have been one without Mao? Thus to my mind, the Great Leader theory of history is very rare, Mao the most recent exception, and mostly it is the forces of history churning inexorably forward.

Which brings us to our maxim for the day: Great Leaders can make history, but fools like Trump and Kim can only pervert it.

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Photo by Raymond Cunningham via Flickr

Kurds Vote on Independence

           by David Parmer / Tokyo

Kurds in Northern Iraq voted overwhelmingly for an independent state on September 25th. The vote was said to be “non-binding” but 93% of those who voted supported an independent Kurdish state.

Opposition to the vote came swiftly, first form the central government in Baghdad, which banned flights to Kurdistan and took measures to take control of borders long managed by Kurdish fighters. Nor did the Kurds get much international support. The United States did not recognize the referendum and stated that it supports a united Iraq. Neighboring countries with Kurdish populations such as Iran and Turkey also condemned the vote.

The Kurds are now in a tricky position; having called for independence the question is “What next?” Without widespread international or regional support, it seems they are not going anywhere near independence soon. A worst-case scenario would be an Iraqi civil war, a conflict that no one would or could win.

So what are your thoughts on the thorny issue? How could it be resolved, and what will happen next. Please log in and let us know what you think.

Photo: Kurdish YPG Fighter via Kurdishstruggle 

KJU Slams Trump in Fiery One-Page Reply

                                      by David Parmer/Tokyo

It didn’t take the DPRK’s Supreme Leader, Mr. Kim Jong-un, long to launch a fiery reply to Mr. Donald Trump’s September 19th speech at the United Nations in New York City. The reply was not to the fact that Mr. Trump had made a speech, but that it contained phrases like “we will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea.” In the speech Trump added a personal insult by calling Mr. Kim “Rocket Man” and claimed he was on a suicide mission.

During the September 19th speech the UN delegates sat in quiet silence while Mr. Trump ranted against not only the DPRK but also against another of his favorite targets, Iran. The Israeli delegation led by Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu beamed and smiled in approval, and later Mr. Netanyahu tweeted his admiration for Mr. Trump’s speech.

On September 22, Mr. Kim blasted trump in a one-page riposte. Mr. Kim said that he had expected more from Mr. Trump’s speech, maybe even stereotyped words, but never the threat of one sovereign nation to eliminate another combined with personal insults to its leader before a body like the UN.

Perhaps the most important line in Mr. Kim’s reply was that he was not intimidated by Mr. Trump’s words, but rather convinced that his decision to possess nuclear weapons was the right decision and one that he would follow to the end.

Mr. Kim called Mr. Trump “mentally deranged” and a “rogue and gangster.” Mr. Kim said he is now carefully considering his options. He ended with a chilling last line: “I will surely and definitely tame the U.S. dotard with fire.”

(The following is the full text of Mr. Kim’s remarks from the Rodong Sinmun)

Respected Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un, chairman of the State Affairs Commission of the DPRK, released a statement on Thursday.

  “The speech made by the U.S. Chief Executive in his maiden appearance on the UN arena in the prevailing serious circumstances, in which the situation on the Korean peninsula has been rendered tense as never before and is inching closer to a touch-and-go state, is arousing worldwide concern.
  A certain degree of my guess was that he would make stereo-typed, prepared remarks a little different from what he used to utter in his office on the spur of the moment as he had to speak on the world’s largest official diplomatic stage.
  But, far from making somewhat plausible remarks that can be helpful to defusing tension, he made unprecedented rude nonsense one has never heard from any of his predecessors.
  A frightened dog barks louder.
  I would like to advise Trump to exercise prudence in selecting words and to be considerate of whom he speaks to when making a speech in front of the world.
  The mentally deranged behavior of the U.S. president openly expressing on the UN arena the unethical will to “totally destroy” a sovereign state, beyond the boundary of threats of regime change or overturn of social system, makes even those with normal thinking faculty reconsider discretion and composure.
  His remarks remind me of such words as “political layman” and “political heretic” which were in vogue in reference to Trump during his presidential election campaign.
  After taking office Trump has rendered the world restless through threats and blackmail against all countries. He is unfit to hold the prerogative of supreme command of the military forces of a country, and he is surely a rogue and a gangster fond of playing with fire, rather than a politician.
  His remarks which described the U.S. option through straightforward expression of his will have convinced me, rather than frightening or stopping me, that the path I chose is correct and that it is the one I have to follow to the last.
  Now that Trump has denied the existence of and insulted me and my country in front of the eyes of the world and made the most ferocious declaration of war in history that he would destroy the DPRK, we will consider with seriousness taking a corresponding, highest level of hard-line countermeasure in history.
  Action is the best option in treating the dotard who, hard of hearing, is uttering only what he wants to say.
  As a man representing the DPRK and upon the dignity and honor of my state and people and upon all my own, I will make the man holding the prerogative of supreme command of the U.S. pay dearly for his rude nonsense calling for totally destroying the DPRK.
  This is not a rhetorical expression loved by Trump.
  I am now thinking hard about what response he could have expected from us when he allowed such eccentric words to trip off his tongue.
  Whatever Trump might have expected, he will face results beyond his expectation.
 I will surely and definitely tame the mentally deranged U.S. dotard with fire.”

(Photo and text via Rodong Sinmun)

PLA Military Reforms — “From the Neck Up”

By Bill Lee

The first phase of China’s, specifically Xi Jinping’s, military reforms appear to have been completed. The “from the neck up” first-phase reforms began in 2015 when X Jinping announced a major revamping of the military, with emphasis on joint command and control functions. The seven military regions were reorganized into five “Theater Commands,” reducing the dominance of the army and placing more importance on the navy and the air force in order to project China’s power beyond its borders. The four General Departments (operations, political work, logistics, and equipment/armaments) were disbanded, and their functions were streamlined into 15 departments and agencies under the Central Military Commission, further consolidating power in the hands of Xi Jinping, the CMC chairman. Two new military services, the Rocket Force and the Strategic Support Force, were established to elevate the PLA’s nuclear and missile forces to be on a par with the other services and to recognize the importance of cyber and space warfare.

The aims of the reforms are to: 1) make the military more flexible and enable the joint use of services, invaluable for modern warfare; 2) consolidate Xi’s and the CPC’s power over the military; and 3) reduce corruption in the military by placing auditing functions within a central authority under the CMC.

The second phase of the military reforms — “from the neck down” — were announced early this year. They will aim at reforming the actual organizational and operational functions of the military services themselves. They will take time to implement, and attention will be paid to dissatisfaction arising from them, such as the downsizing of 300,000 troops, mainly from the ground forces. The PLA may lie low for a while, as the reforms take effect, but with the PLA’s base in Djibouti, its first overseas military base, now in operation, the PLA is likely to emerge a leaner and more effective fighting force that can operate overseas.

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Photo by Jason Chafin via Flickr

The Strait of Malacca – Still Crowded, Still Dangerous and Still Vitally Important.

                                   by David Parmer/Tokyo

Two years ago RG21 took a look at the Malacca Strait in its Asian Waterways series. Our view was that it was possibly the most important waterway in the world. Not much has changed since then, and the “big three” issues surrounding the strait remain at the forefront: traffic, piracy and geopolitics.

The numbers for piracy in 2017 are quite encouraging. Piracy in the Malacca Strait is down 24% year-on-year since 2016. This is thanks largely to the Malacca Straits Patrol supported by maritime assets from Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. Problematic however, is the shift in pirate activity eastward to the Sibutu Passage in the Sulu-Celebes Sea area. Joint patrols by Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia are attempting to deal with this situation.

In 2014, we reported that the number of vessels transiting the Malacca Strait was in excess of 60,000. Last year the number jumped to more than 83,000. In such an highly trafficked area, accidents are inevitable. Two high-profile accidents have happened in the second half of this year. On August 21, the USS John S. McCain collided with an oil tanker in the strait resulting in the loss of life of 10 sailors. And in September an Indonesian tanker collided with a Dominican-registered dredger resulting in two dead and three crew missing.Traffic remains a critical problem and will probably only worsen resulting in further collisions and mishaps. 

With such an important and vital waterway, it would not be surprising that geopolitics is a key concern in the equation. States with varying territorial claims and in and around the Bay of Bengal and Indian Ocean are seen to be jockeying for position to ensure their advantage in the present, and to be prepared in case of any future conflicts. Chinese, Indian and Pakistan submarines ply the waters of the region, and as of June 2017 India has stepped up its surface and airborne patrols around the Andman and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal. Australia too continues its long-standing air patrols of the region, and joint US-Indian cooperation is increasing.

So, in two more years will the area have quieted down? Probably not. While piracy might be capped, traffic and geopolitical considerations will make the Malacca Strait and its littoral and maritime regions an area that looms large on everyone’s radar.

Photo: US Pacific Fleet via flickr

“BRICS is not a talking shop, but a task force that gets things done.” Xi Jinping

Full Text of Keynote Address by President Xijinping at opening of BRICS Business Forum, September 3, 2017. Xiamen, Fujian, PRC.

Your Excellency President Michel Temer,

Your Excellency President Jacob Zuma,

Representatives of the Business Community,

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Dear Friends,

Good afternoon! It is my great pleasure to have all of you with us in the beautiful city of Xiamen, renowned as the “Egret Island”. The BRICS Summit will be held tomorrow. On behalf of the Chinese government and people and the people of Xiamen, and also in my own name, I warmly welcome all of you to the Business Forum.

Xiamen has been a trading port since ancient times as well as a gateway of China’s opening up and external cooperation. Embracing the vast ocean, the city has hosted visitors from around the world. On a personal note, Xiamen is where I started off when I came to Fujian Province to take up a new post in 1985. Back then, being one of the earliest special economic zones in China, the city was at the forefront of China’s reform and opening up endeavor and was brimming with development opportunities. Three decades later, Xiamen has become well known for its innovation and entrepreneurship, with burgeoning new economic forms and new industries, robust trade and investment and easy access to the world with air, land and sea links. Today, Xiamen is a beautiful garden city with perfect harmony between man and nature.

There is a popular saying here in southern Fujian, “Dedicate yourself and you will win,” which embodies an enterprising spirit. Xiamen’s success is a good example demonstrating the perseverance of the 1.3 billion-plus Chinese people. In close to 40 years of reform and opening up, under the leadership of the Communist Party of China, we Chinese have forged ahead, fearless and determined, and we have successfully embarked on a path of socialism with distinctive Chinese features. We have encountered difficulties and challenges on the way forward. But we have persevered and kept pace with the times. With dedication, courage and ingenuity, we are making great progress in pursuing development in today’s China.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Dear Friends,

BRICS cooperation has now reached a crucial stage of development. In assessing its performance, it is important to bear two things in mind: the historical course of global development and evolving international landscape and the historical process of development of the BRICS countries, both individually and collectively, in the context of which BRICS cooperation is pursued.

We are in a great era of development, transformation and adjustment. Although conflict and poverty are yet to be eliminated globally, the trend toward peace and development has grown ever stronger. Our world today is becoming increasingly multipolar; the economy has become globalized; there is growing cultural diversity; and the society has become digitized. The law of the jungle where the strong prey on the weak and the zero-sum game are rejected, and peace, development and win-win cooperation have become the shared aspiration of all peoples.

Against such a backdrop, a large number of emerging market and developing countries have come to the fore, playing an ever greater role in international affairs. BRICS cooperation is a natural choice made by our five countries, as we all share a desire for peace and development. In the past decade, we BRICS countries have surged ahead and become a bright spot in the global economy.

— The past decade has seen the BRICS countries making headway in pursuing common development. The sudden outbreak of the 2008 global financial crisis left the world economy reeling, which is yet to fully recover. Facing the external shock, our five countries have held the ground by strengthening the domestic economy, boosting growth and improving people’s livelihood. In the past ten years, our combined GDP has grown by 179%, trade by 94% and urban population by 28%. All this has contributed significantly to stabilizing the global economy and returning it to growth, and it has delivered tangible benefits to three billion and more people.

— The past decade has seen the BRICS countries advancing results-oriented and mutually beneficial cooperation. Leveraging our respective strengths and converging interests, we have put in place a leaders-driven cooperation framework that covers wide-ranging areas and multiple levels. A number of cooperation projects have been launched that are in keeping with our five countries’ development strategies and meet the interests of our peoples. In particular, the New Development Bank and the Contingent Reserve Arrangement have provided financing support for infrastructure building and sustainable development of the BRICS countries, contributing to enhanced global economic governance and the building of an international financial safety net.

— The past decade has seen the BRICS countries endeavoring to fulfill their international responsibility. Committed to multilateralism, fairness and justice, our five countries have staked out our positions on major regional and international issues and made our proposals to address them. We have promoted reform of global economic governance to increase the representation and say of emerging market and developing countries. As a champion of development, we have taken the lead in implementing the Millennium Development Goals and Sustainable Development Goals, and engaged in close dialogue and cooperation with other developing countries to pursue development through unity.

As an old saying goes, the construction of a tall building starts with its foundation. We have laid the foundation and put in place the framework of BRICS cooperation. In reviewing the past progress of BRICS cooperation, I believe there are three important practices that should be carried forward.

First, treating each other as equals and seeking common ground while shelving differences. In terms of BRICS cooperation, decisions are made through consultation among us all, not by one country alone. We respect each other’s path and model of development, accommodate each other’s concerns and work to enhance strategic communication and political mutual trust. Given differences in national conditions, history and culture, it is only natural that we may have some differences in pursuing our cooperation. However, with strong faith in cooperation and commitment to enhancing trust, we can achieve steady progress in our cooperation.

Second, taking a results-oriented, innovative approach to make our cooperation benefit all. BRICS is not a talking shop, but a task force that gets things done. Our goal is to build a big market of trade and investment, promote smooth flow of currency and finance, improve connectivity of infrastructure and build close bond between the people. In pursuing this goal, our five countries are engaged in practical cooperation across the board, covering several dozen areas, including economy, trade, finance, science, technology, education, culture and health, thus giving concrete expression to the endeavor of building a new type of international relations featuring win-win cooperation.

Third, developing ourselves to help others with the well-being of the world in our mind. Having gone through an arduous course of development, we BRICS countries share the agony of those people who are still caught in chaos and poverty. Since the very beginning, our five countries have been guided by the principle of dialogue without confrontation, partnership without alliance. We are committed to observing the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, international law and basic norms governing international relations in conducting state-to-state relations. When developing ourselves, we are ready to share development opportunities with other countries. The philosophy of BRICS cooperation has gained growing appreciation and endorsement, and it has become a positive energy in the international community.

All this is what the BRICS spirit is about. It is the shared value that has bound us in the past decade’s cooperation. This spirit, constantly enriched over the years, has not only benefited our peoples but also enabled us to make a difference in the world.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Dear Friends,

Reviewing past progress helps us forge ahead in the right direction. Currently, the global economy has resumed growth, with emerging market and developing countries delivering a strong performance. A new round of technological and industrial revolution is in the making, and reform and innovation are gaining momentum. We have enough reason to believe that our world will be a better place.

On the other hand, more than 700 million people are still living in hunger; tens of millions of people are displaced and become refugees; so many people, including innocent children, are killed in conflicts. The global economy is still not healthy enough and remains in a period of adjustment featuring weak growth, and new growth drivers are yet to emerge. Economic globalization is facing more uncertainties. Emerging market and developing countries find themselves in a more complex external environment. The long road to global peace and development will not be a smooth one.

Some people, seeing that emerging market and developing countries have experienced growth setbacks, assert that the BRICS countries are losing their luster. It is true that affected by complex internal and external environments, we BRICS countries have encountered headwinds of varying intensity. But the growth potential and trend of our countries remain unchanged, and we are fully confident about it.

It is time to set sail when the tide rises. Going forward, we BRICS countries have a major task to accomplish, which is growing our economies and strengthening cooperation. We should build on past success, chart the course for future cooperation and embark on a new journey to jointly usher in the second “Golden Decade” of BRICS cooperation.

First, we should boost BRICS cooperation to create new impetus for economic growth of our five countries. In recent years, thanks to our strengths in terms of commodities supply, cost of human resources and international market demand, our five countries have driven global growth. As our five economies continue to grow, however, issues concerning resources allocation and industrial structure have become more acute. At the same time, the global economic structure is going through profound changes, evidenced by shrinking global demand and rising financial risks. All this has posed challenges to the traditional strengths of the BRICS economies, taking us to a crucial stage where we must work harder to overcome difficulties.

How should we get through this stage? Growth rate alone is not the answer. Instead, we should, on the basis of our current conditions and bearing in mind the long-term goal, advance structural reform and explore new growth drivers and development paths. We should seize the opportunity presented by the new industrial revolution to promote growth and change growth model through innovation. We should pursue innovation-driven development created by smart manufacturing, the “Internet Plus” model, digital economy and sharing economy, stay ahead of the curve and move faster to replace old growth drivers with new ones. We should eliminate impediments to economic development through reform, remove systemic and institutional barriers, and energize the market and the society, so as to achieve better quality, more resilient and sustainable growth.

Despite different national conditions, we BRICS countries are at a similar development stage and share the same development goals. We should jointly explore ways to boost innovation-driven growth. This requires us to improve macroeconomic policy coordination, synergize our respective development strategies, leverage our strengths in terms of industrial structure and resources endowment, and create value chains and a big market for shared interests, so as to achieve interconnected development. Basing ourselves on our own practices of reform and innovation, we should blaze a new path which may also help other emerging market and developing countries to seize opportunities and meet challenges.

Economic cooperation is the foundation of the BRICS mechanism. With this focus in mind, we should implement the Strategy for BRICS Economic Partnership, institutionalize and substantiate cooperation in various sectors, and continue to enhance the performance of BRICS cooperation. This year, we have made progress in the operation of the New Development Bank and Contingent Reserve Arrangement, and in e-commerce, trade and investment facilitation, trade in services, local currency bond issuance, scientific and technological innovation, industrial cooperation and public-private partnership, thus expanding and intensifying economic cooperation. We should continue to implement agreements and consensus already reached and better leverage the role of current mechanisms. We should also actively explore new ways and new areas of practical cooperation and strengthen our ties to ensure durable and fruitful BRICS cooperation.

Secondly, we BRICS countries should shoulder our responsibilities to uphold global peace and stability. Peace and development underpin and reinforce each other. People around the world want peace and cooperation, not conflict or confrontation. Thanks to the joint efforts of all countries, global peace has reigned for more than half a century. However, incessant conflicts in some parts of the world and hotspot issues are posing challenges to world peace. The intertwined threats of terrorism and lack of cybersecurity, among others, have cast a dark shadow over the world.

We BRICS countries are committed to upholding global peace and contributing to the international security order. This year, we have held the Meeting of High Representatives for Security Issues and the Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs/International Relations. We have put in place the regular meeting mechanism for our permanent representatives to the multilateral institutions, and convened the Foreign Policy Planning Dialogue, the Meeting of Counter-Terrorism Working Group, the Meeting of Cybersecurity Working Group, and the Consultation on Peacekeeping Operations. These efforts aim to strengthen consultation and coordination on major international and regional issues and build synergy among the BRICS countries. We should uphold the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and basic norms governing international relations, firmly support multilateralism, work for greater democracy in international relations, and oppose hegemonism and power politics. We should foster the vision of common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security, and take a constructive part in the process of resolving geopolitical hotspot issues and make our due contributions.

I am convinced that as long as we take a holistic approach to fighting terrorism in all its forms, and address both its symptoms and root causes, terrorists will have no place to hide. When dialogue, consultation and negotiation are conducted to create conditions for achieving political settlement of issues such as Syria, Libya and the Palestine-Israel conflict, the flame of war can be put out, and displaced refugees will eventually return to their homes.

Thirdly, we BRICS countries should contribute to enhancing global economic governance. Only openness delivers progress, and only inclusiveness sustains such progress. Due to sluggish global growth in recent years, such issues as uneven development, inadequate governance and deficit of fairness have become more acute, and protectionism and inward-looking mentality are on the rise. The global economy and global economic governance system, having entered a period of adjustment, face new challenges.

We should not ignore problems arising from economic globalization or just complain about them. Rather, we should make joint efforts to find solutions. We should work together with other members of the international community to step up dialogue, coordination and cooperation and contribute to upholding and securing global economic stability and growth. To this end, we should promote the building of an open global economy, advance trade and investment liberalization and facilitation, jointly build new global value chains, and rebalance economic globalization. Doing so will bring benefits to people across the world. We five countries should open more to each other, expand converging interests in this process, take an inclusive approach and share opportunities, so as to create even brighter prospects for growing the economies of the five countries.

The development of emerging market and developing countries is not intended to move the cheese of anyone but to make the pie of the global economy bigger. We should join hands to steer the course of economic globalization, offer more vision and public goods, make the governance model and rules more balanced and inclusive, and improve and reshape international division of labor and global value chains. We should work to reform the global economic governance system to make it commensurate with the reality of the global economic architecture. We should also improve governance rules for the new domains of deep sea, polar regions, outer space and cyberspace, so as to ensure that all countries share both rights and responsibilities.

Fourthly, we should increase the influence of BRICS and build extensive partnerships. As a cooperation platform with global influence, BRICS cooperation is more than about our five countries. Rather, it carries the expectations of emerging market and developing countries and indeed the international community. Guided by the principle of open and inclusive cooperation, we BRICS countries place high premium on cooperation with other emerging market and developing countries and have established effective dialogue mechanisms with them.

As a Chinese saying goes, “It is easy to break one arrow but hard to break ten arrows bundled together.” We should leverage our respective strengths and influence, promote South-South cooperation and North-South dialogue, pool the collective strengths of all countries and jointly defuse risks and meet challenges. We should expand the coverage of BRICS cooperation and deliver its benefits to more people. We should promote the “BRICS Plus” cooperation approach and build an open and diversified network of development partnerships to get more emerging market and developing countries involved in our concerted endeavors for cooperation and mutual benefits.

During the Xiamen Summit, China will hold the Dialogue of Emerging Market and Developing Countries, where leaders of five countries from different regions will be invited to join the BRICS leaders in discussing global development cooperation and South-South cooperation as well as the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Mutual understanding and friendship among peoples are crucial to enhancing BRICS cooperation and building extensive partnerships. We should fully leverage the role of people-to-people and cultural exchanges and encourage extensive public participation in BRICS cooperation. We should hold more events like cultural festivals, movie festivals and sports games that are popular among the people so that the BRICS story will be told everywhere and the exchanges and friendship of the peoples of our five countries will become an inexhaustible source of strength driving BRICS cooperation.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Dear Friends,

The past decade has not only seen solid progress in the BRICS cooperation mechanism; it has also witnessed the unfolding of all-round reform and opening up in China and its rapid economic and social development. Over these ten years, China’s economic aggregate has grown by 239% and its total volume of exports and imports in goods risen by 73%. China has become the world’s second largest economy, the lives of its 1.3 billion-plus people have been significantly improved, and China has made increasingly greater contribution to both regional and global economic development.

It is true that as China’s reform endeavors have entered a crucial stage where tough challenges must be met, some underlying difficulties and problems have surfaced, which must be addressed with resolve and determination. As a Chinese saying goes, “Effective medicine tastes bitter.” The medicine that we have prescribed for ourselves is to carry out all-round reform. Over the past five years, we have adopted over 1,500 reform measures covering all sectors, with breakthroughs made in multiple areas, and the reform is being pursued with greater intensity. The pace of economic structural adjustment and industrial upgrading has accelerated. China’s economy has maintained steady and sound performance, and new drivers sustaining development have grown in strength. In the first half of this year, China’s economy grew by 6.9%, the value added from services accounted for 54.1% of the GDP, and 7.35 million urban jobs were created. All these achievements have proven that deepening all-round reform is the right path that we should continue to follow.

Going forward, China will continue to put into practice the vision of innovative, coordinated, green, open and inclusive development. We will adapt to and steer the new normal of economic development, push forward supply-side structural reform, accelerate the building of a new system for an open economy, drive economic development with innovation, and achieve sustainable development. China will stay firmly committed to peaceful development and make even greater contribution to global peace and development.

Last May, China successfully hosted the Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation, which was attended by 29 heads of state or government and over 1,600 representatives from more than 140 countries and 80-plus international organizations. This ushered in a new stage of translating the Belt and Road Initiative from vision to action and from planning to implementation. Forum participants discussed ways of promoting cooperation and development and reached broad consensus. Let me make this clear: The Belt and Road Initiative is not a tool to advance any geopolitical agenda, but a platform for practical cooperation. It is not a foreign aid scheme, but an initiative for interconnected development which calls for extensive consultation, joint contribution and shared benefits. I am convinced that the Belt and Road Initiative will serve as a new platform for all countries to achieve win-win cooperation and that it will create new opportunities for implementing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

The business community of the BRICS countries is the main force driving our economic development. Over the last decade, you have incorporated business development into BRICS cooperation, thus making important contribution to forging BRICS economic partnerships. The reason why we are holding the Business Forum on the eve of the Summit is to solicit your views and advice, so that we can work together to make the Xiamen Summit a success and enable BRICS cooperation to deliver. I hope you will leverage your strengths in terms of information, technology and funding to launch more practical and mutually beneficial cooperation projects that benefit our countries and peoples. What you do will help spur economic and social development and improve people’s lives. The Chinese government will continue to encourage Chinese companies to operate and take root in other countries, and likewise, we also warmly welcome foreign companies to invest and operate in China.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Dear Friends,

We BRICS countries will enter a second decade of more vibrant growth. Let us work together with other members of the international community. Let our cooperation deliver more benefits to the peoples of our five countries. Let the benefits of global peace and development reach all the people in the world.

In conclusion, I wish the Business Forum every success.

Thank you!

 

Full Text of Xi Jinping speech via BRICS 2017

Photo: GovernmentZA via flickr

Xi Jinping’s successor

By Bill Lee

Approaching the end of his first five-year term, Xi Jinping faces the dilemma of all entrenched leaders who want to stay in power: how to do it with reasonable legality. Could Xi emulate Vladimir Putin and take the relatively weak role of prime minister, installing Li Keqiang as president, as Putin did with Dmitry Medvedev, and then come back as president? That is unlikely since Xi would have difficulty rewriting the CPC rules, as Putin did with the Russian constitution.

The Mainichi Shimbun has recently reported that Xi has found the answer. According to the Mainichi, which quotes Chinese “sources,” Xi confidant Chen Min’er will rocket up the Party hierarchy and be appointed to the Politburo Standing Committee at the upcoming Party Congress in the fall, and then be named as the successor to Xi Jinping as Party leader. Chen previously served as the head of the Party propaganda department in Zhejiang Province, when Xi Jinping was the Party secretary there. Chen purportedly gained Xi’s favor when he edited Xi’s articles about his political ideas that were run in the local Party newspaper. Chen was subsequently appointed to the important post of Party secretary of Chongqing municipality, which put him on the path to the Politburo Standing Committee.

If Chen does become Xi’s successor, he will certainly just be a flunky for Xi, who will become like a retired “cloistered Emperor” of Japan. Xi will then be able to wield unlimited power behind the scenes.

The Mainichi report makes sense, but we will of course have to see if it really becomes reality. In any event, Xi Jinping is surely too powerful to exit the scene tamely in five years.

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Photo by Thierry Ehrmann via Flickr

Breaking: India-China End Doklam Standoff

                               by David Parmer/Tokyo

In a surprise move on August 28, India and China agreed to disengagement in the Doklam region. Details are sketchy but Indian forces have pulled back ending the standoff that has gone on since June 2017. The Indian and Chinese leaders are scheduled to meet next month at the BRICS summit in China, and this quick resolution may have been pushed forward to facilitate that meeting.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) issued a terse statement saying that disengagement is ongoing, while China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs noted that Indian forces had withdrawn personnel and equipment that were on Chinese territory.

Disengagement and de-escalation are a good thing for both of these great powers and for the time being lives have been saved. However, border issues between China and India have been going on for decades, and will likely continue. Is there a solution that would end the threat of war once and for all? Please let us know your opinion on this.

Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs statement

Indian Ministry of External Affairs statement

Photo: J. Singh Bawa via flickr

India VS China Border Tension – Here we go again.

                            by David Parmer/Tokyo

An expert on international affairs from London’s famed Chatham House research institute was quoted by CNBC on August 16 as saying ” All logic says it won’t happen.” The expert was talking about the current India-China border tensions turning into war. Sadly, logic has little to do with situations that have reached a certain tipping point, and the current one might just have some logic-defying outcomes.

Tensions have been building since June 2017 when India sent troops to stop the building of a road by China in territory that it considers to be in Bhutan, a country whose defense matters are overseen by India. (The area is called Doklam by the Indians and Donglang by the Chinese.) Since then, China has beefed-up its forces and logistics in the area, and its media has repeatedly warned India to withdraw. A war of words has ensued.

On August 15 the South China Morning Post reported that India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi gave a stern warning during his speech on India’s Independence Day when he said:

” Be it the sea or the borders, cyber or space–in all spheres India is capable and we are strong enough to overcome those who try to act against our country.”

As was the case in 1962, India’s forces are no match for the Chinese PLA on paper. This, however, does not mean that they would not put up stiff resistance should fighting occur. Also, this time the Indian Air Force would certainly enter the fray. Indian naval forces would also probably perform well when called upon to do so.

The Doklam Plateau area is a sensitive area to the Indians, first because, of course, it is a disputed border area, but also because it is only about 34KM from the Siligun Corridor which is a vital supply line to India’s Northwest region.

Tensions have also started to simmer in the Ladak, Jammu and Kashmir region where PLA troops attempted to enter Indian-claimed territory.

On August 20, China’s Global Times reported that China’s PLA Western Theater Command carried out military exercises in which 10 units took part, and that these exercises included live fire training.

If we look at the 1962 India-China conflict, we see a number of similarities. In both cases we see a “war of words” carried out in their respective newspapers and now online. Today we can also see steadily rising tensions and warnings by the Chinese.

What followed in 1962 in India (and in China’s border disputes with its other neighbors, Russia and Viet Nam) was a lightning Chinese military strike followed by a period of calm and a Chinese withdrawal. In China’s border conflicts the term “teach a lesson” was repeated by China as one of its military objectives.

The question is now will China attempt to “teach a lesson” again to India, or will tensions de-escalate? The truth is it could go either way, and logic aside there could again be armed conflict at the top of the world. Please log in and give us your thoughts on this question.

Photo: dhiraj kateja via YouTube

U.S. General Mark Milley: “China is not an Enemy”

                          by David Parmer/Tokyo

At an event at the National Press Club on July 27, in Washington, Chief of Staff of the United States Army General Milley laid out US global policy in a direct and concise manner. The general touched on three main areas and explained current US Army and US government thinking on them:

  • Security Challenges
  • Army readiness
  • Myths about the military 

Security Challenges

Milley said the US faces four nation states:

  • Russia
  • North Korea
  • China
  • Iran

And one non-state actor:

  • Terrorists

He said that an adversary must have “capability and will” to engage in or start a conflict. He said Russia is a “purely rational actor” and that despite differences we share areas of common interest.

As for China, he called China a “significant rising power” and that China had made the most significant shift in Global economic power in the last five centuries.”

He said that China also has capability and will, and has laid out its plans for the “China Dream” very clearly. It will proceed peacefully but has a capable military force to back up its interests.

He added, “China is not an enemy. Neither is Russia for that matter.” What is possible is “competition without conflict.”   And “China is also a rational actor.”

Iran tries to undermine U.S. national security interests in the Middle East.

North Korea is “the single most dangerous threat” at the present time.

“Time is running out.”

Terrorism, he said, will be “A long struggle.”

 Army readiness

The general said that the real question about your army is “What do you want it to do?” Since 1945 at the Breton Woods Conference the US has fielded a global military in support of the World Order. The U.S. now has 180,000 soldiers under arms. The General said that he believes we need a bigger Army. He also said that he believes that there has been a change in the character of war, and that future wars will be urban combat following the world trend for urbanization. He citied the battle of Mosul as an example of this trend manifesting in the present.

5 Myths of War

The general listed five myths of war and gave their corollaries in his estimation.

  • Wars will be short–they will not, they will take time
  • You can win wars from afar–you can’t there must be boots on the ground
  • Special Forces can do it all–they can’t and shouldn’t be asked to
  • Armies are easy to create–they aren’t, it takes time and training
  • Armies fight wars–nations fight wars

In closing General Milley took prepared questions. Two significant answers that he gave were regarding the situation on the Korean peninsula.

“No good options”

” It’s not going to be a pretty picture.” (A possible war in Korea)

Video: CSPAN

Photo: CSPAN