The
character of the Chinese government—one that marries aspects of the
free market with suppression of freedom—shouldn't become the norm.
Should the 21st century be an American century? To answer, it is only necessary to contemplate the alternatives.
One much bruited these days is that of
a Chinese century. With China's billion-plus population, its 10% annual
average growth rates, and its burgeoning military power, a China that
comes to dominate Asia and much of the globe is increasingly becoming
thinkable. The character of the Chinese government—one that marries
aspects of the free market with suppression of political and personal
freedom—would become a widespread and disquieting norm.
But the dawn of a Chinese century—and
the end of an American one—is not inevitable. America possesses inherent
strengths that grant us a competitive advantage over China and the rest
of the world. We must, however, restore those strengths.
That means shoring up our fiscal and
economic standing, rebuilding our military, and renewing faith in our
values. We must apply these strengths in our policy toward China to make
its path to regional hegemony far more costly than the alternative path
of becoming a responsible partner in the international system.
Barack Obama is moving in precisely
the wrong direction. The shining accomplishment of the meetings in
Washington this week with Xi Jinping—China's vice president and likely
future leader—was empty pomp and ceremony.
President Obama came into office as a
near supplicant to Beijing, almost begging it to continue buying
American debt so as to finance his profligate spending here at home. His
administration demurred from raising issues of human rights for fear it
would compromise agreement on the global economic crisis or even "the
global climate-change crisis." Such weakness has only encouraged Chinese
assertiveness and made our allies question our staying power in East
Asia.
Zuma Press
Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping, left, with President Obama at the White House on Tuesday.
Now,
three years into his term, the president has belatedly responded with a
much-ballyhooed "pivot" to Asia, a phrase that may prove to be as
gimmicky and vacuous as his "reset" with Russia. The supposed pivot has
been oversold and carries with it an unintended consequence: It has left
our allies with the worrying impression that we left the region and
might do so again.
The pivot is also vastly
under-resourced. Despite his big talk about bolstering our military
position in Asia, President Obama's actions will inevitably weaken it.
He plans to cut back on naval shipbuilding, shrink our Air Force, and
slash our ground forces. Because of his policies and failed leadership,
our military is facing nearly $1 trillion in cuts over the next decade.
We must change course.
In the economic arena, we must directly
counter abusive Chinese practices in the areas of trade, intellectual
property, and currency valuation. While I am prepared to work with
Chinese leaders to ensure that our countries both benefit from trade, I
will not continue an economic relationship that rewards China's cheating
and penalizes American companies and workers.
Unless China changes its ways, on day
one of my presidency I will designate it a currency manipulator and take
appropriate counteraction. A trade war with China is the last thing I
want, but I cannot tolerate our current trade surrender.
We must also maintain military forces
commensurate to the long-term challenge posed by China's build-up. For
more than a decade now we have witnessed double-digit increases in
China's officially reported military spending. And even that does not
capture the full extent of its spending on defense. Nor do the gross
numbers tell us anything about the most troubling aspects of China's
strategy, which is designed to exert pressure on China's neighbors and
blunt the ability of the United States to project power into the Pacific
and keep the peace from which China itself has benefited.
To preserve our military presence in
Asia, I am determined to reverse the Obama administration's defense cuts
and maintain a strong military presence in the Pacific. This is not an
invitation to conflict. Instead, this policy is a guarantee that the
region remains open for cooperative trade, and that economic opportunity
and democratic freedom continue to flourish across East Asia.
We must also forthrightly confront the
fact that the Chinese government continues to deny its people basic
political freedoms and human rights. If the U.S. fails to support
dissidents out of fear of offending the Chinese government, if we fail
to speak out against the barbaric practices entailed by China's
compulsory one-child policy, we will merely embolden China's leaders at
the expense of greater liberty.
A nation that represses its own people
cannot ultimately be a trusted partner in an international system based
on economic and political freedom. While it is obvious that any lasting
democratic reform in China cannot be imposed from the outside, it is
equally obvious that the Chinese people currently do not yet enjoy the
requisite civil and political rights to turn internal dissent into
effective reform.
I will never flinch from ensuring that
our country is secure. And security in the Pacific means a world in
which our economic and military power is second to none. It also means a
world in which American values—the values of liberty and
opportunity—continue to prevail over those of oppression and
authoritarianism.
The sum total of my approach will
ensure that this is an American, not a Chinese century. We have much to
gain from close relations with a China that is prosperous and free. But
we should not fail to recognize that a China that is a prosperous
tyranny will increasingly pose problems for us, for its neighbors, and
for the entire world.
Mr. Romney is a Republican candidate for president.
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