Victory over the Enemy: U.S. Develops Long-Term Strategy for China

The U.S. Department of State released a study of Chinese policy entitled “Elements of the China Challenge,” which details the Chinese Communist Party’s international strategy, details the behavior and ideology of the Communist Party and the weaknesses of the regime in Beijing, and recommends ten policies that the U.S. government should adopt to confront China.

The report argues that the Communist Party not only seeks global dominance, but also a fundamental change in the world order, placing Beijing at the center of the world order to meet its authoritarian and hegemonic goals.

The State Department is serious about producing a strategic, long-term study of China that demonstrates that the U.S. government is fundamentally reversing the Panda’s policy of appeasement toward China. To reverse this policy, it is necessary to understand the CCP in a theoretical, practical, and international context, to expose its expansionist ambitions, to alert the U.S. and Western democracies, and to plan and act in unison from the beginning.

Many things have already been done, such as purging the Chinese Communist Party’s influence in the U.S., cutting off the Communist Party’s black hands in the U.S. political, business and academic circles, and countering the Chinese Communist Party’s cultural infiltration, political buying, economic schemes and technological theft one by one. So far, the Chinese Communist Party has achieved the effect of clearing the country.

The Chinese Communist Party has taken advantage of the free social environment in the U.S. to do a lot of unglamorous things in the U.S., and now these things can no longer be done, spies have been arrested, traitors in the academic world have been purged, diplomatic personnel have been restricted, and even foreign students and scholars doing research now have to follow the rules and do not dare to say anything.

Although many things have not been done, they have already grasped the movements of the CCP and understood its intentions. For example, the CCP has formed gangs in major international organizations, bribed small and medium-sized countries with money, and adopted a strategy of encircling cities from the countryside in order to isolate the United States and the West. The Communist Party has already won at the World Health Organization (WHO), made gains at the World Trade Organization (WTO), and has even taken the initiative at the United Nations (UN).

The United States has lacked vigilance against the CCP’s infiltration for many years, and has been dug in by the CCP. Trump has taken a retreating approach to this, abandoning his original positions, which is clearly detrimental to the United States. The U.S., with its own national power and international relations, will not be too difficult to reorder itself in international organizations, and the problem is that it will take time for the U.S. to establish another position outside the existing international organizations.

Among the ten tasks are strengthening a liberal, open, and rules-based international order; reassessing various international organizations; strengthening the coalition system; and creating new international organizations. The “strengthening of the international order” and the “reassessment” of the alliance system and international organizations is the transformation and reorganization of existing international organizations, while the “creation of new international organizations” is the “strengthening of the international order” and the “reassessment” of the alliance system and international organizations. The United States and its allies repositioned themselves to divide and dismantle the international organizations dominated by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

The Western democracies, led by the United States, share common values, similar national organizations, and common interests. Therefore, the United States and its allies have rearranged their positions to divide and disintegrate the international organizations dominated by the CCP and to limit the power of the CCP.

The report also includes two very specific points: one is to train a new generation of public servants in diplomacy, military, finance, economics, science and technology, and other fields, as well as public policy experts who understand China and other strategic competitors, friends, and potential friends; and the other is to reform the U.S. education system to help students understand the responsibilities of citizenship in an age of complex information.

Training a new generation of China experts is necessary because some existing strategic research institutes and university research centers have long been dominated by the pro-China left, and there is a need to fundamentally change this pattern of passivity and train a new cadre of China experts to serve the new China policy. Reforming the U.S. education system is a response to the long-standing infiltration of Chinese Confucius Institutes into U.S. schools, to help U.S. students strengthen their understanding of the Chinese dictatorship and to prevent the next generation from being brainwashed by the Chinese Communist Party.

It’s not that Americans don’t know how to play politics; they’re just careless. The Communist Party is a powerful country in the United States and has not taken the CCP into account for a long time, thinking that all the CCP does is to make small fights. This year’s U.S. election, leftist forces are rampant, pushing Trump’s traditional American conservatives into a corner, which is a profound lesson that if not corrected in time, as Pompeo said, the U.S. will become a colony of the Chinese Communist Party.

This State Department report has far-reaching implications, and while the purpose of this statement is not to set policy for the next president, it is clear that none of this planning is for the current administration, at least not for a decade or two of long-term planning. With this report as a basis, it will serve as a principled guide for whoever is president.