Biden‘s call with Xi Jinping did not bring about any real improvement in U.S.-China relations, and the Chinese Communist Party‘s top brass is still pressing Biden into line. After Biden congratulated Xi Jinping on New Year’s Day, Secretary of State Blinken also congratulated the Chinese on New Year’s Day, which was also publicized by the Chinese Communist Party media. Is the U.S. government congratulating every Chinese person on the New Year, or is it congratulating the Chinese Communist regime on the New Year?
Blinken’s congratulatory message, which was supposedly aimed primarily at the Chinese people or ethnic Chinese, said, “We wish our friends around the world good health, peace and happiness on the occasion of the Chinese New Year on February 12.” He added, “We invite all nations to join us in making the world a better place for future generations.”
How does the new U.S. administration expect to “build a better world” with China, as U.S.-China relations have not really improved?
Biden has said that the Chinese Communist Party is “the most serious competitor,” and Blinken has said that the Chinese Communist Party is the greatest threat, but no matter what the argument is, it seems difficult to see a “better world.
According to the Biden Administration, the departments are still evaluating, and the policy toward China has not really taken shape yet, or rather, Biden does not want to continue Trump‘s policy, but cannot find other effective ways for the Time being.
Most U.S. politicians clearly see the ambition and aggressiveness of the CCP, and deeply appreciate the layers of penetration of the CCP, and the real threat has long been at their doorstep; however, Biden did not position the CCP as the biggest enemy, but only the “most serious competitor”, which actually reflects the hesitation of the new U.S. government in confronting and cooperating with each other. The new U.S. administration’s indecision in the scale of confrontation and cooperation.
It is likely that the Biden team has not yet clarified the concept that the U.S. needs to confront the Chinese Communist regime and the Chinese people need to cooperate. Or perhaps it should be said that the Chinese Communist regime wants to compete with the United States for hegemony and hates to get rid of the United States as soon as possible; but this is not the thinking of the majority of the Chinese people, who are willing to cooperate sincerely with the American people and to cooperate and deal amicably with all peoples. The Chinese Communist regime is the enemy of the United States. The Chinese people have no fundamental conflict of interest with the American people, nor do they have historical ethnic grudges; it is the Chinese people who are the friends of the United States, and who are fair and beneficial competitors.
If the Biden team is unable to truly and clearly distinguish between the CCP and China, the CCP and the Chinese people, it is tantamount to equating the 1.4 billion Chinese people with the CCP regime, and will of course be caught in the misunderstanding of confrontation versus cooperation. At present, many governments are caught in the same misunderstanding and in the same distress.
If they still cannot distinguish between the CCP and China, and see the relationship between countries and China as the relationship with the CCP regime, then the so-called both confrontation and cooperation, no matter how they take the right measure, are setting obstacles for themselves, and I am afraid that no matter what policies they formulate towards China, they will hardly succeed.
In the past decades of engagement policy, the Chinese Communist regime has not been changed, but rather bred to intensify its mischief to the Chinese people and the world. Nowadays, the so-called both confrontation and cooperation are naively thought to be able to change the CCP regime?
Why is the top echelon of the Chinese Communist Party afraid of the Trump Administration? Not just fear of sanctions, but fear of not being recognized by the U.S. government and fear of the Trump team’s repeated distinction between the CCP and the Chinese people. The U.S. State Department’s visa restrictions on Communist Party members have sent most Chinese running for the hills. Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said he wants to help the Chinese people overcome the Communist regime and has called on all countries in the world to take responsibility. This is the right way to “build a better world.
If the U.S. continues to endorse the Chinese Communist regime, no amount of tough confrontation or sincere cooperation will change the nature of the Chinese Communist regime, which is fostering the greatest enemy of the free world.
The example of former U.S. President Reagan’s success in the Cold War proves that the U.S. needs a winning strategy, not just a strategy to cope with the Cold War. The United States needs to fundamentally defeat its enemies in order to finally eliminate the threat, and all the problems will be solved, which is the mission that God expects the United States to undertake. The disintegration of the former Soviet Union was a historical inevitability, as was the disintegration of the Chinese Communist Party, and the best choice was to follow the historical trend.
If the United States lacks accurate positioning and strategy, it will precisely be trapped by itself and will also pay a greater price. Xi Jinping is very high-profile with Biden, but is just continuing to play for leverage. While the CCP has repeatedly emphasized the internal cycle, it does not actually expect the U.S.-China relationship to return to what it was before Trump took office. While the CCP is prepared to be both confrontational and cooperative, the United States has yet to shape its strategy.
In the face of the military coup in Burma, the Biden administration immediately took a clear stance of not recognizing it and supporting the democratically elected government, but in the face of the Chinese Communist Party, which also violently seized power and has relied on the SS to maintain power, the Biden administration has yet to clearly position itself. How can freedom, democracy and human rights be truly reflected?
Biden’s so-called strategic patience is tantamount to admitting that it is currently unable to make sense of the situation, precisely because it does not thoroughly recognize the nature of the CCP, or rather, it still lacks the courage to remove the greatest evil force. Biden’s current stance will not make the Chinese Communist regime abandon its hostile hatred and automatically become a so-called “competitor.
The key to successful U.S.-China relations is to clearly distinguish between the CCP and the Chinese people, and to clearly demonstrate that the CCP regime does not represent the Chinese people.
To confront is to fully confront the Chinese Communist regime; to cooperate is to fully cooperate with the Chinese people. Therefore, it becomes inevitable to disassociate from the Chinese Communist regime, to firmly abandon it, and to dismantle it. This is the way to win the U.S.-China relationship, and it is also the straight path to a win-win situation for both the U.S. and China, so that we can “build a better world” together.
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