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From: "M.A. Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <Recipient list suppressed>
Subject: On Making Reality Conform to Preconceptions
Date: Wednesday, April 11, 2001 3:46 PM

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

The Old Cause
by Joseph R. Stromberg

China Syndrome
ON MAKING REALITY CONFORM TO PRECONCEPTIONS

The whole history of US-Chinese relations could be written as a history
of the delusions held by US policy makers and business interests about
China. What China actually was, or is, entered into matters very little,
aside from occasional US attempts at meddling and influencing the
course of events in China. Most of the latter ended in disarray and
confusion.

Sharp-eyed Yankee traders developed an interest in the fabled
China market already in the 18th century, even before we won
our independence from Britain. The notion of the China market
grew and grew throughout the 19th century. Missionaries did
a rough head count of the zillions upon zillions of Chinese and
saw enough potential converts to get all the missionaries into
heaven, bar none. Merchants considered that if every Chinaman
bought a pair of shoes, that would indeed be a lot of shoes.

Now, I am not here to make fun of missionaries and merchants.
If they wish to pay for their own efforts and take their own
chances, who could complain? It�s true that the missionaries
were instrumental in creating a number of sentimental illusions
about China and the Chinese which were of value, later, to
other people; that may be a problem of sorts. It is hard, however,
to separate this case from the common American habit of
fostering illusions about other countries, which � up against reality
� shatter, leaving policy makers and public intellectuals feeling
jilted and angry. It might have been better not to have had the
illusions in the first place. None of this mattered until politicians
and professors got into the act.

AN ASIATIC MODE OF PRODUCTION?

Coming down through the same 19th century, the Chinese
empire had its own problems. The clunky, Confucianist
bureaucratic regime ran up against population pressures
and foreign devils. The Opium War comes to mind, in
which Britain demanded that China say yes to drugs � that
was a simpler time � and acquired Hong Kong in the
unequal contest.

Internal strains on the regime somehow brought forth,
or allowed, at mid-century the T�ai-p�ing Rebellion in which
millions (six to twenty) of Chinese died. This, at a time
when we were impressed with the figure of 620,000
deaths (as well we might be) in the Late Unpleasantness
of 1861-1865. Covert aid from Western powers helped
sustain the imperial state. After all, the Western imperialists
needed some kind of regime in China to collaborate with
them, even if they did not wish it to be powerful enough
to resist their encroachments in the name of trade and
Christianity.

History rocks along in funny paths. In the course of sending
aid to the Chinese regime, French forces stopped off in
Indo-China (1858) long enough to lay the groundwork for their
very helpful colonial presence there. This was so helpful that
a lot of Americans of my generation were killed or maimed
dealing with some of the results. Not that we actually had to
be there, but once someone else has set up a hopeless mess,
how could we ask the United States not to make things worse?
C�est rire.

Anyway, although the Chinese imperial system survived
the shock of the T�ai-p�ing rebellion, China came under
increasing Western pressure. The Germans, the Brits, the
French, the Russians, and others could count, too, and
they all wanted to sell that same pair of shoes to every
Chinaman. They too had missionaries. The whole thing
became very competitive in a national-mercantilist and
imperialist sort of way.

In short order, Western powers helped themselves to exclusive
zones of trade and demanded extraterritorial status for their
nationals operating in China (the famous �Unequal Treaties�).
Reacting to Western intrusion, the Japanese ruling elite
repackaged and modernized the Japanese state, rose to
regional prominence, and began casting its eyes in the
direction of China as well. The famous Chinese "paranoia"
about which we have heard so much lately may have
something to do with this awkward period in Chinese
history.

ENTER THE AMERICANS....

The uncompromising German laissez faire liberal Eugen
Richter said of the Weltpolitik (world policy) of Wilhelm II
that it really meant "that one wishes to be present everywhere,
where something has gone wrong." This could well be the motto
of US foreign policy since 1898. I won�t rehearse things said
here before, except to say that important figures in the US
northeastern political, economic, and intellectual elite convinced
themselves by the late 1890s that an aggressive politically-backed
push into Asian markets was the sovereign remedy for all that
ailed American society. This became sloganized as the Open
Door policy and became an article of faith and an ideological
assumption of US policy makers despite the policy�s failure to
accomplish much in the actually-existing China.

Taking over the Philippine Islands from Spain, as a useful
forward position facing the fabled China market, the US policy
makers threw themselves into the thicket of competition for
economic and political advantage in China. The famous Open
Door Notes (1900, 1901) were one salvo, which did not, however,
have much immediate impact on the behavior of the European
powers with interests in China. The Americans said, in effect,
let us all compete fairly in all of China (wink, wink: we shall be
the strongest competitor and inherit the whole market).

Next, the US participated in the international military operations
to suppress the Box Rebellion. The �Boxers� were an anti-foreign
political movement, whose members attacked and killed
Westerners in their enclaves, possibly with the connivance
of the Empress Dowager, who was getting tired of the foreign
devils. Now it is understandable that once you�ve got yourself
entrenched on someone else�s real estate, you will defend your
lives and interests by force, but that does not alter the fact that
there was more than enough room for Chinese resentment at
the political capitalism of the foreign powers. This is a very
tricky area, indeed, and if we grant the practical right of the
Westerners to combine forces to defeat the Boxers, we should
soon have to defend some things done by Afrikaners in 19th
century South Africa (as I would indeed do), and then all
politically correct hell breaks loose, so let�s not go there in
any depth.

With utter cynicism and greed, the victorious Western
powers then imposed on China the most unequal treaty
of all, which included an overinflated indemnity to be paid
out of Chinese customs receipts in silver (the hard money
of the Far East), but not in a lump sum, of course, but
over a period of years so that the Western powers could
draw more interest. The various intrigues of American
railroad magnates helped provoke a reaction within China�s
narrow educated class, which broadly overlapped with the
bureaucracy itself, leading to the beginnings of the Chinese
Revolution (from 1912). With the overthrow of the dynasty,
ineffective republican rule soon gave way to equally
unsuccessfully central military rule, and then to breakup
into local warlord regimes based on the landlord class.
Meanwhile, the Europeans had taken up their First Global
Bloodbath (1914-1918) and weren�t so much on hand to
complicate things further. Woodrow Wilson even
volunteered his countrymen for the slaughter. A
generous man.

ANOTHER PERIOD OF CONTENDING STATES

Radical and republican forces coalesced in the Kuomintang
party (old spelling). The writ of the KMT did not run all that
far, and localized conflict between warlords continued. The
fledgeling communist movement sought to participate in the
KMT, but was brutally purged by Chiang Kai-shek. Thus
began the famous Long March.

The Soviet Union sought to intervene to influence the political
outcome in its big, populous (and therefore dangerous),
neighbor, but in the end tended to prefer dealing with Chiang,
as a pillar of stability. The Maoists were very resentful of this,
even after coming to power. Matters were further complicated
by Japanese attempts to annex Manchuria, first economically,
then politically from the early 1930s. The presence of US
gunboats well up the Chinese rivers suggests that US policy
makers had a stake as well.

The outbreak of war between the US and Japan in late 1941
added to Japanese overstretch. The KMT pretended to fight
the Japanese, absorbed large quantities of US aid and money,
and occasionally fought the communists. The communists
fought the Japanese and the KMT, while building up good
will with mild rule and hard money at a time when the KMT
landlord regime set off hyperinflation and looted and abused
everyone in its path. The urban business classes were driven
into the arms of the communists, hoping for a break as the
"national bourgeoisie" (Mao�s line about them at the time).
Anyone who thought Chiang was a friend of "free enterprise"
had not read his social-nationalist book.

In December 1949 the Maoists chased the KMT government
and army off the mainland. The KMT bureaucrats imposed
themselves on the Taiwanese people � in a near perfect
example of a conquest state. Granted, China had long
claimed Taiwan � and any Chinese government would claim
Taiwan, much as certain parties claim there can only be one
Ireland (I am not interested in the merits of such arguments,
here), but, truth to tell, the actually-existing Taiwanese people
were not consulted when the KMT arrived there.

COLD WAR FOLLIES

By now, the heroic and cosmic Cold War had come into
being. One legacy of the KMT, dating from the 1930s, was
the China Lobby. This army of American Congressmen,
publicists, and front men claimed sainthood for Chiang
and constantly pushed US foreign policy in the direction
of greater intervention in Asian affairs. Their story was
almost told in the early 1960s by Ross Y. Koen, but the
Lobby�s lingering influence suppressed his book, which
resurfaced in the 1970s during the Vietnam business.

There was also a sort of Maoist Lobby � much investigated
by Joe McCarthy � of academics and others partial to Mao
as an "agrarian reformer." Yes, Owen Lattimore was
undoubtedly a Marxist. Joe McCarthy was too right, but it
did not follow, logically or pragmatically, that anyone in the
US had actually "lost" China or that it had ever conceivably
been in the power of the US to prevent the Chinese Revolution
from running its course. To that extent, the famous (rather
defensive) State Department White Paper was correct. In
a complex world, Joe McCarthy and the State Department
can both be right, but not about the exact same things.

DOUGLAS MACARTHUR AND IMPERIAL OVERREACH

Cold War begat hot war in Korea. General MacArthur, exceeding
his orders, undertook to annex North Korea. This did not work
out well, and in the meantime, the usual sloppy and excessive
(even hysterical) use of US firepower right up to the Chinese
frontier made the Chinese Communist government anxious.
Now I doubt that communism, as such, completely explains
Chinese intervention in the Korean War. The Manchu Dynasty,
had it still existed, might have found the US posture, er, troubling.

US policy makers had never been happy about the Chinese
revolution. Relations froze in Cold War mode for two decades.
 From 1949 on, the new bureaucratic communist dynasty
undertook mass murders well surpassing those of Stalin and
Hitler, proceeded to destroy such economic life as China had,
and showed its East-Is-Red ultra-revolutionary face to the world.
The so-called Cultural Revolution rounded out the world-historically
colossal crimes of Mao and his friends and was, accordingly,
taken up as a great model of human liberation by China scholars
and trendy leftists throughout the West.

The left-wing China Lobby was in the ascendant, and with the
unpopular Vietnam War, the right-wing China Lobby was in
decline. In the end, Nixon, a politician immune to being
red-baited, "played the China card" in what began as a
cynical great-power maneuver against the Soviets. Trade
grew and we finally had our China market. The
"capitalist-roaders" stayed on course, unleashing immense
increases in productivity and prosperity.

CHINA FOR THE CHINESE?

One might think this was enough for a while. It might be
premature to demand that China do everything our way
on a set schedule. But modesty and self-restraint are not
hallmarks of the US empire in its late phase. To bring China
in line with present US cultural standards, we would first
have to finish the missionaries�s work, convert them all to
Protestantism, and then tell them it�s all been a mistake,
and they must now take up the cause of scientific
materialism and/or post-modern angst.

I don�t think we can export our unraveling culture to China.
Better stick with the shoes. The Chinese will, in all likelihood,
modernize Confucianism and be fairly happy with the results.

I have said nothing about the current �crisis� nor do I wish
to. The Chinese are said to be paranoid, inscrutable, and
some other things. Well, frankly, after their relations with
the West, they have their reasons. We�re not going to remould
them all with scholarships to Yale or Stanford. They are Chinese.
They are, in that respect, foreign. I think we should accept that,
or at least take it into account.

Here we speak of one of the most ancient and original of the
world civilizations. Its broad outlines were set long before
those of our civilization, even if ours rests in part on Near
Eastern foundations which predate Chinese civilization by a
thousand years. An ancient script with an enormous literature,
Confucian philosophy, and an indigenous approach to riverine
agriculture � China can draw on all these plus the energies
liberated by the transition to a market economy.

Does this mean that the Chinese state will often or always
behave well? No. But one might ask if the US state often or
always behaves well. There may be those who say �yes.�
To take on that claim would involve us in perhaps the
deepest of all layers of American delusion. Those who
are not open to the possibility that there is a US empire
and that empires do bad things, more often than not, are
the most unrealistic of all.

Should we be realistic about the Chinese state? Insofar as
it matters to us, yes. Should be realistic about the US state?
Even more so. After all, we share some territory with it, for
better or worse.



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