Do as We Say, Not as We Do

Commentary“Do as we say, not as we do” is clearly the attitude of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). In his recent media appearance, the new Chinese ambassador to Australia, Xiao Qian, instructed us that obtaining nuclear powered submarines pursuant to the AUKUS agreement would not be constructive. It would not be helpful, he added, saying that it would set a bad example. Reading these remarks would lead the uninformed to conclude that the CCP was actively discouraging nuclear-powered military equipment.  But the restrictions that it wants applied to Australia are totally breached by the Chinese regime itself. Consider the use of nuclear power by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) navy. Of its 56 submarines, 12 are nuclear powered, and more are being built. Its navy is being expanded at a fast rate. Not only are its submarines nuclear powered, six of them carry intercontinental nuclear missiles. It also has some 400 nuclear warheads, a number expected to increase to about 1,500 in coming years. Vast nuclear silos have been constructed in the west of the country. Yet the CCP has the gall to instruct Australia not to acquire nuclear-powered submarines! China’s DF-41 nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missiles are seen during a military parade at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, on Oct. 1, 2019. (Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images) As the former director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, Peter Jennings, wrote recently: “Beijing hates AUKUS because it complicates its plan to dominate the Indo-Pacific. U.S. undersea technology has an edge the PLA has not blunted. The biggest risk to Chinese maritime power is American and allied maritime power.” Jennings is correct. The commentators who believe China has changed because it has also hinted at dropping trade bans or has moved some of its “wolf warrior” spokesmen to new roles misunderstand that the CCP is playing a long game. Suggestions of a new economic nirvana are naive. At Its Core, CCP Remains Rotten Currently, the CCP is playing the “good cop, bad cop” roles. “Be nice, and we will restore some trade”, which, by the way, was capriciously banned. “But don’t step out of line by challenging our global ambitions.” The vision of the ambassador toying with a glass of Australian red wine reinforced the message: “Be good, and we will take your wine and lobsters again.” However, China will import Australia’s mineral resources when it needs them. “We have to abandon the Cold War mentality, try to understand the nature of things from the perspective of material duality, endeavour to build a community with a shared future for mankind, and join hands to respond to global challenges,” China’s Vice Premier Liu He told the World Economic Forum on Jan. 17. “We believe that an equitable international economic order must be preserved by all.” He added that Beijing opposed unilateralism and protectionism. Yet Chinese Leader Xi Jinping proclaims that totalitarian rule is superior to liberal democracy and will replace it globally. The CCP’s current ire is directed at Japan. Its international mouthpiece, the Global Times, recently warned that: “Japan risks turning itself into ‘Ukraine of Asia’ if it follows U.S.’s strategic line.” “The U.S. and Japan will continue to tread on China’s red line to provoke the Chinese mainland to use force first,” continued the editorial. The article quoted Lian Degui, director of the Department of Japanese Studies at the Shanghai International Studies University: “They want to put China in a dilemma where it has to use force, then shift responsibility to the Chinese mainland and blame it for launching a war.” This false narrative has to be challenged. It is the Chinese PLA navy that is harassing Japanese vessels in the East China Sea. It was the Chinese that fired missiles over Taiwan into Japanese waters. Taiwanese air force pilots run pass an armed U.S.-made F-16V fighter jet at an air force base in Chiayi, a city in southern Taiwan, on Jan. 5, 2022. (Sam Yeh/AFP via Getty Images) The current Australian government should recall that Beijing initially welcomed new prime ministers only to subsequently condemn them for defending Australia’s interests or asserting international norms. Bob Hawke’s condemnation of the Tiananmen Square carnage ended the then-Chinese bromance. Kevin Rudd’s reference to human rights at Peking University began the more recent estrangement. It continued under subsequent Liberal prime ministers. Scott Morrison was binned for asking for an independent investigation of the origins of COVID. The CCP may be changing its tactics, but its long-term strategy remains the same. Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. The Hon. Kevin Andrews served in the Australian Parliament from 1991 to 2022 and held various cabinet posts, including Minister for Defence.

Do as We Say, Not as We Do

Commentary

“Do as we say, not as we do” is clearly the attitude of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). In his recent media appearance, the new Chinese ambassador to Australia, Xiao Qian, instructed us that obtaining nuclear powered submarines pursuant to the AUKUS agreement would not be constructive. It would not be helpful, he added, saying that it would set a bad example.

Reading these remarks would lead the uninformed to conclude that the CCP was actively discouraging nuclear-powered military equipment.  But the restrictions that it wants applied to Australia are totally breached by the Chinese regime itself.

Consider the use of nuclear power by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) navy. Of its 56 submarines, 12 are nuclear powered, and more are being built. Its navy is being expanded at a fast rate. Not only are its submarines nuclear powered, six of them carry intercontinental nuclear missiles.

It also has some 400 nuclear warheads, a number expected to increase to about 1,500 in coming years. Vast nuclear silos have been constructed in the west of the country.

Yet the CCP has the gall to instruct Australia not to acquire nuclear-powered submarines!

Epoch Times Photo
China’s DF-41 nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missiles are seen during a military parade at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, on Oct. 1, 2019. (Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images)

As the former director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, Peter Jennings, wrote recently: “Beijing hates AUKUS because it complicates its plan to dominate the Indo-Pacific. U.S. undersea technology has an edge the PLA has not blunted. The biggest risk to Chinese maritime power is American and allied maritime power.”

Jennings is correct. The commentators who believe China has changed because it has also hinted at dropping trade bans or has moved some of its “wolf warrior” spokesmen to new roles misunderstand that the CCP is playing a long game. Suggestions of a new economic nirvana are naive.

At Its Core, CCP Remains Rotten

Currently, the CCP is playing the “good cop, bad cop” roles. “Be nice, and we will restore some trade”, which, by the way, was capriciously banned. “But don’t step out of line by challenging our global ambitions.”

The vision of the ambassador toying with a glass of Australian red wine reinforced the message: “Be good, and we will take your wine and lobsters again.”

However, China will import Australia’s mineral resources when it needs them.

“We have to abandon the Cold War mentality, try to understand the nature of things from the perspective of material duality, endeavour to build a community with a shared future for mankind, and join hands to respond to global challenges,” China’s Vice Premier Liu He told the World Economic Forum on Jan. 17. “We believe that an equitable international economic order must be preserved by all.”

He added that Beijing opposed unilateralism and protectionism. Yet Chinese Leader Xi Jinping proclaims that totalitarian rule is superior to liberal democracy and will replace it globally.

The CCP’s current ire is directed at Japan. Its international mouthpiece, the Global Times, recently warned that: “Japan risks turning itself into ‘Ukraine of Asia’ if it follows U.S.’s strategic line.”

“The U.S. and Japan will continue to tread on China’s red line to provoke the Chinese mainland to use force first,” continued the editorial.

The article quoted Lian Degui, director of the Department of Japanese Studies at the Shanghai International Studies University: “They want to put China in a dilemma where it has to use force, then shift responsibility to the Chinese mainland and blame it for launching a war.”

This false narrative has to be challenged. It is the Chinese PLA navy that is harassing Japanese vessels in the East China Sea. It was the Chinese that fired missiles over Taiwan into Japanese waters.

Epoch Times Photo
Taiwanese air force pilots run pass an armed U.S.-made F-16V fighter jet at an air force base in Chiayi, a city in southern Taiwan, on Jan. 5, 2022. (Sam Yeh/AFP via Getty Images)

The current Australian government should recall that Beijing initially welcomed new prime ministers only to subsequently condemn them for defending Australia’s interests or asserting international norms.

Bob Hawke’s condemnation of the Tiananmen Square carnage ended the then-Chinese bromance. Kevin Rudd’s reference to human rights at Peking University began the more recent estrangement. It continued under subsequent Liberal prime ministers.

Scott Morrison was binned for asking for an independent investigation of the origins of COVID.

The CCP may be changing its tactics, but its long-term strategy remains the same.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

The Hon. Kevin Andrews served in the Australian Parliament from 1991 to 2022 and held various cabinet posts, including Minister for Defence.