The Wall Street Journal - USA (2020-11-16)

(Antfer) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, November 16, 2020 |A


Beijing Never


Got the Memo


The China Nightmare
By Dan Blumenthal
(American Enterprise Institute, 167 pages, $30)

BOOKSHELF| By John Bolton


W


ith Joe Biden’s election now declared by the press,
albeit still unacknowledged by Donald Trump, it is
appropriate to consider what policies his administration
will pursue starting Jan. 20. Any new president’s national-
security policy would be more coherent, consistent and
sustained than Mr. Trump’s. The risk with Mr. Biden is not that
his policy will be chaotic, but that it will be badly misguided.
One thing is certain: China is the most significant inter-
national threat that America—and the global West generally—
now faces. And that will be true for the rest of this century.
Mr. Biden’s real views on dealing with China are obscure,
more collateral damage from an election campaign that rarely
debated foreign and defense policy in any substantive way.
Much remains to be seen, especially in light of China’s
responsibility for worsening the coronavirus pandemic by its
concealment and disinformation. Beijing’s disingenuousness
has worsened U.S. public opinion about China, a shift echoed
world-wide, potentially far more negatively than the adverse
reactions to the 1989 Tianan-
men Square repression.
Dan Blumenthal of the
American Enterprise Institute
has stepped into this void with
“The China Nightmare: The
Grand Ambitions of a Decaying
State.” Serious practitioners
and students of U.S.-China
relations will need to reckon
with his analysis.
Mr. Blumenthal’s approach
will catch many by surprise.
He says plainly that “China has
taken advantage of American
complacency.” He rejects the
conventional thinking that China’s
domestic economy is still moving from strength to strength,
thereby providing Chinese president Xi Jinping and the
Communist Party with the wherewithal to insist on China’s
centrality in Asia and to challenge the U.S. globally. Indeed,
it is key to Mr. Blumenthal’s “China nightmare” thesis that
Mr. Xi’s domestic policies (and those of his immediate prede-
cessor, Hu Jintao) have rolled back many of the dramatic,
market-oriented reforms of the Deng Xiaoping era in favor of
increased state control. The Xi regime is impairing China’s
economic growth (and any prospect for an innovation-based
economy) and laying the basis for failure internationally.
Mr. Blumenthal writes that the main thesis of his book “is
that despite (or perhaps because of) China’s growing internal
weaknesses, it is pushing forward grand strategic ambitions.”
China is not the juggernaut of Wall Street financiers’ imagi-
nations, but that doesn’t make its expansionism less a threat.
Mr. Blumenthal challenges received wisdom in other ways.
Contrary to the prevailing mantra of China’s “peaceful rise,”
his analysis stresses that Mao Zedong and his successors
repeatedly used military force against their geographical
neighbors. They are doing it today, from the East and South
China Seas to the “line of actual control” on the disputed
frontier with India.
Domestically, the Xi regime is, among other things,
engaging in armed repression against ethnic minorities like
Tibetans and Uighurs; crushing dissent in Hong Kong (and
thereby violating the “handover” agreement with the U.K.);
and initiating a “social credit” system so the state can rank
all Chinese citizens in every aspect of their lives, from
jaywalking to dissent. China faces “insurmountable social
problems,” Mr. Blumenthal writes. But “a weaker China...
does not necessarily mean a risk-averse China.”
While China’s theft of intellectual property is a huge
problem for the U.S., Mr. Blumenthal argues further, we
cannot ignore the reality that America and Japan purposely
transferred considerable scientific and technological
knowhow to China. When we assign responsibility for the
consequences of this catastrophic error, we need not look far.

Beijing apparently never received the memo that the age
of empire is over. The Chinese Communists have focused on
fully restoring the Qing empire’s boundaries, and no lacuna
in achieving that goal is more painful than Taiwan’s de facto
independence. In resolutely Orwellian fashion, China has
insisted so fiercely on its distorted interpretation of the 1972
Shanghai Communiqué’s “one China” language that even
Americans now unwittingly accept China’s version. That suits
Beijing; it doubtless hopes Mr. Biden’s team will find those
pesky Taiwanese as much a nuisance as did Jimmy Carter,
for thwarting what Mr. Blumenthal calls China’s “main
strategic-military priority since the end of the Cold War.”
Taiwan’s example of freedom and openness, Mr. Blumenthal
contends, is enormously disruptive on the mainland. The
U.S. could put the Communist Party in a vise by using
information statecraft and other forms of political warfare.
China has for years been waging political warfare against us,
so it is well past time to implement a counterstrategy. In
cyberspace, America is doing precisely that, forestalling or
retaliating against efforts to influence our domestic political
discourse, thus building deterrence to prevent such attacks
in the future.
While a true grand strategy toward China is urgently
needed, Beijing’s obsession with Taipei provides Washington
an asymmetric response to objectionable Chinese behavior.
We can answer its belligerence and intransigence through
diplomatic or political means, wounding the Chinese
Communists deeply, and simultaneously bolstering Taiwan.
The most consequential step, one I have urged for over
20 years, is for America to grant Taiwan full diplomatic
recognition. By all customary international law criteria (a
defined territory and population, a capital city, and a
government carrying out normal governmental functions),
Taiwan is a sovereign state, and democratic to boot. Rela-
tions between the U.S. and China would chill dramatically,
but that is what China should fear, not America. There are
smaller steps Washington could take. We could, for example,
regularly receive Taiwanese officials in U.S. government
buildings, which would seriously undermine the legitimacy
of China’s campaign to force Taiwan into a morganatic union.
Our relations with Beijing will not get easier over the
next four years. Mr. Blumenthal has done the Biden adminis-
tration a favor with “The China Nightmare.” Let’s hope the
president-elect takes advantage of it.

Mr. Bolton, a former U.S. ambassador to the U.N., served as
national security adviser from April 2018 to September 2019.

China is not the juggernaut of Wall Street
financiers’ imaginations, but that doesn’t
make its expansionism any less of a threat.

When Nixon Taped Joe Biden


J


oe Biden can be heard on
the Nixon tapes. President
Nixon called Mr. Biden on
Tuesday, Dec. 19, 1972. The
president had returned from
Camp David, where he had
been planning an ambitious
second-term government reor-
ganization. Delaware’s Sen.-
elect Biden had narrowly de-
feated a popular incumbent
and Nixon ally, Caleb Boggs, 13
days before his 30th birthday.
He became the second-youn-
gest person ever elected to the
Senate.
Nixon—who won Delaware
by more than 20 points in his
49-state landslide—took note of
this rising star, who had flipped
a GOP Senate seat. “If I had
gone to Delaware, it wouldn’t
have changed one iota,” Nixon
said to Chuck Colson about
Boggs’s defeat. “He just had a
damn good young candidate
running against him.”
On Dec. 19, Nixon saw in his
morning news summary that


Mr. Biden’s wife, Neilia, and 1-
year-old daughter, Naomi, had
been killed in a car accident the
day before in Delaware. Their
sons, 3-year-old Beau and 2-
year-old Hunter, survived the
crash with severe injuries.
Nixon, who as a child lost two
siblings to tuberculosis, wanted

to call. “Could you get the new
senator from Delaware, Mr. Bi-
den, on the phone please?” he
asked the White House switch-
board operator.
Nixon and Mr. Biden were
both from hardscrabble fami-
lies. They had irascible fathers
who taught them how to pick
themselves up after a defeat.
Both were self-conscious that
they didn’t attend the best

schools. They had an interest in
foreign affairs. Like Nixon, Mr.
Biden later served as vice pres-
ident under a more charismatic
president. They were never
part of the in-crowd; that drove
them to work harder.
News of the crash momen-
tarily stopped political talk in
the Oval Office. “He wasn’t in
the car?” Nixon asked. “No,
sir,” one aide, Ken Cole, said,
“He was up on the Hill.”
It was a moment that
brought two men together who
might otherwise never have
connected in a personal way.
“Hello, Mr. President, how are
you?” Mr. Biden answered.
Even senators don’t forget
their first phone call from a
president. “Senator, I know
this is a very tragic day for
you,” Nixon said, seemingly
searching for words, “but I
wanted you to know that all of
us here at the White House
were thinking about you, and
praying for you and also for
your two children.”
“I appreciate that very

much,” Mr. Biden responded.
Nixon, about the same age as
the senator-elect’s father,
urged him to pick himself up
after the greatest setback of
his life. “You have the great
fortune of being young,” Nixon
said. “I remember I was two
years older than you when I
went to the House. But the
main point is you can remem-
ber that she was there when
you won a great victory, and
you enjoyed it together. And
now I’m sure that she’ll be
watching you from now on.
Good luck to you.”
Nixon, who recognized Don-
ald Trump’s potential in 1987,
saw Mr. Biden’s 15 years ear-
lier. “I appreciate it very much,
Mr. President,” Mr. Biden re-
sponded. “I appreciate your
call. I appreciate it.”

Mr. Nichter is a professor of
history at Texas A&M Univer-
sity—Central Texas and author
of “The Last Brahmin: Henry
Cabot Lodge Jr. and the Mak-
ing of the Cold War.”

By Luke A. Nichter


In 1972, the president
called the senator-
elect ‘a damn good
young candidate.’

OPINION


Apple is mak-
ing its first
Mac comput-
ers since 2005
without an In-
tel micropro-
cessor. In-
stead, the
company an-
nounced last
week, Macs
will use Ap-
ple’s own M1 processor, fabri-
cated by TSMC, the Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing
Co. Hey, nothing personal, In-
tel—by now the whole indus-
try knows you botched your
transition to sub-10-nanometer
chips and are still behind. But
this has implications way be-
yond computing.
If Intel is a few years be-
hind, China’s lag may be closer
to a decade. In conjunction
with formulating its 14th Five
Year Plan, Beijing put out an
official communiqué (I love
that word!) previewing its
“protracted battle” with the
U.S. and stated, “Technology
self-reliance is the strategic
support for national develop-
ment.” What’s scary is that
China may have to draw this
battle line right through Tai-
wan, where Apple gets its pro-
cessors. We now see headlines
like this in the Asia Times: “US
tech giants exposed if China
takes Taiwan.” Ya think? Let’s
break this down.
To begin, note that last year
China produced only 16% of
the semiconductors it con-
sumed domestically. In 2014,
China announced a National
Integrated Circuit Plan promis-
ing to spend $150 billion to ex-
pand local semiconductor


China Is Losing Its Bet on Chips


manufacturing. It didn’t work
because you can’t throw
money at the problem. The
world is littered with compa-
nies (AT&T, General Motors)
and countries (France, Italy,
Russia) that failed at semicon-
ductor production. It takes
state-of-the-art equipment and
homegrown expertise.
Second, to produce wicked-
fast chips for smartphones, 5G
and certainly the latest preci-
sion weapons, you need fabri-
cation facilities, or fabs, that
can turn out 7- or even 5-nano-
meter chips, which isn’t easy
to do. According to Mike
Brown, director of the Penta-
gon’s Defense Innovation Unit,
“50% of advance semiconduc-
tor production is in Taiwan.”
The rest is in the U.S., South
Korea and Israel.
Third, the Trump adminis-
tration cut off China’s Huawei
from buying advanced chips
made by TSMC. Except for In-
tel and Samsung, most every-
one uses TSMC, including U.S.
companies Nvidia and Ad-
vanced Micro Devices.
Fourth, for about five years,
Intel has been stuck at 14-
nanometer chips. This gets
confusing: I spent most of my
early career tracking the chip
business, and I still get head-
aches digging into their guts.
What Intel calls 14 nanome-
ters, TSMC calls 10 nanome-
ters. To get to sub-10, you need
to use photolithography with
extreme ultraviolet light, or
EUV, to etch tiny lines onto
chips. Intel has said it won’t
start producing 10-nanometer
chips (the equivalent of
TMSC’s 7 nanometers) until
late 2021. Intel may even buy

chips from TSMC!
Fifth, China has many
partly state-owned semicon-
ductor companies, like the
Semiconductor Manufacturing
International Corp., or SMIC,
but none have caught up to
TSMC because of another four
letters, ASML. This is the
Dutch equipment company
that makes the only EUV pho-
tolithography machines. This
from ASML: “EUV lithography
uses light with a wavelength of

just 13.5 nanometers (nearly x-
ray level), a reduction of al-
most 14 times that of the other
enabling lithography solution
in advanced chipmaking, DUV
(deep ultraviolet) lithography,
which uses 193-nanometer
light.” Oh, and ASML is not al-
lowed to sell to China for de-
fense reasons. So for now,
China is locked out of sub-10-
nanometer technology. Sure, it
could invent its own EUV, but
that might take a decade.
Finally, geopolitics steps in
with a lot of what-ifs. If
China’s self-reliance initiative
fails, and a Biden administra-
tion continues an advanced
chip embargo—which it
should—China would be in a
bind, much as the 1941 oil em-
bargo of Japan may have
forced its hand. China’s mili-
tary, in an arms race with the
U.S., has to be nervous about

being locked out of sub-10-
nanometer chips. Beijing is
likely gaming out the costs and
benefits of bringing Taiwan’s
capacity under its control,
even as the U.S. weighs de-
fending it: TSMC has five fabs
on a single campus, Hsinchu
Science Park.
But even that bold step
would likely fail almost right
away. Unlike an assembly line
or an oil refinery, making chips
is fickle. The formula might be
written down but is really in
the head of TSMC’s engineers
and is tweaked almost daily. A
Silicon Valley engineer once
accidentally spilled ink into a
fab’s water supply—and output
yields went up! A forced Tai-
wan takeover would crater
output even if China brought
in mainland engineers. It’s
more art than science.
After a forced takeover, the
next plausible fear is a few
well-placed Chinese missiles
taking out half of the world’s
advanced chip production, and
of course a big chunk of the
global economy. But the shock
waves from that move would
damage China’s economy even
more than the pandemic did.
Still, I hope TSMC factories
are guarded by banks of Pa-
triot missiles. I’d put some of
those around ASML’s Dutch fa-
cilities too.
It may take a few years, but
Intel will catch up. China may
too. Meanwhile, it’s smart to
diversify where advanced
chips are made. The Trump
administration got TSMC to
agree to build a fab in Arizona,
spending $12 billion by 2029.
That’s a start.
Write to [email protected].

An attack on Taiwan,
the top manufacturer,
would roil industry
and the world.

INSIDE
VIEW
By Andy
Kessler


When U.S. rat-
ification of
President
Trump’s re-
formulated
North Ameri-
can Free
Trade Agree-
ment was still
in doubt, Mex-
ican President
Andrés Ma-
nuel López Obrador put in a
good word for it.
In November 2019 he
boasted that he had sent a let-
ter to House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi explaining that approval
of the United-States-Mexico-
Canada Agreement was “in the
interest of the three peoples,
the three nations.”
The U.S. Congress ratified
the agreement in December
and it went into effect in July.
But now AMLO—as the Mexi-
can president is known—wants
to treat the USMCA like a buf-
fet, taking for Mexico what he
likes but having none of what
he doesn’t.
What he likes, he said last
week, is that investors now
flock to Mexico because “the
North American market is as-
sured” and “this means jobs
and well-being.” This was a
reference to the hundreds of
billions of dollars in manufac-
turing exports and agriculture
that now flow north from Mex-
ico, duty-free, every year.
But in the same remarks
AMLO repeated his belief that
the agreement doesn’t require
an open Mexican energy mar-
ket because Mexico retains its
“exclusive domain” over its re-
sources.


Mexico’s Assault on Energy Investors


That’s not how energy in-
vestors read the USMCA, and
they’ve begun to push back
against AMLO’s economic na-
tionalism. In an Oct. 22 letter
to Mr. Trump, more than 40
members of the Congress from
both sides of the aisle com-
plained that actions taken by
AMLO’s government “threaten
U.S. energy companies’ invest-
ment and market access and
undermine the spirit” of the
USMCA. A storm is brewing.
Mexico’s 2014 constitutional
reform opened the country’s
electricity and oil-and-gas
markets to nonstate inves-
tors—foreign and domestic.
Since then private capital has
flowed into oil exploration,
gasoline and electricity.
But open markets conflict
with AMLO’s goal of reviving
state-owned oil company
Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex)
and the national electricity
company, CFE. Neither enter-
prise is up to the challenge of
competition and both are short
on capital.
So to help his national
champions, the Mexican presi-
dent has spent the past two
years putting his thumb on the
scales in favor of the behe-
moth state energy companies.
This includes everything from
slow-walking permits for gaso-
line stations and refusing non-
discriminatory access to infra-
structure to blocking the
startup of new power stations
and suspending auctions and
development on oil and gas
fields.
Pemex and CFE continue to
flounder. Bloomberg has re-
ported that in the first 21

months of AMLO’s presidency,
Pemex gave up some 13% of
Mexico’s gasoline market to
private concerns, adding that
“at the end of August, private
companies were supplying
about 17.5% of total gasoline
volumes” and “approximately
27% of diesel.” In response, the
government has begun to
move more aggressively in
support of its darlings.

In June Mexico’s competi-
tion commission—an indepen-
dent regulatory body—went to
the Supreme Court, alleging
that a new federal electricity
policy announced in May is an-
ticompetitive because it doesn’t
treat CFE’s rivals equally, and
that it oversteps executive au-
thority. A high-court stay has
been upheld on appeal, pending
a ruling on the policy.
This is a rare, and likely
temporary, setback for Mr. Ló-
pez Obrador, who has success-
fully purged most independent
institutions and packed them
with loyalists. He now controls
the energy regulator and the
hydrocarbon commission. He
successfully got rid of one
member of the Supreme Court,
which no longer enjoys the
prestige of independence. The
competition commission re-
mains independent, but it’s an
outlier.

On June 22 Mr. López Obra-
dor reportedly met with some
two dozen regulators and offi-
cials to present a 17-point plan
for saving Pemex and CFE, in-
cluding a proposal to end new
permitting for competitors.
The document has since been
leaked. AMLO has also said
publicly that he is ready to
change the constitution to pro-
tect state control of energy.
This implies a rollback of
Mexico’s 2014 energy reform.
By demagoguing economic lib-
erals, he may win popular sup-
port for it. But an effort to
protect state companies at the
expense of private investors
would likely contravene Mex-
ico’s USMCA commitments.
The agreement recognizes
Mexico as the sole owner of its
natural resources. But in mat-
ters related to state-owned en-
terprises, it says Mexico’s laws
must remain consistent with
obligations it has under al-
ready-ratified free-trade
agreements. This is a reference
to Mexico’s membership in the
Trans-Pacific Partnership,
which commits signatories to
an open market in energy, non-
discrimination in trade and in-
vestment, and the prohibition
of indirect expropriations. The
investor-state dispute-settle-
ment provisions in energy,
telecom and infrastructure in
Mexico that were in Nafta are
retained in the USMCA.
The upshot is that if AMLO
wants Mexico’s duty-free ac-
cess to the U.S. and Canada to
remain intact, energy competi-
tion will have to become part
of his vocabulary.
Write to O’[email protected].

AMLO tries to treat
the North American
trade pact like a
smorgasbord.

AMERICAS
By Mary
Anastasia
O’Grady

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