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Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
4 years ago

What else would you expect from the FT? I saw through it many years ago. It is a vile, globalist entity that exists to serve the EUrocrats, big finance and so many of the other malign actors that scar this world.

Mark Corby
Mark Corby
4 years ago

A splendid exposure of both the sainted FT and Rachman.(presumably no relation to Peter?).
In fact one would be forgiven for thinking that Gideon Rachman was a fully paid up Apparatachik of the CCP.
The sadness is, that so many frankly feeble US Presidents have simply avoided the China problem. So much so, that if it comes to war, whilst the CONUS will remain inviolate, the ‘theatre allies’, Taiwan,Japan, S Korea etc will be devastated.
It should never have come this.

Ralph Windsor
Ralph Windsor
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark Corby

The supreme art of war is to subdue your enemy without fighting (Sun Tzu)

Mark Corby
Mark Corby
4 years ago
Reply to  Ralph Windsor

That will be very difficult this time,I fear.

Howard Medwell
Howard Medwell
4 years ago

some sense in this article, but I didn’t like the use of the word “totalitarian”. Obviously, the PRC is a vile tyranny. However many commentators use the word “totalitarian” as a subliminal suggestion that the PRC is in some way socialist. It is not, and never has been. The PRC is a capitalist economy which is administered by a political system which can only be described as a bureaucratic dictatorship. In its early years, its government frequently suppressed private businesses in the interest of greater centralised state control, but this has nothing to do with socialism. Yes, this is a bit complicated, but the use of ambiguous terms like “totalitarian” over-simplifies the discussion.

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
4 years ago

S/he who pays the piper picks the tune. The FT like most other papers is a commercial operation and its articles will reflect the interests and prejudices of readers, advertisers and owners. Its readership consists largely of the people that have transferred industry to China and left us dependent on the fascist state for basic medicines and PPE.

The FT has also been notoriously uncritical of Saudi Arabia. The US has the Wall Street Journal and so readership of the FT is lower than in Europe and Asia.

conall boyle
conall boyle
4 years ago

Squirm! Squirm! Squirm! Unherd is having a tough time ‘proving’ that China is evil. Hence wet-dishcloth hit pieces like this.

As for US military presence by invitation: Didn’t the US go ballistic, literally, when Cuba invited in the Russians to defend them? Sauce for the goose etc….

conall boyle
conall boyle
4 years ago

Still censoring hostile comments? What a bunch of snowflakes!

Martin Davis
Martin Davis
4 years ago

China has many reasons to be at loggerheads with the US. The latter’s parking of tanks on the former’s lawn dates from the late 19th Century, when it was in the company of European powers doing the same. The Far East position of those powers collapsed in the Second World War, that of the US expanded. ‘Invitation’ is a somewhat pale expression of the hopeless position of defeated and/or occupied powers. Its determination to maintain this position was underlined by the amount of blood and gold expended in Vietnam. The US’s presence in East Asia is thus part of its post war hegemonic role, now in retreat. China’s return to a simulacrum of Imperial behaviour is predictable. Does that mean we are fated to continue to adhere to a bifurcated view of international affairs?

David George
David George
4 years ago
Reply to  Martin Davis

The use of “invitation” of the US into Asia is fully appropriate, Japan and Taiwan in particular have much to fear from an expansionist China. The Asian countries bordering the South China Sea and those being threatened and subjugated with China’s predatory debt and overt (and covert) financial and political and military pressure are deeply concerned.
Japan, The Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Sri Lanka as well as the Island nations of the South Pacific are seriously vulnerable without a counter to a rampant imperialist China.
Their fears are a perfectly reasonable reaction to the situation they are confronted with now. The 19th century and the second world war have nothing to do with it.

Nigel Clarke
Nigel Clarke
4 years ago
Reply to  Martin Davis

Ah, a bit of history…but perhaps you need to look at ALL the history, and not just pick out those bits that concur with your assertions.
Like the bit about China becoming a communist state, developing a nuclear capability, starving 40 million people etc…If I was Taiwan, Japan or South Korea I think I would be inviting anyone who would help to prevent Chinese expansionist plans that include being annexed and coming under Chinese rule. See Hong Kong for recent developments in Chinese expansionism….