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Will China’s President Xi go too far?

<p>After nearly 40 years of slow reform in China&comma; it is indisputable that President Xi Jinping is taking the Middle Kingdom back to the days of the Cold War&period;  We may not be there yet&comma; but the chill is in the air&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Since the days when President Nixon sat in that over-stuffed armchair next to Chairman Mao&comma; China has evolved into a more open country – with a lot of free-market reforms&period;  Foreign business can now essentially own their enterprises without a mandatory Chinese partner&period;  Business profits are easier to take out of China&period;  Tourism – virtually nonexistent in the old day – is a booming part of the Chinese economy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Government oppression began to disappear like all those blue Mao uniforms universally worn by the people in the past&period; Internet access put the average Chinese citizen in personal communication with people throughout the world&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The progress was not perfect&period;  There was a long way to go to match western standards of freedom – but at least things were moving in the right direction&period;  That is until President Xi took over&period;  It would not be an inappropriate comparison to the situation with Russia and the rise of President Vladimir Putin&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Xi is as determined as he is affable&period;  He has done what no Chinese leader has done since Mao&period;  He has manipulated the laws and rules to make him a dictator with a lifetime appointment&period;  He did this in the good old fashion way&period;  He manipulated the loyalty of the powerful bureaucrats and military leaders&period;  That is what Putin did in Russia and what the Kim family has been successfully doing in North Korea for decades&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This does not mean that Xi is one hundred percent free of any threats to his power – but only that the odds are currently in his favor for a long reign&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Xi’s determination to be the international tough guy has been seen in his crackdown on the Internet&comma; his program to monitor the activities of more than 1&period;6 billion people through facial recognition and the policy of social grading&period;  Xi has made the cellphone a device that makes it almost impossible for citizens to function without it – and for Beijing to use it as a technological umbilical cord&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Xi has launched an aggressive influence program over Chinese nationals and ex-patriots in the United States&period;  He intimidates by threatening passports and family back home&period;  He has increased the recruitment and placement of spies in the United States – and other western nations&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>China’s unexpected tough stand on trade has prolonged a mutually damaging trade war – although Trump is likely to win that one eventually&period;  Unlike Maoist China&comma; the Xi foreign policy is attempting to extend economic hegemony over third-world nations in Asia&comma; Africa and South America&period;  Xi is not an isolationist&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Under Xi&comma; China has kicked off an arms race with the west unlike anything seen since the old Soviet&sol;American contest&period;  Xi uses his increasingly powerful military as a cover for expanding China control over the South China Sea – and has created artificial island military bases to press his claim&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Xi has now discarded the idea that Hong Kong would remain a quasi-independent province under a One China&sol;Two Systems policy&period;  In the face of increasing pro-democracy protests&comma; Xi has enacted a Hong Kong security act that will literally crush the freedoms Hong Kongers have enjoyed since the British returned the island to China in 1997&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Xi is a cautious despot&comma; but he may assume that military force can easily crush any resistance to his edict&period;  But there is a chance – and outside chance – that Xi may have gone a bit too far&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong was not the noisy rattling of a small minority&period;  It was … and is … a movement backed by the vast majority of the citizens&period;  In one march&comma; at least two million people took part&period;  That is approximately one-third of the entire population&period;  That would suggest that well over half of the population strongly oppose Beijing’s takeover&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>With those kinds of numbers&comma; you cannot count on the police and security forces to stay loyal to Beijing&period;  That is why Xi wants to send in his own military&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>With the deep feelings of the people of Hong Kong and the powerful determination of Xi&comma; there seem to be only two possible results in the near future&period;  Hong Kong freedom will be quickly crushed by brute and fatal force or a Hong Kong civil war will ensue&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>You can bet that the folks in Taiwan are paying very close attention&period;  And you can also bet that the recent deal for the U&period;S&period; to sell weapons to Taiwan is a direct response to Xi’s adventurism&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If Xi orders a bloody oppression of Hong Kong on top of China’s blame for the deadly Covid-19 pandemic&comma; the Chinese president may wind up being the pariah of the world&period;  Like many power-hungry dictators&comma; his unfettered ambitions may be his undoing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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