Monday, April 13, 2020

How China is losing the world’s trust following its cover-up of the coronavirus crisis

Ed.'s note: What we are really looking for is a possible destabilization of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Very unusual for SCMP, owned by Alibaba's Jack Ma, to run this article. It was probably written by a Chinese, maybe even a CCP-run journalist living in US from the looks of it. Let's put our money on political infighting within CCP in 2020. 2020: The year of a Soviet-style collapse happening inside the CCP.
________

Source: South China Morning Post

Beijing failed to go public with the true scale of the pandemic, hampering other nations' ability to respond in time

China's rise on the global stage was made possible by the goodwill of the rest of the world, and trust that had been hard earned should not be so easily squandered

By Chi Wang | 13 April 2020

Illustration: Craig Stephens

The lacklustre response of the Trump administration to the coronavirus pandemic and its failure to live up to the traditional US role during a global crisis has led some to wonder whether China can fill this void.

While the US may not be pleasing its allies by halting exports of protective equipment, China is not going to find it easy to step into the US' global leadership role. The breach of trust that China exhibited in concealing the onset of the pandemic will have far-reaching implications on its aspirations for global leadership.

China's closest allies and partners demonstrated their lack of faith in Beijing's ability to handle the virus early on by closing their borders and repatriating citizens – the measures that China criticised the United States for taking. North Korea – China's only ally in the formal sense of the term – sealed its borders in late January.

While Sino-Russia relations have been growing increasingly intimate under President Xi Jinping and his counterpart Vladimir Putin, Russia closed its direct borders with China in late January and suspended visa-free travel from China on February 2. Iran, a key strategic partner of China, stopped all flights between the two countries on January 31.

Pakistan, also a key partner of China's, did not repatriate its citizens, but this choice was motivated more by Pakistan's own public health deficiencies than faith in China's ability to handle the pandemic.


As the pandemic wore on, the narrative over the virus became focused on the decision of President Donald Trump and some of his officials to label the virus the "Chinese virus" or "Wuhan virus". While Washington and Beijing pointed fingers, China's partners became critical of the regime’s handling of the coronavirus crisis.

Britain, who only months earlier had angered the US by allowing Huawei to bid for the rights to build its 5G infrastructure, is now reportedly eyeing a "reckoning" with China. Boris Johnson, who as prime minister was ultimately responsible for the 5G decision, now lays in hospital with the coronavirus.

Please go to South China Morning Post to read the entire article.
________


Related:

Thousands of Media Workers Losing Their Jobs - China Buying Into US Tech Media

Fusion Centers and Surveillance Systems - US and Israel Sign a "Pact" - Feeding the BIRD - The Chinese Model

US and Japan Announce Their Firms to Relocate Out Of China - Has China Reached Parity?

Post-Coronavirus Reshuffle - Keeping Sensitive Technology Out of China - "Prepping For Military Struggle"





No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Looking into our circumstances...