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Will China's Government-Subsidized Technology Ultimately Export Authoritarianism? (nytimes.com) 126

For 30 years David E. Sanger has been covering foreign policy and nuclear proliferation for The New York Times — twice working on Pulitzer Prize-winning teams. But now as American and Chinese officials meet in Alaska, Sanger argues that China's power doesn't come from weapons — nuclear or otherwise: Instead, it arises from their expanding economic might and how they use their government-subsidized technology to wire nations be it Latin America or the Middle East, Africa or Eastern Europe, with 5G wireless networks intended to tie them ever closer to Beijing. It comes from the undersea cables they are spooling around the world so that those networks run on Chinese-owned circuits. Ultimately, it will come from how they use those networks to make other nations dependent on Chinese technology. Once that happens, the Chinese could export some of their authoritarianism by, for example, selling other nations facial recognition software that has enabled them to clamp down on dissent at home.

Which is why Jake Sullivan, Mr. Biden's national security adviser, who was with Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken for the meeting with their Chinese counterparts in Anchorage, warned in a series of writings in recent years that it could be a mistake to assume that China plans to prevail by directly taking on the United States military in the Pacific. "The central premises of this alternative approach would be that economic and technological power is fundamentally more important than traditional military power in establishing global leadership," he wrote, "and that a physical sphere of influence in East Asia is not a necessary precondition for sustaining such leadership...."

Part of the goal of the Alaska meeting was to convince the Chinese that the Biden administration is determined to compete with Beijing across the board to offer competitive technology, like semiconductor manufacturing and artificial intelligence, even if that means spending billions on government-led research and development projects, and new industrial partnerships with Europe, India, Japan and Australia... But it will take months, at best, to publish a broad new strategy, and it is unclear whether corporate America or major allies will get behind it.

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Will China's Government-Subsidized Technology Ultimately Export Authoritarianism?

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  • In the Cold War, the USSR and USA each sought to proselytize other countries to its political/economic systems.
    Now only the USA is still doing that. China couldn't care less whether or not Laos and Democratic Republic of the Congo have freedom of speech.

    • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @09:10PM (#61180880) Journal
      Perhaps in the short term. But in the long term, I don't agree with you. 'Free speech', democracy in general, is poison to a government like the Chinese government, and if anyone doens't believe that, all you have to do is look at how they treat their own citizens.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by dryeo ( 100693 )

        You can also look at how America treats its citizens, at least some, like the 2 million in prison or as your sig implies, the myriad ways of disenfranchising the wrong citizens. Then there was the lack of the usual peaceful transition of power after the last election.
        The difference is that America has learned that it is fine allowing people to bitch about things, so isn't so anti-freedom of expression, but that is also changing as the last 4 years showed where the President himself attacked speech continuou

        • It's a bingo!

          Politics in America is screwed and the disconnect we have sowed with our strongest allies has left us with no one who will stand with us. The classic words, "united we stand" have been completely ignored and here comes our fall from grace.

          This is the type of reasonable discussion that should be heavily covered in America to better reform our political approaches but the normal replies to this would be we are defending China. No, we are just outlining the poor footing America has left itself wit

          • Our allies are coming back now that Trump is gone because they're at least smart enough to see that Trump did NOT speak for the whole of the U.S.
            • Really? I have seen no evidence of this. Can you share? If anything they are learning the inconsistency of making deals or relationships with America considering our polarized political system where everything will change in 4 to 8 years.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @11:58PM (#61181106)

            It's really the shits with the way America acted the last 4 years. The only way to confront China is as a united front. If most of the world had been united in being willing to suffer a bit to make a point, would China have done what they did in Hong Kong knowing that there would have been consequences, even if only economic?
            Reading recently about the UK rejecting slavery in the early 1800's. It worked as the common person was willing to take an economic hit as they hated slavery. Dealing with China needs the same, the common person willing to forgo cheap shit to make a point.
            America also has to make sacrifices, like not pushing their shitty IP BS when ever we try to unite, unluckily the IP people have too much power as the American electoral system depends on money, every 2 years.

            • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

              About what, China catching up to the USA and UK in selling authoritarianism. How many authoritarian governments does the USA/UK support, ten, twenty, thirty, as long as the allow US/UK corporations to pillage that countries resources and people for a share of the action, no government is too authoritarian. So who supplies swords Saudi Arabia to chop of the heads of any one the criticises their insane monarchy, or bombs or machine guns, fighter jets missiles and authoritarian monitoring hardware and software

              • by dryeo ( 100693 )

                Mostly agree but,

                All the worst authoritarians the most corrupt and the most violent are under the control of the USA/UK alliance.

                should be many of the worst authoritarians are under the control of the US/UK alliance. Unluckily there are a lot of authoritarians to go around.

        • You can thank a Republican party that's so fucked up, got it's head so far up it's own ass, that it couldn't get a legitimate candidate to run against Hillary Clinton (which is an entirely different subject I am NOT getting into here!) so they latch on to a so-called 'populist', because they're so morally and ethically BANKRUPT that they don't give a flying fuck what some asshole like Trump does to this country and it's citizens, so long as THEY get to retain power, and "stick it to the liberals".
          Oh and by
          • by NotEmmanuelGoldstein ( 6423622 ) on Sunday March 21, 2021 @01:24AM (#61181238)

            ... to retain power, and "stick it to the liberals".

            To be fair, there are plenty of "rich people will save us" dreamers left in the Republican party. It's been consumed by tea-party acolytes espousing the values you described and tradionalists, such as Mitch McConnell, using bullying to control the senate. With its main role now the grabbing of power, it was only a matter of time until a psychopathic demagogue took control of the party: He was exactly what the tea-party admired. Republicans could have refused to endorse Trump, like they did for Bush Senior but Trump was a mouthpiece for their power-grabbing ideals, so they had to sink or swim with him. (This is what QAnon was about, if it was ever about anything.)

            ... NOT DEMOCRATS.

            The Democrats are not entirely blameless: They ignored several popular candidates to endorse an old-school has-been, Hillary Clinton. The entire party had the delusion that they could choose the president. The people made it clear they would not tolerate such contempt. While they chose old-school again, Biden had experience in listening to the people and delivering change.

            ... corrupted by the so-called ...

            No, this is the power those voters want to grab and as always, they chose the Republican party because they thought 'jumping on the bandwagon' would make themselves important.

            • Biden had experience in listening to the people and delivering change.

              Citation needed

            • The entire party had the delusion that they could choose the president.

              The party insiders value experience, which Clinton had in spades. Voters don't seem to value experience, in fact it might even be a detriment in their eyes. Seems to be true for both Democratic and Republican voters. This is so bizarre to the people who run the party that they can't seem to accept it. I'm not sure I can blame them, it's fucking crazy, but that's how it is.

      • The Chinese people are not weak, they deserve the free speech that the rest of the world has.

        • Not all free speech is good. China prosecutes corporations that bribe politicians. In US that's considered protected speech unless they literally utter the words "quid pro quo".
          • Bingo and white collar crime that leads to deaths can be punished with a death sentence.

            China understand it's important to be harsh on certain crimes and corruption which America has become complacent too.

            • Dealing drugs leads to the death penalty. The communist government quickly solved the opium problem after siezing power, by executing all the addicts and dealers.

              Being Muslim and not quiet about it leads to reeducation camp.

              All those smelly homeless people on the streets? They would be swept away to camps or worse in China.

              Political demonstrations? Better have permission first or here come the tanks and troops from a different region of the country who don't speak your language.

              American leftists don't unde

              • So homelessness and drug addiction is a feature of US democracy and not a failure? Yay! That means we're winning!
              • I have no problem being up on the wall. Being dead means I finally get to sleep, I don't have to deal with people's shits, and all I will achieve has been finally encapsulated. Death is liberation, if the worst an oppressive force can do is kill me, then I welcome Death.

                "Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?"

                I mean about the only thing you mentioned that has a reasonable amount of supporting evidence is the matter of opium and drug use. Whether or not I agree with this position is

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by phantomfive ( 622387 )

            Not all free speech is good.

            "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master." Be wary of those who seek reasons to censor. That is you.

            China prosecutes corporations that bribe politicians.

            Bribing is action, not speech. Your goal is to stop an action.

          • by vlad30 ( 44644 )

            Not all free speech is good.

            but I would rather hear it and evaluate it on my own

            China prosecutes corporations that bribe politicians.

            should be China prosecutes corporations that don't bribe the right politicians or offend the CCP

            • but I would rather hear it and evaluate it on my own

              You've already been "hearing" corporate free speech by witnessing dark money influencing elections. You haven't been "evaluating" it at all, which is the problem I'm pointing out.

          • All free speech is good. Bribes are not speech and aren't considered so.
        • Damned right. Despite the turmoil it would cause in the world I'd like to see the Chinese people kick their shit excuse for a government to the curb.
      • They treat their own citizens very well.

      • China has many strategies and adapting. Tech influence among them. China will advance as it can. Democracies need to cooperate or it will be more divide and conquer.
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        Free speech

        Our first shipment of authoritarianism has already arrived. It's called cancel culture.

    • Hard to say. If you go back 60years, the USA has exported their fair share of authoritarianism too. At least the Chinese will give the oppressed a 5G connection to play video games and watch tiktok..
    • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @09:20PM (#61180900) Homepage Journal

      Hmm... As FPs go, I guess it's okay, but kind of reductionist. Sanger recently wrote a book called The Perfect Weapon that largely disagrees with your position. As regards Africa in particular, I'd recommend China's Second Continent by Howard French.

      My own take is quite complicated. For one thing, "communism" is just a distraction. It was a transient label of convenience, and some of the "communist" ideas even meshed well with some traditional Chinese philosophies, but it never fit well and now it's just a dead brand. Kind of like "Republican" in the States. The real objective is winning the LONG race, and from the Chinese perspective the normal situation is China as #1 in the world in every category. It's just that they are only now coming back after a couple of bad centuries.

      From that perspective, I'm speculating that they engineered the Myanmar situation as a first test of the Biden administration. I hope that Biden's team understands the implications, but I admit that I would fail the test. Right now I don't see any good solution approach.

    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      In the Cold War, the USSR and USA each sought to proselytize other countries to its political/economic systems. Now only the USA is still doing that. China couldn't care less whether or not Laos and Democratic Republic of the Congo have freedom of speech.

      Really? Lets put that to the test and have Laos or Congo comment about the right of the Uighurs, the independence of Tibet or Taiwan, freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, mineral and oil rights in the South China Sea, etc.

      Also you don't seem to understand the Cold War. It was always a three party affair. Two major parties and a third minor party. Russia and China merely swapped roles.

    • That's because China is just buying infrastructure and control over those countries. They don't care how the peons rule amongst themselves as long as all the value and true control remains with China.

    • China doesn't have much of own exportable ideology because it's hard to settle on something with such huge population.
  • Sounds familiar (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @09:00PM (#61180848) Journal

    They are not the first nation to do it. [wikipedia.org]

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      China's policy is to not force countries it trades with to adopt its political policies. If you want to buy some surveillance gear then China will sell it to you, just like US and European and Israeli companies will. But they won't force you to have it.

      That's how they are competing against the US, where if you do business with them or use USD then you have much are forced to follow US rules and regulations globally. Like say you want to use an American part in your widget, well now you can't export it to ce

  • What's to export? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @09:05PM (#61180860) Journal

    Authoritarianism is everywhere. China exports products. The US exports politics

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. The problem is not the products China may or may not export. The problem is the _buyers_.

  • No. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @09:11PM (#61180886)
    Capitalism will [washingtonpost.com]. We've already seen this. Companies look the other way at China's human rights abuses because they don't want to risk losing access to their cheap labor market and their growing consumer market.

    It's the same reason Russia can invade the Ukraine and Saudi Arabia can invade Yemen. Money talks. And since most of us are paycheck to paycheck [cnbc.com] we're not gonna speak up, and we're gonna vote for conservative (little 'c') candidates who'll maintain the status quo rather than risk an economic disruption that might push us over the edge.

    This, along with a variety of wedge issues plus various forms [wikipedia.org] of organized [wikipedia.org] bigotry [wikipedia.org] is how and why 1% of the population can claim over 50% of the wealth. They're tactics for controlling and ruling over large groups of people developed and honed over centuries.

    Sure would be nice if we taught all this in schools, we'd have a much sharper citizenry. But, well, it's not hard to see why we don't.
    • Re: No. (Score:2, Insightful)

      by backslashdot ( 95548 )

      So your solution is to hand over even more monopoly power to the government and allow them to own vast industries? Socialism is literally capitalism with one monopoly player â" the government.

      A better system is capitalism and competition with regulatory oversight.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by MinasOne ( 6492330 )
        socialism isn't "when government does stuff", people keep saying this despite having the entire internet at their disposal. The books written by Marx, Lenin, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Emma Goldman, Chomsky, Michael Parenti, Richard Wolff, and even George Orwell are right there to read, yet people continue this myth of "government owns everything". Read a damn book that wasn't written by Ben Shapiro or Dennis Prager. https://www.goodreads.com/shel... [goodreads.com] And even if "socialism" isn't your cup of tea, Social Democrac
      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @11:03PM (#61181024)
        and lots of it. Universal Vote By Mail, Automatic Voter Registration, Mandatory Voting (can't supress it if it's mandatory) and Universal Suffrage (nobody loses the right to vote, if you've got so many rapists and axe murders they can swing elections you've got bigger problems).

        Also education. Like I said, we should be teaching those tricks used against us in schools.
      • The government is already in bed with most large corporations. Look how much Uber spent getting special laws passed just to benefit themselves. Same deal with these politicians who "retire" and then magically end up as board members for the company they just helped out.

        • by MikeKD ( 549924 )

          The government is already in bed with most large corporations. Look how much Uber spent getting special laws passed just to benefit themselves. Same deal with these politicians who "retire" and then magically end up as board members for the company they just helped out.

          That wasn't Uber in bed with the California government; it was Uber in bed with the people of California [ca.gov].

      • Socialism is - literally - employee owned corporations, aka cooperatives.

        • Socialism is - in this thing called reality - dictatorship under the pretext of "think of the people".

          Also, no scotsman can rape a woman. It has never happend !
    • Nothing works when corporations are defined as and equated with individuals. Not capitalism, not democracy. Except tyranny, which is what our current status quo corporatism does really well.

    • Russia can invade Ukraine because nobody gives enough damn about Ukraine to start a nuclear war with Russia. Ukraine's government and politics are just as corrupt as Russian. It remains the most corrupt and poorest country in Europe, despite years of massive western economic, military, and diplomatic support. The only difference between Russia and Ukraine is that Ukraine's corruption is still stuck where 1990s Russia was, clans of oligarchs and politicians fighting each other while stealing billions (Russia

    • Not capitalism per se, just people.
    • I'm sorry, but you are conflating Capitalism, an economic system, with greed, a human vice. Capitalism is not responsible for the existence of vice, that has existed as long as humanity. People can be greedy, selfish and short-sighted under any system. In fact, under every system they are. Fortunately, under a Capitalist-Democratic political economy, where all market actors are political actors and vice versa, when one person's greed harms another, they can demand regulations be created to prevent it in
  • by Anonymous Coward

    NBA, Disney, etc are already setting precedents for current Chinese authoritarianism in US culture.

    Wake me up when Lebron stops railing against Hong Kong freedom...or Tom Cruise gets his Taiwan patch back on his flight jacket in Top Gun 2.

    Remember when celebrities we're all "Free Tibet"? Pretty quiet about that all of a sudden...

  • by c-A-d ( 77980 ) on Saturday March 20, 2021 @09:31PM (#61180924)

    Next question.

  • No (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 )

    No need to for cheap Chinese imports, not when we have our domestic brands of authoritarian that are far more authoritarianier than the Chinese version that falls apart easily.

  • Hardly. China's not in the business of exporting authoritarianism. It's in the business of fortifying its own power. Whatever else happens in the mean time is just collateral damage.

    • by LeeLynx ( 6219816 ) on Sunday March 21, 2021 @12:13AM (#61181128)
      It's not necessarily a matter of doing it as an end in and of itself. Authoritarianism, like any evil, is a lot easier to get someone to swallow when it's the norm or, even better, there is a much worse example next door. I will never believe that the core of the CCP wasn't rooting for another Trump term - it's far easier to fend off criticism of your record on human rights and civil liberties when your critic is speeding headlong into the same system. For that matter, it likely figures in some small way into their foreign relations calculus regarding North Korea - Xi Jinping looks like Gandhi when you stack him up against Kim Jong Un.
      • by dj245 ( 732906 )

        For that matter, it likely figures in some small way into their foreign relations calculus regarding North Korea - Xi Jinping looks like Gandhi when you stack him up against Kim Jong Un.

        I would argue the opposite.

        China has issues with persecuting political dissidents, silencing members of the press, committing genocide against people who want to practice their religion and ethnic groups. They are making territorial expansions in Tibet, Hong Kong, and manmade islands in the sea. They are influencing Hollywood to not make movies that would make China look bad or go against what they want. Nazi German did literally all of these things.

        North Korea also has issues with persecuting poli

  • ...already demands insane things of Chinese employees, don't think they wont expect the same thing from people who live across a line on a map. Devaluation of labor is a real problem, American law has transformed to support union busting - just like China - where unions are outright illegal.
  • Government-Subsidized Technology. Presently the US also subsidizes exports, and makes outrageous claims that it is not. China has other sorts of subsidies, and because of scale of volume, ensures success. Somehow, India is not good at the same game. One concludes the price of cheap capital is the new determinant - and capital that is not stolen or pocketed at that, and amplified by whole supply chain manufacture. However that changes when high value goods are produced, and when because China can make 10x,
  • Sorry but this is just propaganda. The world's networks are already full of 3G and 4G hardware from Huawei and yet we aren't "tied" to China in any way. Nor has there been any case of the Chinese using that technology to spy on us, while on the contrary it's known and proved that English-speaking countries do it. If anything, I feel more free if I can choose China hardware, because it's substantially cheaper at the same quality, so I can use the money I save for other purposes or I can afford things that I
  • What? China might start competing with the USA to export pervasive, pernicious, Orwellian surveillance capabilities to authoritarian regimes?! How dare they! The outrage! Manifest destiny says white Europeans are the only ones fit to dominate & oppress! (That means centuries of white racist exceptionalism is likely to be turned around on us relatively soon. Don't worry, they still need us. They're still heavily dependent on trading with us.)
  • They graduate as many engineers EVERY YEAR as the US has in total.

    • by larwe ( 858929 )
      This is a classic example of chasing a metric, not an objective. Note how few of the influential tech innovations that have come out of the US in the past couple of decades, were created by graduated engineers. There is no correlation between "number of people yeeted out of school with a piece of paper" and "world thought leadership". Essentially all you're saying here is that a certain class of worker ant is more highly represented in the population.
      • by randjh ( 7163909 )
        Well, the IEEE publishes a journal dealing with AI/ML. Glance at the TOC and look at the authors' names. They're mostly Chinese. If there comes such thing as reliable computer facial recognition and behavioural predictions, they're going to be developed in China, not in the US. We're reaching the point where we don't require vaccines to be 100% effective in order to be useful. Yet we demand that (at least in principle) of our justice systems. Why?
  • Google and Facebook produce enough of domestic, modern, high-tech authoritarism.

  • They're doing it now, dipshit.
  • Political criticism is illegal in China with laws such as Picking Quarrels and Provoking Troubles [wikipedia.org] and Inciting subversion of state power [wikipedia.org]. I wonder if any of the commenters that draw a false equivalency between the US and China have given any thought of what the ramifications of their posts would be if they were held accountable to an authoritarian government?

    Even business tycoon Jack Ma [yahoo.com] is not immune.

  • David Sanger is right in that China must be evaluated as an economic power much more so than a military power. China operates like a ruthless oligarchy controlled BUSINESS that happens to control an entire country including the military, the universities and the schools. Chinese businesses will lose money at the request of the communist party. The Chinese military and universities are far more intertwined than in the west. Everything is coordinated for national economic objectives. Businessmen that ar

  • All this is exactly the same as the USA have been doing all this years and the USA are already imploding, because every time 1% of the people control the other 99%, sooner or later trouble will show up

Children begin by loving their parents. After a time they judge them. Rarely, if ever, do they forgive them. - Oscar Wilde

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