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US President Donald Trump waves to supporters after being introduced during a rally on November 5 in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. Photo: AP

Letters | Donald Trump’s trade war taps into American disdain for China’s authoritarianism

  • The US president’s stance on China is based on more than trade and is here to stay
Columnist David Dodwell is correct when he writes of “hypocrisy run amok” (November 3) on trade. The US and China are the two largest trading nations so we should not be surprised that their positions carry the most hypocrisy.
However I think that Mr Dodwell, as a veteran trade negotiator, is so preoccupied with trade that he is not seeing the wood for the trees. Trade and the economy are not the be all and end all, and rather than “inching towards openness”, China’s social reforms and market forces seem to have stalled, despite much official rhetoric to the contrary.

US presidents Clinton and Obama expected freedom within China to progress alongside wealth creation. They were naive, as the two differing cultures will not mesh easily. As China gets stronger it naturally becomes more nationalistic, but it also is becoming revisionist. US business leaders will bend low to scoop up profits, but ordinary Americans have long detested authoritarianism, and President Trump has tapped into this aversion.

The US attitude to China now appears to be “belt up” and “hit the road”. I think your Insight articles “Don’t count on a Democratic Congress to soften Trump on China” (November 2) and “Malaysia and Pakistan offer lessons on the Belt and Road Initiative” (November 3) give a more realistic analysis than Mr Dodwell’s piece.

I.M. Wright, Happy Valley


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