China and US: The wrong war, with the wrong enemy

CGTN Published: 2018-07-30 21:27:59
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Those who sense their time, win.

Mr. Trump saw his time: an opening to war, a trade war. Heading into 2018, US unemployment was the lowest in years and growth the highest in months. 

Trump thought this was the time to attack. But when a master plays chess, he sees not only one move, not only the next, but the whole path to victory. Trump is myopic in not playing the long game.

Trade stories never repeat, but they do rhyme. Let us hark back to the 1950s and 60s when the US was a surplus country. Strong post-war demand coupled with targeted government policies gave birth to decades of American export growth. China entered a similar cycle at the beginning of the 21st century.

Like a big merry-go-round, your time comes and goes. A wise man adapts. America should train more workers to get into service and high-end manufacturing, not fight wars – for real or for trade. General Omar Bradley told Congress in 1951 that the Korean War was “The wrong war, at the wrong place, at the wrong time, and with the wrong enemy." America need not be wrong again.

Only time will prove where real strength lies. The biggest power of a nation comes from moral clarity and political purpose.

America First is not a slogan, it is a fact. America is first in many ways. It has the biggest economy, the strongest military and some of the best brains in the world. America is not an underdog, it is a top dog -- but barking loud, and at the wrong trees.

A trade war with the world is a wrong tree. Hotheads make war, cool heads make peace. The White House is in short supply of cool heads.

And cool heads usually come from a good heart. One of the songs that touched a chord in the hearts of many is Ray Charles’s America the Beautiful. In Chinese, America literally means the Beautiful Country, but only “Till all success be nobleness and every gain divine."

What are America and China? Let us recall Lincoln’s refrain from his first inaugural address: "We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies...The mystic chords of memory will swell when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature."

President Trump, if you want to be a great leader, find the better angels. You need to understand the limitations of short-term wins and appreciate the value of enduring victory. Your followers may be kind to you, but history will not.

Scriptwriting: Zou Yue 

Videographer & Editing: Zhou Jinxi 

Animation: Pan Yufei 

Creative planning: Zhao Yuanzhen 

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LU Xiankun Professor LU Xiankun is Managing Director of LEDECO Geneva and Associate Partner of IDEAS Centre Geneva. He is Emeritus Professor of China Institute for WTO Studies of the University of International Business and Economics (UIBE) and Wuhan University (WHU) of China and visiting professor or senior research fellow of some other universities and think tanks in China and Europe. He also sits in management of some international business associations and companies, including as Senior Vice President of Shenzhen UEB Technology LTD., a leading e-commerce company of China. Previously, Mr. LU was senior official of Chinese Ministry of Commerce and senior diplomat posted in Europe, including in Geneva as Counsellor and Head of Division of the Permanent Mission of China to the WTO and in Brussels as Commercial Secretary of the Permanent Mission of China to the EU. Benjamin Cavender Benjamin Cavender is a Shanghai based consultant with more than 11 years of experience helping companies understand consumer behavior and develop go to market strategies for China. He is a frequent speaker on economic and consumer trends in China and is often featured on CNBC, Bloomberg, and Channel News Asia. Sara Hsu Sara Hsu is an associate professor from the State University of New York at New Paltz. She is a regular commentator on Chinese economy. Xu Qinduo Xu Qinduo is CRI's former chief correspondent to Washington DC, the United States. He works as the producer, host and commentator for TODAY, a flagship talk show on current affairs. Mr. Xu contributes regularly to English-language newspapers including Shenzhen Daily and Global Times as well as Chinese-language radio and TV services. Lin Shaowen A radio person, Mr. Lin Shaowen is strongly interested in international relations and Chinese politics. As China is quite often misunderstood in the rest of the world, he feels the need to better present the true picture of the country, the policies and meanings. So he talks a lot and is often seen debating. Then friends find a critical Lin Shaowen criticizing and criticized. George N. Tzogopoulos Dr George N. Tzogopoulos is an expert in media and politics/international relations as well as Chinese affairs. He is Senior Research Fellow at the Centre International de Européenne (CIFE) and Visiting Lecturer at the European Institute affiliated with it and is teaching international relations at the Department of Law of the Democritus University of Thrace. George is the author of two books: US Foreign Policy in the European Media: Framing the Rise and Fall of Neoconservatism (IB TAURIS) and The Greek Crisis in the Media: Stereotyping in the International Press (Ashgate) as well as the founder of chinaandgreece.com, an institutional partner of CRI Greek. David Morris David Morris is the Pacific Islands Trade and Investment Commissioner in China, a former Australian diplomat and senior political adviser. Harvey Dzodin After a distinguished career in the US government and American media Dr. Harvey Dzodin is now a Beijing-based freelance columnist for several media outlets. While living in Beijing, he has published over 200 columns with an emphasis on arts, culture and the Belt & Road initiative. He is also a sought-after speaker and advisor in China and abroad. He currently serves as Nonresident Research Fellow of the think tank Center for China and Globalization and Senior Advisor of Tsinghua University National Image Research Center specializing in city branding. Dr. Dzodin was a political appointee of President Jimmy Carter and served as lawyer to a presidential commission. Upon the nomination of the White House and the US State Department he served at the United Nations Office in Vienna, Austria. He was Director and Vice President of the ABC Television in New York for more than two decades.