As Xinjiang makes international news, China’s counterattacks against the US miss the mark
- Beijing is right that US history is far from blameless and Washington is overzealous in labelling China a ‘threat’
- That doesn’t change the fact that its Xinjiang policies are indefensible and will only make it more vulnerable to terrorist attacks
Three years and no terrorist attacks. And remember the misery of Native Americans.
We went from the Chinese government’s denial that it had set up camps for Uygurs to this justification after their existence could no longer be covered up.
So, we’re left to seek truth from facts. And the key facts come down to photos of sprawling, windowless buildings surrounded by barbed wire and watchtowers, which leave no doubt that those inside are there against their will.
In a sign of the Chinese foreign ministry’s defencelessness, spokeswoman Hua Chunying brought up in a tweet last week the “tears” and “blood” of Native American civilisations that were decimated by the westward expansion of the United States.
She was correct about this brutal and tragic history. She might as well have brought up the internment camps that the US government forced Japanese-Americans into during World War II.
She could have also pointed out the repercussions African-Americans face, to this day, for minor traffic violations or wearing hoodies.
It would be fair for Hua and the rest of China’s diplomatic corps to cite these realities because they make a mockery of America’s perception of itself as a beacon of freedom and good governance.
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Using one brush stroke to portray an entire group of people, and enacting policies based on these presumptions, never works out well.
Responding to it by bringing up the fate of Native Americans more than a century ago only creates an equivalence between that brutality and the Xinjiang internment camps.
Just as the blanket presumption of guilt that Washington’s ideologues are trying to throw on everything Chinese will undermine its authority on the world stage, the continued effort to detain Uygurs until their culture is suffocated will backfire.
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Does anyone think the murderous rage of someone like Second Lieutenant Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani of the Royal Saudi Air Force would have been quieted if he had been forced to sing Yankee Doodle Dandy in an internment camp?
As the Muslim world gets more details about what’s going on in Xinjiang, China will only become more vulnerable to attacks from beyond its borders like the US witnessed in Florida.
Moreover, China risks losing the diplomatic game it’s playing against the US in Europe, where it needs allies more than ever as it seeks to build market share among the world’s 5G infrastructure customers and win over international public opinion about its Belt and Road Initiative.
Beijing will find it very difficult to achieve its foreign policy goals until it finds a more humane way to address the threat that the Xinjiang internment camps are meant to address.
Robert Delaney is the Post’s US bureau chief