An
Apology to China Is Long Overdue
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
The
gang whipping up war hysteria against China suffers under a number
of delusions about the plane collision over the South China sea.
The main one is their cock-sure conviction that the crash was an
aggression by the Chinese pilot against an innocent American plane,
and hence the US should not only refuse to apologize but also exact
retribution.
Three
days after the crash, however, MSNBC (April 4, 2001) reported that
"new details" were now available concerning precisely
how the crash occurred. The "US aircraft executed a banking
maneuver off to the left," which caused a close-flying Chinese
jet to crash. These facts were provided by US officials on background,
and, as the news report said, it helps "explain the rationale
behind Chinese assertions that the American plane moved 'suddenly'
and thereby triggered the accident."
Translation:
China is right that this crash was the fault of the US. The story
further noted that this information was not being announced publicly.
In short, we can infer from the story that the US government told
lies about a death it caused, and is refusing to admit it
just as the same government did at Ruby Ridge, Waco, Belgrade, and
a thousand other cases.
Now
the Pentagon says that the plane was on autopilot, but the report
still doesn't exclude the possibility that the plane was manually
turned to spook the Chinese jet on its third pass close to the plane.
Now, perhaps the US has definitive evidence that the Chinese are
wrong and that the jet hit the US plane. If so, it should release
it. It certainly hasn't so far.
Also
instructive is the behavior of the other Chinese jet. When its pilot
saw what happened to his partner, he radioed Beijing for permission
to shoot down the US plane. This response is consistent with the
claim that the US banked left: he saw his partner hit and regarded
US behavior as an act of war. Had it been his partner's fault, his
first response would have been to get the heck out of Dodge. In
any case, he was refused permission to shoot, thus illustrating
how restrained China has been in this case, far more so than the
US would have been if the roles were reversed.
Aside
from the details of who did what to whom, consider the broader picture.
The US claims it was over international waters. Reports vary on
precisely where the US was flying, but we do know that it was inside
the 200-mile limit that the US claims for itself. Within this same
mile limit, but outside a 12-mile limit, China regards appropriate
air traffic as commercial and not military. By presuming to fly
so close to land with a spy plane, the US is guilty, at minimum,
of inhospitable behavior. There is no right to spy.
To
understand the Chinese position further, imagine this scenario.
You and your family are casually eating dinner when you notice some
guy with a listening device in the alley. He is listening in on
your conversation! You run out the back door and into the alley,
which is technically public property, and you demand to know what
the heck is going on. He regards your action as hostile and slams
you into the wall, and you die.
Who
is at fault here? Well, your wife would reasonably point out that
the snooper in the alley is at fault, for it is he who was harassing
your family with listening devices inside the confines of your own
home. At minimum she demands an apology. And what if the snooper
protested that, hey, this is a public alley? What's more, he says,
this was just "routine" surveillance, and the real problem
is the man had attempted to stop him from doing his job of listening
in on the dinner conversation.
There
is no judge in this country who would side with the snooper (the
US) as opposed to the home owner (China). The US behaved nastily,
with a disregard for the territorial sovereignty of China and the
lives of young men serving in its military.
It's
long past time to bite the bullet: the US needs to apologize to
the Chinese. The pilot Wang Wei, husband and father and patriot,
died protecting his country against a foreign spy plane stealing
military secrets from within Chinese commercial airspace. This was
an imperial adventure the US had no business undertaking. Again,
there is no right to crowd commercial airspace with nefarious eavesdropping
adventures.
And
this crowding, spying, and aggressing takes place within the context
of a much broader problem: the perception that the US doesn't care
a fig for Chinese lives and property. This perception is reinforced
in our trade policy (not a day goes by when some protectionist doesn't
call for sanctions), US policy on human rights (China's every violation
is denounced even as the US won't admit any wrongdoing in Yugoslavia,
Iraq, or, for that matter, Waco), and the unending and unproven
claims that China is using Chinese-Americans in government as spies.
Example:
when the US bombed the Chinese embassy two years ago and killed
Chinese journalists, you might expect that the first thing on the
mind of the US government would be penance and propitiation. Instead,
it issued a lame excuse (the maps were old), claimed it was an accident
(probably not), and then demanded that all protests in China cease
immediately. The cinders on the bombed building were still hot and
US lawmakers were threatening China for complaining too much!
Even
our language reflects an absurd, intractable, and ultimately dangerous
anti-Sinoism. We routinely refer to "Red China" or "Communist
China" as if the place were still being run top-down by Mao.
For pointing out that China may not be at fault in this air fiasco,
I've been called a communist agent more times than I can count.
But
look at the facts. China has stock markets, lower taxes than the
US, private homes, private schools, and private business centers
the size and scale of Houston. Beijing alone has 89 McDonalds restaurants.
And notice all the fabulous products routinely used in the US that
are made in China. This is no communist country. China is an authoritarian
state that is becoming ever freer, year by year. We should be encouraging
this trend through peace, trade, and mutual friendship, not whipping
up war.
With
its belligerent behavior on the high seas, the US has broken the
deal. But there is an easy way out of this predicament. Apologize.
It may be hard to do, but it is the right thing to do. If China
succeeds in extracting that from the US, it will have done a service
to the cause of liberty, giving to each American what we might not
otherwise hear in our lifetimes: an official admission that our
government is not infallible.
April
11, 2001
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He also edits a daily
news site, LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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