Chinese officials are warning that they are prepared not only for trade war, but for financial, diplomatic and limited military confrontation with the United States, in response to American demands for fundamental changes in Chinese economic policy.
The dispute between the world’s two largest economies has moved beyond narrow issues of trade or specific areas of prospective conflict: Washington now views China’s technologically-focused economic strategy as a challenge to America’s world position, and China views Washington’s demands on China as the equivalent of a “new Opium War,” as a senior Chinese official told Asia Times last week.
This is not a drill. Nor is the result of “Art of the Deal” negotiating on the part of the Trump Administration. Since 2015, China has sought to shift its economy from the smokestack-and-export model introduced in 1978 by Deng Xiaoping to a high-tech, consumer-focused model dubbed “Made in China 2025,” supported by $1 trillion in infrastructure investments to ensure Chinese preeminence in the Eurasian continent. The United States ignored China’s high-tech shift for years; now it has discovered that China threatens to leapfrog the United States in critical areas of high technology, military as well as civilian.
What for China is the new normal of economic life is viewed in Washington now as an existential threat. That was the nub of White House adviser Peter Navarro’s June 19 report, entitled “How China’s Economic Aggression Threatens the Technologies and Intellectual Property of the United States and the World.” China interprets American action to shut down the operations of its second-largest telecom equipment company, ZTE, as proof that Washington does not propose to negotiate a modus vivendi but rather inflict damage on the Chinese economy.
A radical disparity of strategic estimates is at work. The United States still believes it is powerful enough to bully China into submission, while the Chinese believe they are strong enough to come out on top in a confrontation with the United States.
Ominously, a senior Chinese official, Trade Ministry economist Mei Xinyu, warned last week that China will pursue war on many fronts in response to American protectionism. In an interview with Germany’s leading news organization Der Spiegel, Dr. Mei was asked which measure China will take against the United States. He said, “China has responded to the first installment of US punitive tariffs by imposing countervailing duties in comparable product categories. Should the US now impose tariffs on imports of another 200 billion, China will extend the conflict to other fields,” quoting Mao Zedong’s dictum, “You fight your war your way, and I will fight mine my way.”
Chinese countermeasures might include an attack on US financial markets, Mei added: “The US and China are the largest economies and largest financial markets in the world. But in the US, the financial sector plays a much bigger role than in China. In that sense, the US is vulnerable here, so of course, that’s an option.” Der Spiegel asked, “Wouldn’t China hurt itself if it sold its dollar reserves?
The value of the dollar would fall, but China’s assets would fall as well.” The Chinese official responded, “In good times, our way of competing is to try to grow faster than the US. But when times get bad, it’s about who loses the most. That would be a financial war – and what such a financial war between the two largest economies looks like is probably beyond our imagination.”
Dr. Mei added, “When we had our first trade conflicts with the US in the 1990s, the US economy was 15 times bigger than the Chinese. Today it is 1.5 times bigger. Not that we wanted a trade war back then – we could not afford it. Today we can afford it. The export share of our gross domestic product has dropped to below 20 percent since the peak of the early 1990s. At the same time, the share of domestic consumption has grown strongly. This strengthens our position.”
Foreigners presently own about a third of America’s total public debt of more than $20 trillion. China owns about $1.1 trillion of this. The trouble is that the United States Treasury will need to borrow $1 trillion a year for the indefinite future. The US Federal Reserve has ended its program of public bond buying, and the US savings rate is extremely low; domestic buyers cannot absorb the $1 trillion annual requirement, and the US will have to borrow from foreigners. That is a long-term strategic vulnerability of which China is keenly aware, and which the United States appears not to have considered.
That is war talk for public consumption, with a degree of vehemence that no Chinese government spokesman has employed in the past. Speaking on background, a senior Chinese official told Asia Times that Beijing now believes that Trump has “betrayed” China. Beijing had sought an accommodation with the United States, offering to increase its imports of US goods and reduce the $375 billion bilateral trade deficit. US officials had discussed a plan in which China would invest in US liquefied natural gas facilities and accept long-term contracts to buy US gas, for an estimated $50 billion increase in US export to China.
But Beijing has concluded that Washington does not want specific trade concessions, the official continued, but rather wants China to abandon its economic policy of subsidizing nascent industries and acquiring advanced technology – in effect giving up its plans for economic development, in the Chinese perception.
A critical turning point was the Commerce Department’s ban on sales of American chips to power ZTE’s mobile handsets, sourced mainly from the American semiconductor giant Qualcomm. ZTE had violated sanctions on sales of high technology to Iran and North Korea. China’s President Xi Jinping intervened personally with President Trump to rescind the decision. Trump’s Commerce Department negotiated an unprecedented $1.9 billion fine as well as direct American controls over ZTE management, only to have the US Senate vote to reinstate the crippling ban on chip purchases. Trump’s Republican opponents united with Senate Democrats to embarrass the US President. The Chinese official commented, “That is Trump’s problem, not our problem.”
In Congressional testimony last week, the Pentagon identified China’s ten-year-old “Thousand Talents” program for acquiring high-tech skills as a strategic threat to the United States. A prepared statement by the Defense Department warned:
“The Department of Defense is facing an unprecedented threat to its technological and industrial base. Continued globalization and our open society, both in academia and business, has offered China and others access to the same technology and information that is critical to the success of our future warfighting capabilities. China is making significant and targeted investments in the same technologies of interest to the Department. These include artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, cybersecurity, and unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) technology. China has made it a national goal to acquire foreign technologies to not only advance its economy, but also to use these technologies to advance its military capabilities, and it is doing so through both licit and illicit means.”
Michael Griffin, Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, warned that America’s “open society” has “offered China and others access to the same technology and information that is crucial to the success of our future war-fighting capabilities.”
America is about to become a great deal less open. Foreign and especially Chinese applications to American university graduate programs in physics and other quantitative fields have fallen by a quarter to a half for next year’s fall semester, as foreign students feel a chill wind from Washington. Some universities fear that they will not be able to maintain their existing programs in the absence of foreign applicants, who comprise in the case of computer science four-fifths of all doctoral students.
At the fringes of the US administration, there is talk of expelling Chinese nationals from the United States. The prominent conservative pundit Victor Davis Hanson asked in an interview last week, “why do we have a million Chinese nationals in the United States? Why are Chinese nationals buying property all over? If you’re a member of the Chinese Communist Party, maybe you can’t come to the United States. Maybe you can’t buy property.” Dr. Hanson is a personal friend of mine, but this is crazy talk.
About 350,000 Chinese students now study at American universities, and they dominate tech disciplines. Only 7% of American students major in engineering vs. a third in China. The United States cannot win a technology race with China without Chinese students. That is not a new predicament; it recalls the Second World War and the Cold War, both of which were won by Germans, that is, the German scientists working for the Allies rather than the ones working for Hitler. Germany had the preponderance of scientific talent in the 1930s, and the US won by recruiting it.
We won because “our German scientists were better than their German scientists,” as Churchill aide Sir Ian Jacob quipped – starting with Albert Einstein, but also the entire team that built the atomic bomb including Robert Oppenheimer, Edward Teller, Hans Bethe, and Eugene Wigner). Working for the US, Werner von Braun and his German team overcame the Russians’ early lead in space exploration. Historian Andrew Roberts argued in his magisterial The Storm of War that Allied recruitment of dissident Germans was indispensable to Allied victory.
I told the late Tom Wolfe that his bestseller The Right Stuff was the most pernicious book published in America during my lifetime, because it misled Americans into believing that a bunch of tobacco-chewing astronauts won the space race, rather than the rocket scientists that the US inherited from Hitler. Today the preponderance of scientific talent has shifted to Asia; even the most aggressive efforts to persuade Americans to apply themselves to technology would be too little and too late.
Some years ago I proposed to the US government a massive covert program to identify and recruit the cream of Chinese talent both at American and Chinese universities, the creative few whose initiative and inventiveness would tip the balance of power for future innovations. There are numberless Chinese scientists who would like to live in a country where the government doesn’t dictate how many children they can have, where they can express opinions without worrying about the Ministry of State Security, and where the food isn’t saturated with heavy metals.
The most pressing threat to American security does not come from Chinese students or researchers but from the thousands of Google engineers who signed a petition rejecting cooperation with the US Defense Department, followed by a similar movement among Amazon employees. If you want American patriots who will devote their talents to building American strategic superiority, you may have to look for them among foreigners who are weary of the oppressiveness of their own governments.
Instead, the tone of American policy towards individual Chinese has become rancorous, even xenophobic. That is ugly, and it also is self-defeating. Economic supremacy and, in the final reckoning, military supremacy depend on the preponderance of talent. The United States appears to suffer from an inflated opinion of its own standing in that regard, and is initiating a confrontation with China that both sides will lose – but the United States is likely to lose more.
For what it is worth, I will offer some unsolicited advice to the Trump Administration. As an American, I want China to be prosperous, secure, and well behind the United States.
First, do what the Eisenhower administration did in 1957 – shift federal resources toward science and technology and starve the universities of all other forms of aid, including student loans.
Second, restore federal R&D spending to the levels of the Reagan years (when we spent 1.3% of GDP on basic R&D vs. about 0.7% now).
Third, begin Manhattan Project-style programs under the aegis of the Defense Department to force breakthroughs in critical technologies: quantum computing, semiconductor manufacturing, drone technology, artificial intelligence, missile defense (including space-based systems), and anti-submarine warfare to start.
Fourth, as I noted above. organize a brain drain out of China: Identify and recruit their most inventive and creative tech people.
Fifth, get together with the Japanese and organize an alternative to China’s One Belt, One Road program. The fulcrum of this program is the 600 million people of Southeast Asia, most of whom would welcome an alternative to Chinese dominance.

John Tee Spot on. Using China’s supposedly "historical maps" that they pull of their behinds so mysteriously which entitles them to go about their emipre building, what happens if Mongolia or Japan were to do the same.
Joe Wong WUMAO, can you show your face?
Darrell Burgan,
I have no doubt that you are a genius like Trump claims to be a genius. But I am not talking of individuals but of a population. You can google it and I am sure you will find that the average IQ of the Chinese population is much higher than the average IQ of the US population.
John Tee,
USA thinks that every country is taking advantage of USA, and that every country is an existential threat to USA (including Canada). So, USA is imposing tariff, not only on Chinese products, but also Canadian, Mexican, German, Japanese, South Korean and Indian products. USA is sanctioning not only Syria, North Korea, Iran and Venezuela but also China, Russia, and dozens other country.
Galen Linder Yes, China treats other countries so well, thats why Vietnamese people hate them.
Joe Wong Wrong. America is a multiethnic society founded on the ideals of rule of law, human rights, freedom, and democracy. The same ideals once held by Sun Yat Sen. I am proud to be a Chinese American.
The world goes round in circles. 19th century belongs to the British, The 20th belongs to the Americans. And the 21st, guess what, belongs to Asia with China in the driver’s seat. That’s my simplistic understanding of the world right now. You can argue till the cows come home. The fact remains that we must treat China with respect rather than turning a country on the rise as an enemy.
John Tee, It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter. It was of no interest. The Crimes of the USA have been systematic, constant, vicious, remorsless, but very few people talked about them. You have to hand it to the America. It has exercised a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masterbating as a force for universal good. It’s a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis. – Harold Pinter, Nobel Lecture (2005)
Tony Wu, I don’t think the American, i.e. the Gweilo, can distinguish you from the mainlanders, you will be locked up in the Guantanamo Bay all the same, despite your hard licking of their behinds.
John Tee, Asia Times is owned by Chatham House, a sun set empire pretending the sun had not set yet.
David Goldman, USA is a racist white supremacist society. Because of the historical reasons, people with blinding hatred towards Chinese like Peter Navarro is the norm not exception in the USA as well as in its allied nations like Japan. Chinese would not want to stay in a hostile society like the USA if they can help it. In the past the material superiority of the USA offered Chinese a choice they hard to refuse despite all the nays they have to endure. But nowadays the material superiority of the USA is disappearing, there are less and less reasons for the Chinese to stay in the USA that no American appreciates their contributions if not outright hostile. In addition China’s recruiting talent programs are attracting more and more Chinese as well as other national talents to China.
The United States’ inflated opinion of its own preponderance of talent is deeply rooted in its racist white supremacist culture and DNA, it cannot be changed and will not change. You and Peter Navarro are the same just in differnt shade of gray. It seems you have failed to notice the American own handicaps like Peter Navarro.
What I find perplexing is, apparently, people are surprised at the emergence of conflict between China and the U.S. given the relative trajectories
Darrell Burgan Correct. I am actually pro-Trump. But I disagree with him on these trade issues. I view China as both a partner and a competitor. The Chinese are neither friends nor enemies. They are merely a people who have their own self-interest, just like everyone else around the world. Peter Navarro lacks the nuance and detailed thinking necessary to deal with the Chinese.
I tend to agree with most of your recommendations. However, I think Trump and even Navarro deserve credit for highlighting an issue American elites have long been somnambulant about. It strikes me it takes a massive shaking of the status quo to get our elites to realize the pre-Trump direction was the direction of failure.
The question seems to me to be whether Trump can adjust tactically, while keeping his strategic vision intact.
Tony Wu And, they cannot make computer chips. Except those copies of Microns. That was when they failed to buy the company, so went and raided and stole the software and used it as a base to make Micron chip copies. That is as far as they have got.
Syed Abbas , don’t write the United States off so easily. Things never looked so bad as in 1979, yet we began the longest expansion in US history a few years later.
Ken Nguyen The US would in effect rule there had been a national disaster and refuse to reimburse them. Check mate!
Ken Nguyen I doubt many US companies have put more money into China than they are prepared to looose if the shit hits the fan. Which has always been the case when you deal with any authoritatian dictatorships anywhere in the world. And, 99% of the companies are joint ventures where 51% is owned by the local partner, so it would be China that gets hurt if the US was to go. Of course, they could be kept on running till the designs become dated and stops selling as there would be no new tech coming from the US.
Why do you think that 100% owned Chinese car makers are loosing market share year on year to foreign owned? Because this years "new" local model is a copy of a two year old foreign car tech. The Chinese consumer knows this all too well now, so if they are buying on price, its local, if they are buying for the latest tech and efficient engines etc, they buy a foriegn brand locally made.
Kier Valdez . Yup, and it was the UK and the US that were supplying China in fighting Japan. But they dont like to mention that now, it interferes with the education policy.
Dont you realise that the US is one of China’s biggest markets, but what the US sells to China is comparatively little. So who will be hurt the most? The ONLY thing the rest of the world wants China to do, is trade fair. Thats all, not too difficult you would think. Like if every country raised their tariffs against Chinese goods to the same level as China has on imports.
What could possibly be unfair about that? Reciprocal and fair trade is the only thing any country can ask for. It is when some countries expect everything to be in their favour that the trouble starts, like now with China.