|
Free Trade with China
Trade sanctionshowever well intentionedplace an undue
burden upon the Chinese people already suffering from the immoral practices
of their government. Sanctions cut off necessary goods to the poor and
often have little effect on the lifestyle of government leaders. Furthermore,
sanctions frequently enable Chinas political leaders to strengthen
their hold on power by blaming the impoverished condition of their country,
not upon a lack of freedom there, but upon the very sanctions imposed
by outsiders to challenge the regime and its practices.
FEATURED ARTICLE:
“China
and the Trade Warriors”
by Rev. Robert A. Sirico
The Wall Street Journal, June 11, 1997
Despite occasional tensions between social conservatives and economic conservatives,
most social and cultural goals have an economic dimension about which the two
camps are generally in agreement. But now a leader of the socially conservative
camp has proposed that there is an issue that pits morality and prosperity irreconcilably
against one anotherU.S. trade with China, a nation known for human-rights
violations, and particularly for religious persecution.
Gary Bauer of the Family Research Council is demanding that the U.S. government
wage economic war against China with sanctions, boycotts and embargoes. In his
campaign for trade restrictions with China, Mr. Bauer and a few other conservative
leaders are working hand in glove with labor unions and other left-liberal protectionists,
normally die-hard opponents of the religious right.
Barricades Have Collapsed
The usual political barricades have collapsed as Mr. Bauer's comrades join
forces to oppose congressional attempts to continue normal trading relations
with China. In a recent letter, Mr. Bauer compares the urgency of imposing sanctions
to issues such as ending slavery and defeating Hitler.
How restricting trade with China will help strengthen American family, faith,
and morality is still unclear. What is clear is that Mr. Bauer finds China's
treatment of Christians morally objectionable. I do, too. And he is to be commended
for his efforts at raising the public's awareness of this reprehensible state
of affairs. Christians are threatened, jailed, expelled, and even killed in
China. Whether this occurs more or less today than in decades past is in dispute.
But even one human rights violation is one too many.
That's why I, along with many others, signed an open letter from the Family
Research Council to the Vice President that appeared in major newspapers. It
objected to Mr. Gore's failure to emphasize China's poor human-rights record
during his March visit. The letter particularly highlighted China's vicious
suppression of the rights of Roman Catholics to worship in freedom. The letter
said nothing about a broader trade agenda.
I would have signed a similar letter about the appalling treatment of Christians
in Egypt (which receives U.S. foreign aid), Saudi Arabia (whose interests the
U.S. has defended militarily), and Iraq (a country where a Kurdish convert to
Christianity, Mansour Hussein Sifer, was recently martyred). Friends of freedom
should oppose restrictions on worship and the right of religious speech anywhere
they may appear, including the U.S.
When I signed the letter on China, however, I did not understand that it was
a prologue to a full-blown political campaign that would seek to curtail commercial
ties between China and the rest of the world. Mr. Bauer's position has evolved
from taking a strong moral stand in favor of religious freedom to one of waging
total trade war.
A charge often leveled against the Christian right is that it is not sensitive
to the difference between urging certain moral ends and using government coercion
to bring them about. It's usually a canard: In the case of the arts, for example,
the religious right seeks not censorship but an end to taxpayer subsidies for
blasphemy and obscenity. I regret having to say that this time, however, the
Family Research Council has lived up to the stereotype. It is attempting to
enlist government power, at the expense of everyone who benefits from American-Chinese
commercial relations, thus choosing an inappropriate means to achieve a moral
end.
What's more, trade sanctions would be counterproductive. Sanctions won't bring
freedom for religious expression in China. They won't end China's cruel policies
limiting family size. They won't stop the horrific policy of forced abortions.
They won't bring about democracy. They can only further isolate the two countries
from each other and close off avenues for greater degrees of Western influence.
The growth of Western businesses in China, however, would dilute the power
of China's communist rulers. As commercial networks develop, Chinese business
people are able to travel more freely, and Chinese believers have more disposable
income with which to support evangelistic endeavors.
No one understands this better than evangelical missionaries currently working
in China. Mr. Bauer's passionate campaign has elicited pleas from many of them
for Congress not to cut off trade relations. It would endanger their status
there, and quite possibly lead to the revocation of their visas. It would severely
limit opportunities to bring in Bibles and other religious materials that make
it possible for them to share the Gospel. These missionaries understand that
commercial relations are a wonderfully liberating force that allow not only
mutually beneficial trade but also cultural and religious exchanges. Why doesn't
Mr. Bauer listen to those who know far more about China than Washington think
tanks and labor unions do? "They may be too close to the situation," he answers,
somewhat flippantly.
Until recently, trade warriors have cited the case of the U.S. Bishops who
have opposed renewing normal trading status with China. At the same time, however,
Hong Kong's official Catholic newspaper, the Sunday Examiner, reports
new contacts between Beijing and Hong Kong's Catholic hierarchy. These contacts
are a major step towards an official recognition of the Catholic Church on the
mainland.
To The Good
This would be all to the good. Diplomacy and international trade strengthens
people's loyalties to each other and weakens government power. It is indisputable
that Beijing has shown itself to be supremely interested in fostering prosperity
at home. Christians must take advantage of this impulse, rather than recklessly
treating China as a monster that must be slain.
This need not be an issue that divides social conservatives from economic conservatives.
Economic prosperity through free trade is the most effective distributor of
wealth and power, and trade with China is the surest way to break the grip of
centralized political power. Religious conservatives should broaden their focus
beyond purely social and cultural issues. Mr. Bauer and his supporters are right
to decry the immoral treatment of believers in China. But allowing themselves
to be used by protectionist and labor lobbies is an imprudent approach. Just
as religious freedom offers the best hope for Christian social influence, economic
freedom is the best hope for spreading that influence around the world.
 
|