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Why the US‐​Europe ‘Front’ Against China Is Pure Fantasy

博客文章

Why the US‐​Europe ‘Front’ Against China Is Pure Fantasy
博客文章

博客文章

Why the US‐​Europe ‘Front’ Against China Is Pure Fantasy

2021年01月12日 06:15 最後更新:06:15

This article originally appeared on Responsible Statecraft on January 5, 2021, written by Ted Galen Carpenter. His sophisticated analysis revealed the cruel reality-- US‐​Europe ‘Front’ Against China Is Pure Fantasy. You may see it, quite obvious, no need to read between the lines,as follows.

One unmistakable goal of the incoming Biden administration is to repair the damage that the Trump administration inflicted on America’s relations with its traditional diplomatic and strategic partners, especially the European allies. Biden and his advisers have explicitly criticized Trump’s “America First” approach with respect to both economic and security policies. Instead, they emphasize strengthening multilateral efforts to achieve common objectives in those arenas.

Biden himself has made it clear that one of those objectives is to induce Europe to join the United States in a common front to deal with China. “As we compete with China and hold China’s government accountable for its abuses on trade, technology, human rights, and other fronts,” he said in remarks delivered on December 28, “our position will be much stronger when we build coalitions of like-minded partners and allies to make common cause with us in defense of our shared interests and values.”

Biden added that “on any issue that matters to the U.S.-China relationship,” including “ensuring security and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region, [we]are stronger and more effective when we are flanked by nations that share our vision for the future of our world.”

Biden’s quest is likely to fail. Indeed, just two days after the president-elect’s comments, the European Union signed a major investment deal with Beijing. RealityChek blogger Alan Tonelson contended that the EU’s action constituted a “punch in the mouth.”  That may be an exaggeration, but negotiations had been going on for seven years, and there was no reason why EU leaders could not have held off and consulted with the Biden administration after it took office before taking final action. Their failure to do so indicated that the EU will chart its own course regarding economic relations with China based on an assessment of European interests, not U.S. policy preferences.

Evidence is even stronger that Washington cannot count on European solidarity with the United States if it comes to a diplomatic confrontation with Beijing over human rights or other issues. That point became glaringly apparent last year when the Trump administration tried to enlist Europe in a united response to the PRC’s imposition of a new national security law on Hong Kong. U.S. leaders wanted a joint statement of condemnation as well as the imposition of some sanctions in response to Beijing’s brazen erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy.

Allied backing was tepid and grudging, at best. Among the major European powers, only Britain (Hong Kong’s former colonial ruler) joined the United States in embracing a hardline approach. . German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas argued that the best way for the European Union to influence China on the Hong Kong dispute was merely to maintain a dialogue with Beijing.

The European Union’s response was anemic and evasive as well. Apparently determined to avoid becoming entangled in America’s escalating rivalry with China, EU foreign ministers embraced Germany’s approach and emphasized the need for dialogue about Hong Kong. After a videoconference among the bloc’s 27 foreign ministers, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell emphasized that only one country bothered to raise the subject of sanctions. Borrell added that the EU was not planning even to postpone diplomatic meetings with China.

Such actions suggest that European governments have little interest in being part of a U.S.-led common front to deal with Beijing even on diplomatic and economic issues, much less security problems. In adopting that stance, they accurately reflect European public opinion.

Europeans want no part of a possible confrontation with China. When a September 2019 survey by the European Council on Foreign Relations asked, “Whose side should your country take in a conflict between the United States and China?” the results were emphatic against backing America.

Support for Washington was meager even among the usually Amerophile populations in Central and Eastern Europe. Just 19 percent in the Czech Republic, 17 percent in Romania, and 13 percent in Hungary supported the U.S. position. The outcome among Washington’s long‐​standing economic and security partners in Western Europe was similar. Only 18 percent of French respondents, 20 percent of Italians, and 10 percent of Germans chose solidarity with the United States in a showdown with China. Overwhelming majorities in all countries surveyed favored neutrality.

Such a stance is unsurprising. The United States is a Pacific power with extensive economic and security interests in East Asia. China’s economic and military rise poses a serious challenge to the status of regional hegemon that the United States had enjoyed since the end of World War II.

Europe’s situation is fundamentally different. The European powers have limited economic interests and even fewer security concerns in the region. The risks associated with waging even a diplomatic feud with China — to say nothing of a trade war or a military confrontation — would appear to most Europeans to outweigh any conceivable benefits. From the standpoint of European interests, discreet neutrality regarding relations between the United States and China is the prudent course.

Given that reality, the Biden administration is likely to be disappointed in the probable European response to calls for a joint response to China’s transgressions. The new president may scorn the “America First” doctrine and seek to revitalize the coalition of Western democratic powers. But at least when it comes to policy toward China, Biden will find that the United States is a leader with few followers.

K. Y. Yip(葉啟賢)  Engineer
HKFDP




香港建設專業聯會

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深圳樓市情況--皇崗小區

 

最近,深圳拆舊改新規定~《深圳經濟特區城市更新條例》正式通過,城中村拆遷通過率若達95%,即可動工,意味著深圳僅有的一些城中村的拆舊建新步伐將大大提速。

其中,擁有700多年曆史、福田CBD附近、被譽為“深圳最富城中村”皇崗村小區舊改項目也正式啟動開拆。從皇崗村小區向外望,福田CBD盡在咫尺,這將是繼大衝、白石洲、大金沙之後舊改價值含金量最高的區域。此村的福田益田路以東、金田路以西、濱河大道以南,緊鄰福田CBD和深圳會展中心,與香港新界元朗米埔一帶,隔河相望,地理位置得天獨厚。

近有媒體報道了深圳城中村集體資產市值榜,皇崗村以350億穩居全深圳第四,是名副其實的土豪村。皇崗村小區有福田CBD後花園、深圳最古老村落、“最富城中村”之稱。根據規劃,皇崗村完成舊改後將建成福田CBD最大的綜合居住社區。

在皇崗村小區,除了村民自建房,還有皇崗股份公司、皇崗小學、皇都廣場、皇庭世紀、皇庭彩園、東方雅苑、共和世家等小區以村名命名的皇崗公園等綠化帶。

以前,相比於二手房價動輒10萬+、15萬+ 人民幣/平米 的福田CBD、香蜜湖等,皇崗村小區的樓房因城中村交錯,其二手房價長期位列“福田低窪地”,只介乎5~7萬人民幣/平米。但現在這一切正在發生變化:拆舊建新在如火如荼地進行,加上總投資超3億的皇崗中學重建工程也已全面動工,根據規劃,將建成九年一貫制學校具有54個班的優質學校,於明年起招生, 也就是說皇崗村小區的房子變成了學區房 ,這已受到了眾多家長的歡迎,不斷來這邊買房子。在上面諸多利好因素的催生下,皇崗村小區二手房價,在過去一年已上揚至8萬~11萬人民幣/平米, 總體上,樓價平均大幅上升了50%或以上。

另外,緊鄰皇崗村舊改一期項目的皇達東方雅苑,一年以來漲幅也頗大~從去年12月的7.5萬/平米 均價到現在的10萬/平米,上升了33%. 目前其單位起步總價已達750萬人民幣,即約900萬港幣,而且供不應求。

過去二十一年來筆者一直強調,西式真普選使企業營運成本不可持續發展地上升,故不可持續發展,產業不斷外移東來,中國經濟前景非常好,會成為世界的經濟中心。2008年起,世界貨幣供應量不斷上升,中國好城市的好房子值得持有。僅供大家參考。

陳貴和 基金主席
香港建設專業聯會主席