Editor’s note for Wednesday, August 19, 2020
A note from the editor of today's The China Project Access newsletter.
My thoughts today:
Iโve been writing apocalyptic headlinesย and notes rather regularly recently, as you may have noticed. Hereโs another pessimist, the famous international relations realistย John Mearsheimer: โI worry greatly that not only will we have a war between the United States and China, but also that there’s a serious possibility nuclear weapons would be usedโ he told Asahi Shimbun.
One of the major tensions between the two countries is of course over Huawei. The most recent American restrictions on the company announced on Monday would โkillโ it, one according to one industry executive. That assessment seems to be shared by many:
- The Financial Times callsย the U.S. move a โmortal threat.โ
- Nikkei Asian Review reportsย on โhow a handful of U.S. companies can cripple Huawei’s supply chain,โ and separately notesย that Chinaโs 5G rollout has been slowed down by U.S. restrictions on Huawei and its less famous rival ZTE.
Our word of the dayย is fig leafย (้ฎ็พๅธ zhฤxiลซbรน, literally, โcover up shame clothโ).
The word was used in yesterdayโs briefing from the Chinese foreign ministry in answer to a question about Huawei. The spokesperson said: โWhat the U.S. has done shows clearly that the market economy and fair competition principle it claims to champion is nothing but a fig leafโ (transcripts in English, Chinese).
Finally, Iโll be away tomorrow and Friday, leaving you in the capable hands of my colleague Lucas for the rest of the week.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief