The United States has paid little heed to the growing Chinese intelligence threat, according to economist, China expert, and author Clyde Prestowitz.
“The Chinese have been buying up land near American bases. That land is not being bought in order to grow wheat. They’re watching the bases,” he noted.
Meanwhile, the Chinese regime puts enormous resources into intelligence efforts, according to Prestowitz, who served as counselor to the secretary of commerce during the Reagan administration and currently heads the Economic Strategy Institute.
US Companies Subservient to Beijing
In his book, titled “The World Turned Upside Down: America, China, and the Struggle for Global Leadership,” Prestowitz pointed out another challenge China poses: making U.S. companies subservient to Beijing. He singled out Apple Corporation as an example.In the late 1990s, Apple moved its production facilities from California to China to take advantage of cheap labor, Prestowitz said. This was not surprising, considering that the Chinese regime “was offering free land, no taxes for 25 years, utilities at half cost.”
The result, he said, is that “China can compel Apple to do whatever it damn well pleases. And so Apple has, in a way, been captured politically by China.”
This limits the U.S. government’s power over Apple. “When Apple testifies before the Congress or lobbies U.S. government entities, it presents itself as an American company, but officials have to keep in mind that it is, in a way, more subservient to Beijing than it is to [Washington].”
He further pointed out that not only Apple, but other companies—including General Electric, General Motors, Boeing, and other major manufacturing companies—are highly reliant on China, and “all of them are subject to coercion by the Chinese Communist Party.”
“The [Lockheed Martin] F-35 has a component that’s made in China. That tells you the extent, the penetration of products made in China,” Prestowitz said.
Boost US Production, Curb Dependence on China
To counter the threat from the Chinese regime, Prestowitz suggested an industrial policy that strives to boost production in the United States, while curbing dependence on China.A similar approach should be applied to other technologies such as telecommunications, Prestowitz said.
“U.S. venture capital has been very active in China. If the Chinese are trying to propagate particular industries of technology, they will welcome [and] attempt to entice U.S. venture capital to invest in those technologies in China.”
“That’s not good for the U.S.,” he stressed. “We want that invested in U.S. technology.”