China and Energy Independence
Trump warned against becoming overly dependent on China for energy. He criticized electric vehicles partly because of their dependence on manufacturing in China and their tendency, along with other renewable energy sources, to jettison fossil fuels that Trump argues provide America with energy independence at an affordable price.“Number one, people can’t afford” electric vehicles, he told the cheering Pennsylvanians. “Number two, the batteries are made all in China, all the earth, the rare earth comes out of China.”
“It all comes out of China, and a little bit in the Congo, [and] guess who controls the Congo? China! We play right into their hands,” he said.
China and Afghanistan Withdrawal
Trump also argued that Biden should not have given up the Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan for strategic reasons beyond Islamic terrorism.Xi Jinping and Drugs
Trump spoke extensively about Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Xi Jinping, who he described as “fierce” and “smart.” Trump justified calling Xi “smart” because Xi “rules with an iron fist 1.5 billion people. Yeah, I'd say he’s smart, wouldn’t you say he’s smart?”The former president recounted a time he spent with Xi, in which he made a “great trade deal with him” that helped America’s farmers and manufacturers.
Trump said he “had a great relationship” with Xi and called him “king” over the latter’s protestations because “You are to me, you’re president for life. It’s the same thing.”
Then Trump noted that China makes fentanyl and sends it into the United States via America’s porous border “in numbers that you wouldn’t believe, wouldn’t believe it, pouring through that porous border.”
Supposedly, according to Trump, Xi attempted to stop the fentanyl flow but could not.
Trump then asked Xi if China had a drug problem, to which Xi answered no.
“So President, President, you don’t have a drug problem, but why?” Trump asked.
“We have quick trial,” answered Xi, according to Trump.
Trump asked, “What is a quick trial?”
“We immediately catch the drug dealer. We give him quick trial,” said Xi, according to Trump.
Trump then spoke to the crowd in Pennsylvania. “And if he is guilty, which I would say probably they’re batting … about 100 percent? Or only 99?”
“If the drug dealer is guilty, he is immediately executed. So we have no drug problem in China,” said Xi, according to Trump.
This was Trump’s introduction to calling for the death penalty for all drug dealers in the United States. He said that other countries, like Singapore, follow the same approach.
Trump did not mention former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who is under international scrutiny for his government’s alleged extrajudicial killings of not only drug dealers, but drug users.
China in Trump’s Closing Remarks
In Trump’s closing remarks, he said, “We will hold China accountable for unleashing the virus upon the world.” He vowed to protect innocent life.Trump claimed that China would never invade Taiwan as long as he were president.
Mainstream Media Coverage
The Washington Post and The New York Times covered the speech but did not mention Trump’s comments on China, which the U.S. Defense Department and NATO recognize as their biggest threat.Bottom Line
So what did Trump really say about China? Regrettably, he did, in fact, call Xi “smart” while marshaling the faulty evidence that Xi’s rule over China’s vast population with an “iron fist” somehow indicates intelligence rather than a communist or fascist approach to politics.The Financial Times, at least, got that right.
But the breadth and depth of Trump’s comments on China were, to my knowledge, otherwise entirely ignored by the liberal-leaning mainstream media, which unfortunately chose instead to focus on the relatively less substantial fireworks display of polarizing language by both Trump and President Joe Biden in labeling each other as “semi-fascist” and “enemy of the state,” respectively.
Neither is true.
Unfortunately, Trump calling Xi intelligent for his “iron fist” while mooting the idea of a “quick trial” and death penalty for drug dealers, the latter he supports for introduction into the United States, will be grist for the Democrats’ propaganda mill.
That is a mistake and fatal to America’s need for moral and material strength for the coming struggle with authoritarian regimes.
To protect America from our greatest threat in Beijing, we must first praise democracy and human rights as smart rather than “iron fists” and “quick trials.”
The Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees the right to a jury trial of one’s peers, which is in no way consistent with “iron fists” and “quick trials.” America’s material power rests in large part on our moral leadership internationally, on issues like democracy, human rights, and the rule of law.
Former American presidents were right to highlight the American role in the world as a moral “beacon of hope.” Failure to highlight America’s moral high ground by any U.S. president only hurts America’s standing internationally.
If Americans could overcome their partisanship to rally our moral strength and unite against our most dangerous foreign threats, including Xi and the Chinese Communist Party, it would make America’s Founding Fathers proud.