Reports are coming out of intense corruption in the Chinese military. These come as no surprise, since China is a highly corrupt society
to begin with thanks to the unusually close relationship between
government and business that characterizes Chinese state-capitalism and
China's ancient tradition of wealthy nobility being awarded government
positions that dates back to the Qin Dynasty in 221 BCE. Corruption in
the military hampers the effectiveness of communication and lowers
discipline, while corruption in the civilian government keeps millions
in poverty and creating a major wealth disparity between the rich
Eastern cities and the poorer yet more populous West.
On
its face, this looks pretty good for the U.S. America is in the
business of maintaining its hegemony, which it can do by keeping its
challengers down. Corruption hurts China by hurting the Chinese economy,
weakening their military, and increasing the possibility of a revolution
by the poor West.
However, the U.S. has both a moral
and realist responsibility to denounce corruption in China. Morally, the
U.S. must denounce corruption because it unfairly hurts China's poor
and kills millions, which no upright human being can allow. This in turn
would increase America's soft power and moral standing in the world by
showing other nations that the U.S. cares about helping the little guy.
From a realist point of view, however, denouncing corruption by sending
Hilary Clinton to China to give a speech saying something along the
lines of "rampant corruption like China's makes a government
illegitimate" would help speed along a collapse of the Communist Party.
How would this work? First, it is highly improbable that any speech by a
U.S. official, even by the President, would force China to change its
corrupt ways. Corruption in China is too deeply entrenched and too
ancient of a tradition to be ended by a speech. Further, despite the
amazing volume of organizations, money, and laws (1,200 of the latter)
that have been used to attempt to fight corruption in China, corruption
has increased, not decreased.
While denouncing Chinese
corruption is unlikely to deny the U.S. the benefits of this corruption,
it will likely incite anger against the regime. Corruption in China is
well-known, but most Chinese I have talked to merely regard it as a fact
of life and not as an evil. It would not be particularly hard to show a
large swath of the Chinese people who corruption hurts them because
this is plainly evident in most parts of the country. If a speech by
Hilary Clinton or another prominent, well-known American were to call
corruption evil, it could incite some small-scale revolts against the
Chinese leadership, which would in turn weaken China. Even if that does
not happen, the end result is still good: China remains hobbled by
corruption while the U.S. gets a new image as a moral crusader for
justice.
