ao Zedong.
The revolutionary found- ing leader of the People's Republic
of China was aware of the racialist attitude of his own countrymen.
"What has come to light in various places in the last two or
three years shows that Han chauvinism exists almost everywhere.The problem in
the relations between nationalities which reveals itself in the Party and among
the people in many places is the existence of Han chauvinism to a serious degree
and not just a matter of its vestiges."
This was tackled in an inner-party directive drafted for the
Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, March 16, 1953. What was to
be done?
"Education must be assiduously carried out so that this
problem can be solved step by step. Moreover, the newspapers should publish more
articles based on specific facts to criticize Han chauvinism openly and educate
the Party members and the people."
"Han" is the Chinese brand for their race, "Han chauvinism"
is a form of Chinese racism, and now that China is a more powerful nation, the
tendency of stronger states to bully the smaller ones can parallel the
inclination of the majority nationality within a territory to intimidate the
ethnic minorities.
Mao himself warned his cadres thus, "We must never adopt an
arrogant attitude of great-power chauvinism and become conceited because of the
victory of our revolution and certain achievements in our construction."
["Opening Address at the Eighth National Congress of the Communist Party of
China," September 15, 1956]
Then again, "In Commemoration of Dr. Sun Yat-sen," November
1956, Mao predicted that "in the year 2001, or the beginning of the 21st
century, China will have undergone an even greater change. She will have become
a powerful socialist industrial country."
"But we must be modest.In our international relations, we
Chinese people should get rid of great-power chauvinism resolutely, thoroughly,
wholly and completely."
It is 2008 A.D. and do we now see this Han great-power
chauvinism at work in the Spratlys?
Mao's heirs, especially the Hu-Wen Administration, have to be
admonished that the combination of totalitarian governance, state-led
capitalism, burgeoning population and pent-up demand for territory is a
prescription for war.
Macapagal.
The former president of the Philippines surveyed political
systems three decades after his term. He evaluated Deng Xiaoping's "Four
Modernizations" and its predecessor. "Maoism was a disaster in material
terms.(It) led to impoverishment and even hunger for many." [Diosdado Macapagal.
Constitutional Democracy in the World. Manila: Santo Tomas University Press,
1993, p. 351]
In his appraisal, he showed pragmatism. "When the Chinese
speak of opening, the West ought not to expect an opening of the system.
Democratization does not mean the Communist Party is relinquishing its leading
role." [p. 272]
How can we now apply Macapagal's review of China?
Mahan, A.T., Captain, United States Navy
He was a proponent of naval power at the time when the Cubans
and the Filipinos were winning their national liberties via armed struggle. To
him the Americans listened, seeing clearly the wrangling among the European
powers and the strategic potential of the Pacific Ocean.
How should USA position itself? Where? Rivals? Mahan's
answer:
"It is a question for the whole civilized world and not for
the United States only, whether the Sandwich Islands, with their geographical
and military importance, unrivalled by that of any other position in the North
Pacific, shall in the future be an outpost of European civilization, or of the
comparative barbarism of China.
"It is sufficiently known, but not, perhaps, generally noted
in our country, that many military men abroad, familiar with Eastern conditions
and character, look with apprehension toward the day when the vast mass of China
- now inert - may yield to one of those impulses which have in past ages buried
civilization under a wave of barbaric invasion. The great armies of Europe,
whose existence is so frequently deplored, may be providentially intended as a
barrier to that great movement, if it come." ["Hawaii And Our Future Sea Power,"
Letter to the editor, New York Times, January 31, 1893]
As it turned out, the Philippines, possessing the greater
strategic and geopolitical value, was occupied by the Americans beginning in
1899, and its geo-economic role remains in the 21st century.
Like Spain, the US coveted the Philippines for its utility as
a springboard to China, among other reasons. Its characteristic as an unsinkable
base for naval and other operations and its proximity to the Asian mainland
makes our Archipelago a pawn and prize for the Eagle and the Dragon.
Finally, MacArthur, Douglas, Chief of Staff, United States Army, at the
University of Pittsburgh, June 8, 1932: "Pacific habits do not insure peace or
immunity from national insult and aggression."