Thursday, August 08, 2019

The Situation in Hong Kong: The 黑手 [black hand] of Foreign Interference and the Justification for Intervention





One of the most interesting elements of the developing situation in Hong Kong is the move, now several weeks old, by the Central Government authorities to build a very strong case that at the root of the conflicts in Hong Kong are agents provocateurs representing foreign powers. But not just any old foreign power--but the one foreign power with which China is currently engaged on multiple fronts in a fight for the redefinition of the relations between them. Of course I mean the United States.

In some respects Hong Kong offers a crisis form which China may well be tempted to seek advantage. One cannot blame them--the potential benefits are substantial. It provides a basis for legitimacy in intervention, it shifts focus form domestic conflict to foreign manipulation, and it may strengthen China's hand in both its current conflict with the United States over trade and in China's efforts to reshape the tenor and foundation of global international discourse (and China's place in the management of that narrative).

All of this is fair game, I suppose, within the rules of international engagement that have become the "new normal" after the rise of the current holders of positions of national leadership since 2014. A new historical era demands conformity to the rules (the "truths" of that era) that are manifested in the historical conditions within which states find themselves (the "facts" form which truth is derived). The Americans have themselves refined this technique for its own new era through the politics of "Russian interference" that has played a dominant role in the politics of discrediting the Trump administration.  This is a tool that anyone, then, can use, to their own strategic ends.

This considers some of the actions that may point to the development by Chinese authorities of a coherent strategy to re-frame the situation in Hong Kong from one of domestic disturbance to one of foreign interference requiring the intervention of central authorities. To that end it is necessary to identify a plausible foreign adversary, to find character evidence that suggests that this adversary has already engaged in such conduct elsewhere; and lastly to marshal evidence from which local interference might be surmised. 

1.  Identify a plausible foreign adversary.

In a prior post I noted the quite deliberate reference by Yang Guang  (杨光) to the  黑手 [black hand] of foreign interference (A Warning "Stop the storm and Restore Order!" [“止暴制乱、恢复秩序”!]: Statement by the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office of the State Council Official Views of Current State of Affairs in Hong Kong [国务院港澳办新闻发言人介绍对当前香港事态的看法]). The us eof the reference was made in this context:"我们还要向那些肆无忌惮的极少数暴力犯罪分子和他们背后的黑手发出警告;  中国一直称有外部的“黑手”卷入香港当前的事态; 这次政治风暴幕后黑手是--些敌视中国发展的势力 [We also want to warn those unscrupulous violent criminals and the black hands behind them; China has always said that there are external "black hands" involved in the current state of affairs in Hong Kong; The black hand behind the political storm is something that is hostile to China’s development.] ". 
But the references was also used to point to the role of the United States as an instigator.
 We can look for evidence or clues about what they are saying from public reports. Since the start of the revision of the Fugitive Offenders Regulations in February, some Western politicians and the Taiwan authorities have publicly stood at the forefront and made many remarks about reversing black and white and irresponsible remarks. Let's briefly review, for example, on March 21, the US State Department issued the "2019 US-Hong Kong Policy Law Report," which is much earlier than in previous years. It uses the word "regression" to describe Hong Kong's high degree of autonomy and has issued many statements. The rumors have threatened the rule of law in Hong Kong and eroded "one country, two systems." For example, in late March, the United States highly invited some of the opposition’s leading figures to visit the United States, and arranged for the Vice President and the Secretary of State to meet and support them. Less than two months later, senior US officials met with the so-called "anti-extradition amendments and the United States and Canada" led by the opposition figures. On June 13, some US lawmakers revisited the so-called "Hong Kong Bill of Rights on Human Rights and Democracy", arguing that they should regularly review or adjust their policies on Hong Kong and impose sanctions on relevant officials. In June, Pelosi said a famous saying, "The demonstrations in Hong Kong are a beautiful scenery." On June 25th, the former British Foreign Secretary Hunter asked Hong Kong to investigate the June 12 conflict. On July 8, the US Vice President and Secretary of State met with Li Zhiying respectively, openly discussing the issue of Hong Kong's amendments and Hong Kong's autonomy under "One Country, Two Systems." Wait a minute, there are still many, I will not go to read one by one, do not delay everyone's time. I think that these remarks have a common feature, that is, to support the demonstrators to support their strengths and encourage their efforts, and to point and intervene in the affairs of Hong Kong. The situation in Hong Kong has deteriorated to the point where it is today. Some violent militants dare to unscrupulously carry out illegal activities and dare to openly challenge the bottom line of the principle of "one country, two systems". I think this is inconsistent with the irresponsible remarks of some Western politicians and their ignorance. Open, their "contributions" to the chaos in Hong Kong are also very impressive.

Recently, Yang Jiechi, director of the Office of the Central Foreign Affairs Working Committee, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi have all accused the Western forces of interfering in Hong Kong affairs. Mr. Tung Chee-hwa, vice chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, also pointed out that the black hand behind this political storm is hostile to China's development. The fundamental purpose of the forces is to make Hong Kong a battleground for the international game and to make Hong Kong a base against the Central Committee as a pawn to contain China. This voice is righteous and stern, and a word breaks their bad intentions.

我们可以从公开的报道中去寻找你所说的他们干预的证据或者线索。从2月份《逃犯条例》修订工作启动以来,一些西方政客和台湾当局就公然站在前台指手画脚,发表了很多颠倒黑白、不负责任的言论。我们简单回顾一下,比如说3月21日,美国国务院发表《2019美国-香港政策法报告》,比往年大大提前,以“倒退”这两个字来形容香港的高度自治,并多次发表声明,妄言修例威胁了香港的法治,侵蚀了“一国两制”。再比如3月下旬,美国很高调地邀请了一些反对派的头面人物访美,并且安排了副总统和国务卿会见,为其撑腰打气。随后不到两个月,美国高官又分别会见了反对派头面人物所带领的所谓的“反对引渡修例美加团”。6月13日,美国一些议员重提所谓“香港人权与民主法案”,妄称要定期检讨或调整对港政策,对相关官员实施制裁。6月,佩洛西说了一句著名的话,“香港发生的游行示威是一道美丽的风景线”。6月25日,英国前外交大臣亨特要求香港就6月12日冲突进行调查。7月8日,美国副总统、国务卿分别会见了黎智英,公然议论香港修例问题,以及香港在“一国两制”下的自治地位。等等,还有很多,我就不一一去念了,不耽误大家时间了。我想,这些言论都有一个共同的特点,就是为示威者撑腰打气、擂鼓助威,对香港的事务指指点点、横加干涉。香港的局势恶化到今天这个地步,一些暴力激进分子敢于肆无忌惮地进行违法活动,敢于公然挑战“一国两制”的原则底线,我想这与一些西方政客不负责任的言论、与他们的煽风点火是分不开的,他们对香港的乱局所做的“贡献”也实在是很可观。

近期,中央外事工作委员会办公室主任杨洁篪,国务委员、外交部长王毅都斥责西方势力对香港事务的干涉,全国政协副主席董建华先生也一针见血地指出,这次政治风暴幕后黑手是一些敌视中国发展的势力,其根本目的就是要令香港变成国际博弈的战场,令香港变成反抗中央的基地,作为牵制中国的棋子。这个声音义正辞严,一语道破了他们的不良居心。(A Warning "Stop the storm and Restore Order!" [“止暴制乱、恢复秩序”!]:

But this was hardly the first time the Black Hand metaphor was used to identify the United States as a prime instigator of the conflict in Hong Kong. On 24 July 2019, Time Magazine's online version (China Urges U.S. to Remove ‘Black Hand’ From Hong Kong Protests) reported from a Bloomberg source the use of the Black Hand trope by a Chinese Foreign Ministry official:
There are “signs of foreign forces behind the protests,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters Tuesday in Beijing. “I wonder if these U.S. officials can truthfully answer to the world the role the U.S. has played in recent events in Hong Kong.”

Her comments came after the U.S. State Department on Monday said attacks on protesters and other bystanders by criminal gangs was “particularly disturbing,” according to a Voice of America report. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi had blamed the “black hand” of Western forces for stirring up trouble in Hong Kong last month, without singling out the U.S. (Ibid.; see also here (Reuters)).
Pointedly, perhaps, the South China Morning Post circulated a story of the American Secretary of State denying the allegation (Mike Pompeo rebukes China’s ‘ludicrous’ claim US is behind Hong Kong protests  ("US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said it is “ludicrous” for China to claim the United States is behind the escalating protests in Hong Kong.")). On 341 July CNN distributed an article that also considered the issue, but that also suggested a coordination of accusation with China's allies.  
Chinese state media has run multiple editorials blaming the US for the chaos. The state-run tabloid Global Times alleged Monday that there had been "unprecedented levels of contact" between Hong Kong pro-democracy leaders and Western governments.
"It is an open secret in Hong Kong that the forces protesting the extradition bill have been sponsored by the US," the paper said.
North Korea has also leveled such claims at the US. In an editorial on Friday, state-run media Rodong Sinmun claimed the protests were the "outcome of a plot hatched by the US and other Western countries."
However, neither country has provided any evidence for its allegations. At the press conference, Hua only made reference to public meetings between well-known Hong Kong pro-democracy leaders and US politicians.  (China is blaming the US for the Hong Kong protests. Can that really be true?).
 On the other hand, members of the US Congress, and elements of US civil society (sometimes in coordination with other Western civil society communities) have expressed views that have irritated the Central Government. The Central Government has tended to lump these unremarkable expressions of opinions by foreign officials and civil society elements as interference as well. "China’s Foreign Ministry had strong words this week for members of the U.S. Congress weighing in on the Hong Kong protests: “Any attempt to interfere in Hong Kong affairs and China’s internal affairs is doomed to fail.”" (US Lawmakers Are Watching Hong Kong, and China Isn’t Happy About That).  
At a regular press conference on August 7, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying was asked about recent statements from U.S. Senators Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas) and Mitt Romney (R-Utah) expressing concern about the repression of protests in Hong Kong. Hua slammed the senators for “smear[ing] the just actions taken by the Hong Kong police.” She argued that “The recent protests and demonstrations in Hong Kong have turned into radical violent behaviors that seriously violate the law, undermine security and social order in Hong Kong, and endanger local people’s safety, property and normal life.” * * * Hua had a similar response when asked about comments from U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-California):
Nancy Pelosi and some other U.S. politicians have been calling white black time and again, bolstering violent radical criminals and even justifying and whitewashing their behaviors. They’ve also wantonly smeared and vilified the just move of the SAR [special administrative region] government and police to uphold the rule of law and order. This is no different from covering up, conniving at and supporting illegal criminal behaviors, which again reveals their malicious intention of anti-China and messing up Hong Kong. (US Lawmakers Are Watching Hong Kong, and China Isn’t Happy About That)
From the perspective of Chinese strategies to shift focus to interference, this might prove distracting at best and might dissipate the power of the argument they have put forward.  But only time will tell.The Chinese are likely especially irritated about the possibility of the enactment of a "Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act” (S.417 introduced in the Senate by Marco Rubio (R-FL), which Pelsoi suggested was now on the table in the House, and which has been supported by influential U.S. elites.  Yet such political acts in response to foreign decisions have been quite common for China, especially when it is deemed to affect political or strategic interests of the Central Government.  Yet, it is hard to resist the perceived value of connecting these acts with the situation actually on the ground in Hong Kong.  And to some extent, of course, such actions may may indirect effect--by signally to local elements  the changing political consequences for China abroad of contemplated responses within China.
 
2. Find character evidence that suggests that this adversary has already engaged in such conduct elsewhere


This one is fairly easy.  First China can point to the US  Global Magnitsky Act projects as inherently designed to project US power (and thus interference) abroad.  But recently China has sought to create the inference of the plausibility of Hong Kong interference by making claims about the tendency of the US to interfere in other places.  Most recently that was noted by the high profile Central Government condemnation of what it termed US interference in Venezuela (China condemns U.S. 'interference' in Venezuela).

But interference claims go much deeper in China.  They tie into old fears of the revival of US encirclement policies, which fueled opposition to TPP (see here). And it underlies Chinese sensitivities with respect to US-Taiwan relationships (Chinese State Media Slams U.S. 'Flagrant Interference' With Huge Taiwan Weapons Deal ("The People's Daily editorial suggested that the Taiwan weapons deal was just one element of American efforts to "contain China." It added that the "irresponsible practice of the U.S." will raise tensions, and warned that American leaders "should not take chances and keep walking on the wrong path."")). It has guided Chinese thinking in 2018 opposing portions of the North American trade deal (Chinese embassy in Canada condemns ‘US veto’ clause in North America trade deal). Taking a cue from Western discourse, Chinese diplomatic statements have become more pointed in a way recognizable to Western audiences.
China’s diplomats have become increasingly vocal and outspoken. This month, China’s ambassador to London, Liu Xiaoming, gave a rare televised statement accusing the British government of meddling in Hong Kong, the scene of mass protests against Beijing’s rule. Earlier this year, China’s envoy to Canada publicly accused his hosts of “white supremacy,” while the country’s chief envoy in South Africa said President Donald Trump’s policies were making the U.S. “the enemy of the whole world.” ('You Are a Racist Disgrace.' Former National Security Advisor Susan Rice Chides 'Ignorant' Diplomat on Twitter (July 2019)).
The structural components become visible in this wider context.  Like a good lawyer seeking to draw an inference of a likelihood that an accused acted in a particular way by pointing to a pattern of similar conduct in the past, the Central Government is seeking to make plausible its claims of interference by making a case that US foreign action is itself undeniably driven by an impulse to interfere.  This pays additional dividends.  First it advances Chinese efforts to develop its own model of internationalism based on principles of non-interference (for which an antipode in the form of the US is required).  Second, it makes the case for a greater room to maneuver in Hong Kong.  Third, it can be useful in managing its trade dispute with the US.  And fourth, it may aid in advancing Belt and Road initiatives. Whatever happens in Hong Kong, this initiative likely has staying power.

3. Marshal evidence from which local interference might be surmised.
 (Source)

China has continually pointed to meetings between Hong Kong individuals identified as part of the protest movement and U.S. officials. The Tweet distributed 8 August through the People's Daily is one example. Indeed, the meeting that was pictured in that Tweet also sparked an official response from the Central Government:
Also Thursday [8 August 2019], the Chinese foreign ministry's office in Hong Kong issued a formal protest over a reported meeting between U.S. consular officials in the city and opposition figures, including prominent activist Joshua Wong. The statement demanded the U.S. explain the purpose of the meeting and "immediately cease interfering in Hong Kong affairs." (China is blaming the US for the Hong Kong protests. Can that really be true?).
CT Post reporting for Bloomberg provided more detail: "China's foreign ministry, which has previously said Hong Kong's ongoing unrest was "the creation of the U.S.," urged American diplomats in a statement to "draw a clear line with all anti-Chinese rioters, stop sending wrong signals to illegal violators, stop meddling in Hong Kong affairs, and stop going further down the wrong path."" (China warns U.S. after diplomat meets with prominent protesters).

The meeting was highlighted in a pro-Central Government newspaper (Wen Wei Po).  But the response from Mr. Wong and U.S. officials was one of studied indifference.  It was reported this way:
"Representatives of the United States Government meet regularly with a wide cross section of people across Hong Kong and Macau," said consulate spokesman Harvey Sernovitz. "For example, the day of this particular meeting, our diplomats also met with both pro-establishment and pan-democratic camp legislators, as well as members of the American business community and the consular corps."

In a Facebook statement on Wednesday, Wong acknowledged that he had met with a U.S. diplomat but shrugged off allegations that the meeting was proof of foreign interference.

"In the past, I've also visited Washington and communicated directly with U.S. lawmakers," he wrote. "This meeting is nothing special."

They discussed the legislative process of passing the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, Wong said, adding that he also urged the U.S. to stop exporting tear gas and rubber bullets to the Hong Kong police. (China warns U.S. after diplomat meets with prominent protesters).
Additional individuals have been identified in tweets that are circulating (e.g., here). These suggest the possibility that the Central government or SAR authorities are already building cases for prosecutions against identified individuals that may in part be strengthened by the development of the "Black Hand" theory now circulated by the Central Government.


Still, the battle lines have been drawn.  And the consultation on the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act can only add fuel to the Central Government's fire seeking to connect the dots between local protestors and the U.S.  Yet again, it may make a difference to distinguish between direct interference and indirect engagement with local effects.  One is reminded here of the way that the Chinese Foreign Ministry has continuously shrugged off Australian and New Zealand allegations of interference for its meetings, consultations, and statements directed toward Australian education (see, e.g., here, here, here, and here).

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