Congressman Ro Khanna Articulates Vision for Peaceful Competition with the PRC | Hoover Institution

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Monday, April 24, 2023
Hoover Institution | Stanford University

Hoover Institution (Stanford, CA) – Ro Khanna, US Congressman representing Silicon Valley, addressed an audience of students and other members of the Stanford community about his vision for achieving level and fair competition with China, reducing tensions in Sino-American relations, deterring People’s Liberation Army (PLA) aggression against Taiwan, and rebuilding America’s manufacturing base.

The program was hosted in partnership between the Hoover Institution and Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute. After his remarks, Khanna engaged in a conversation with Amy Zegart and Michael McFaul, senior fellows in both sponsoring Institutions.

In Khanna’s perspective, the dominant narrative about US-China competition being a new Cold War clouds prospects of achieving a just and enduring peace. To achieve and sustain that ideal in the current global landscape, Khanna is advocating for a constructive rebalancing with China.

Khanna’s strategy is built on four guiding principles:

An economic reset to reduce trade deficits and tensions between the United States and China
Open lines of communication between policy and business leaders on both sides of the Sino-American relationship

Economic Reset

Khanna argued that the economic opening of China and unfettered globalization had unintended economic, social, and political consequences for America since the turn of the century. Over the past two decades, 70,000 American factories were closed, and millions of jobs were shipped to China. In parts of America, China’s rapid economic rise at the expense of American industry contributed to the destabilization of families, the rise of lethal drug use, and a polarized political landscape.

In his remarks, Khanna advocated for reducing America’s trade deficit with China. He said rebalancing trade requires providing federal financing for critical factories and making substantial investments in key industries including aluminum, steel, paper, microelectronics, advanced auto parts, and climate technologies.

In closing the trade deficit, Khanna also argued that the United States should prevent Chinese officials from manipulating exchange rates in their favor; impose countervailing duties and tariffs on Chinese goods; urge China to buy more US products like pork, soybeans, and corn; and renegotiate World Trade Organization rules so that the WTO can punish China if it violates principles of free trade and basic human rights.

Open Lines of Communication

Khanna argued that maintaining lines of communication between the United States and China is critical to easing tension on both sides, avoiding the risk of war, and deescalating a conflict, should it occur, in the Taiwan Straits. Strong norms, he said, should be established around government-to-government and military-to-military communications lines.

Building Effective Deterrence

Nevertheless, Khanna said, it would be naïve to be complacent about the threats that China imposes on its neighbors, notably Taiwan. He urged the United States and its allies to signal clearly to China about the high price it would pay if the PLA launched a cross-strait assault.

Khanna said that establishing deterrence for Taiwan against China, while sustaining support for Ukraine in its fight with Russia, will require America to invoke the Defense Production Act and expand the number of weapons suppliers beyond America’s five big defense contractors.

Respect for Asian Partners

Khanna emphasized that in providing support for Taiwan, the United States must consider the preferences of the Taiwanese people. Despite their tensions with the Chinese Communist Party, Taiwanese receive enormous economic benefits from trade with the mainland. He said that while it is vital that the United States help strengthen Taiwan’s defenses, provocative actions must be avoided. To help maintain this delicate peace, Khanna advocated that the United States also reaffirm a commitment to a One China Policy and the status quo in cross-strait relations.

Khanna also said that the United States should build security and economic partnerships with India and other Asian partners based on mutual interests. Strengthening these like-minded actors and, in turn, encouraging multipolarity in Asia, he said, will help prevent China from posturing itself as the region’s hegemon.

Achieving Bipartisan Support to Rebuild American Manufacturing

In his conversation with Zegart and McFaul, Khanna said that he is hopeful that the United States can muster the resolve on a bipartisan basis to rebuild its manufacturing base to tackle twenty-first-century challenges. As an example, he pointed to America’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which, despite political dysfunction, resulted in the rapid development and delivery of vaccines and economic assistance to millions of Americans.
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Very much needed massage. All you need is make it happen, HOPE !!!

LuTube
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The manufacturing arrangement with China is certainly a problem. We need to have a wholistic approach to addressing the forces that drive the offshoring in the first place. The democrats believe the government can rebuild manufacturing through government action and double down on the regulations of businesses which are a big part of why the offshoring happens. This is not going to work.

andrewlm
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Some day, lack of required disclosure and lack of standing will become issues. I am Metacom’s Heir.

kingcrazymani
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I understand why the USA values Taiwan. During WWII Taiwan was known as the unsinkable aircraft carrier. Imperial Japan made great use of Taiwan during it's genocidal invasions of China. Taiwan was Japanese territory and served as an unsinkable military base. The alliance between the USA and Japan is a perfect fit.
Btw, I'm half Japanese, born and raised in the USA. My mother was a child in Imperial Japan.

t.c.s.
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1 Timothy 5:20 ESV

As for those who persist in sin, rebuke them in the presence of all, so that the rest may stand in fear.

teresasimpson
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Guy believes in competition, but argued for Affirmative Action. So glad the US imported his family after India got independence. 🙄 Your family fought for that and left 🤣😂.

MikeLiteraus