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    <div class="moz-cite-prefix">On Monday 30 April 2018 01:16 PM,
      Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:<br>
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            <div style="direction: ltr;">So what do you propose,
              introducing a narrow and slanted Chinese POV (which does
              rather smack of propaganda) as some sort of balance?<br>
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    <br>
    Suresh, I have not ever responded to your emails for many many years
    now bec our exchanges have tended not to go very well... But in the
    interest of seeking a new beginning for these IG civil society
    spaces, I'd make an exception. <br>
    <br>
    No, I do not propose introducing any "narrow and slanted Chinese
    POV" to try and balance.... BTW, the referred article which you say
    smacks of propaganda comes from Milton Mueller led IGP's (Internet
    Governance Project) website, and there have been similar articles on
    that website, and  I understand it is within overall IGP's policy
    direction.... I do not think anyone can plausibly characterise IGP's
    policy orientation as being of promoting Chinese propaganda!<br>
    <br>
    On the other hand, as my note below characterising China as one of
    the global digital power seeking to dominate the world shows, I am
    equally critical of China's digital imperial tendencies.. For
    instance I wrote <a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/columns/a-borderless-economy-that-will-be-controlled/article8581476.ece">this
      oped on China's global e-commerce ambitions</a>. And a few  hours
    back forwarded to another elist <a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2143899/forget-facebook-leak-china-mining-data-directly-workers-brains?utm_source=Mailer&utm_medium=ET_batch&utm_campaign=etcio_news_2018-04-30">this
      article as a major horror in the making</a> .. <br>
    <br>
    What I propose is developing and implementing a genuinely global
    public interest oriented strategy, with a marked partiality towards
    the weaker and disadvantaged groups (as civil society should always
    take) -- and in this regard to recognise and discard the habitual
    pro US-led western powers and big business aligned stands that
    global civil society in IG has become accustomed to take... <br>
    <br>
    parminder <br>
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      <div class="gmail_quote">On Mon, Apr 30, 2018 at 1:05 PM +0530,
        "parminder" <span dir="ltr"><<a
            href="mailto:parminder@itforchange.net" target="_blank"
            moz-do-not-send="true">parminder@itforchange.net</a>></span>
        wrote:<br>
        <br>
        <blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0
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            <p><font face="Verdana">And it is not old history at all....
                <br>
              </font></p>
            <p><font face="Verdana">Just now I see this call by OECD for
                a global dialogue on AI 
                <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.oecd-forum.org/users/42484-douglas-frantz/posts/21562-artificial-intelligence-why-a-global-dialogue-is-critical"
                  moz-do-not-send="true">https://www.oecd-forum.org/users/42484-douglas-frantz/posts/21562-artificial-intelligence-why-a-global-dialogue-is-critical</a></font></p>
            <p><font face="Verdana">But reading on one realises that
                with a global dialogue, OECD means not a UN based one,
                where are countries are equal, but an OECD led
                dialogue...  (which IG civil society has customarily
                cheered and participated in, while condemning any
                possible UN process)<br>
              </font></p>
            <p><font face="Verdana">One squirms to hear so many calls
                now-a-days for global dialogues, rules and agreements,
                just as an example, Wired carries one such all today "<a
                  moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.wired.com/story/data-protection-standards-need-to-be-global">Data
                  protection standards need to be global</a>" ... There
                are others on AI, and so on...<br>
              </font></p>
            <p>But wait a minute, was it not just this January of 2018,
              that the UN WG on Enhanced Cooperation (on International
              Internet-related polices) closed without a report because
              not only the western countries and the big business but
              also the Internet community and much of IG civil society
              could not agree there really were Internet/ digital
              governance issues that needed global addressing (other
              than perhaps as they were already being addressed by the
              OECD, World Economic Forum and the such)....</p>
            <p>And the only comment one heard was from Milton at the IGP
              cheering the failure of the WG on enhanced cooperation!
              Not another word on the subject by anyone...</p>
            <p>Is there any global civil society in any other area which
              is so bereft of ideas, imagination, forward-looking
              proposals, much less of accountability and progressive
              notions like working for the weakest, social justice,
              economic rights, and so on.... Could we yet reassemble and
              take up our responsibilities... <br>
            </p>
            <p>parminder <br>
            </p>
            <br>
            <div class="moz-cite-prefix">On Monday 30 April 2018 12:50
              PM, parminder wrote:<br>
            </div>
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              cite="mid:eed23277-ddd0-09fd-8b65-3f780b114d3e@itforchange.net">
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              <p>I hardly ever post to these lists now-a-days, because
                rarely are substantive issues posted here in any case,
                but thought of forwarding this because this refers to my
                - by now, favourite :) - issue of pointing to the
                culpability of civil society actors in the IG space over
                the last one decade or so in being partisan to narrow US
                led western interests and having considerably forgotten
                to promote global public interest, and the interests of
                the weakest sections, groups and countries. And, as
                often happens in the mid to long term, such partisanship
                is no longer serving even western interests that well. <br>
              </p>
              <div class="moz-forward-container">My posting and
                engagement on this issue are aimed at proposing and
                promoting an effort at a collective rethink and
                re-orientation among the IG civil society about its
                politics and role, as we enter a digital society where
                Internet or digital governance is one of the most
                important political subjects. <br>
                <br>
                parminder<br>
                <br>
                -------- Forwarded Message --------
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                      <th valign="BASELINE" align="RIGHT"
                        nowrap="nowrap">Subject: </th>
                      <td>[JNC - Forum] US-China digital cold war is
                        well and truly under-way</td>
                    </tr>
                    <tr>
                      <th valign="BASELINE" align="RIGHT"
                        nowrap="nowrap">Date: </th>
                      <td>Mon, 30 Apr 2018 12:34:50 +0530</td>
                    </tr>
                    <tr>
                      <th valign="BASELINE" align="RIGHT"
                        nowrap="nowrap">From: </th>
                      <td>parminder <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E"
                          href="mailto:parminder@itforchange.net"
                          moz-do-not-send="true"><parminder@itforchange.net></a></td>
                    </tr>
                    <tr>
                      <th valign="BASELINE" align="RIGHT"
                        nowrap="nowrap">Reply-To: </th>
                      <td>Internet governance related discussions <a
                          class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E"
                          href="mailto:forum@justnetcoalition.org"
                          moz-do-not-send="true"><forum@justnetcoalition.org></a></td>
                    </tr>
                    <tr>
                      <th valign="BASELINE" align="RIGHT"
                        nowrap="nowrap">To: </th>
                      <td>Forum@Justnetcoalition. Org <a
                          class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E"
                          href="mailto:forum@justnetcoalition.org"
                          moz-do-not-send="true"><forum@justnetcoalition.org></a></td>
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                  </tbody>
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                <p><br>
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                <p>As in the earlier times, cold war alignments were
                  determined by, or determined, where a country acquired
                  its armaments from, in the digital cold war there is
                  going to be a similar schism in terms of whose digital
                  security equipment you finally trust and buy, as
                  everything gets underpinned by the 'digital'....
                  Coupled with the  "digital security" based
                  polarisation will be data flows polarisation -- EU is
                  determining adequacy tests about where its data can
                  flow to, the new US CLOUD Act is determining adequacy
                  test about which countries can access data residing in
                  the US for regulatory and law enforcement
                  purposes..... <br>
                </p>
                <p>We were headed towards such a polarisation when, over
                  the last decade or so, we rejected global institutions
                  and agreements for Internet and digital governance...
                  What is significant is the role that civil society
                  groups played in such rejection, and thus must share
                  the blame of the oncoming digital polarisation which
                  leaves all countries that are not the US and China at
                  the abject mercy of these digital super powers ...
                  parminder<br>
                </p>
                <p><br>
                </p>
                <p><br>
                </p>
                <p><a id="reader-domain" class="domain"
href="https://www.internetgovernance.org/2018/04/29/a-chinese-perspective-on-the-growing-high-tech-cold-war/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+internetgovernance%2FabwE+%28IGP+Blog%29"
                    moz-do-not-send="true">internetgovernance.org</a> </p>
                <h1 id="reader-title">A Chinese Perspective on the
                  Growing High-Tech Cold War</h1>
                <div id="reader-credits" class="credits">by Jinhe Liu</div>
                <div id="meta-data" class="meta-data">
                  <div id="reader-estimated-time">9-12 minutes</div>
                </div>
                <hr>
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                        <p><span>In Chinese online discussions, many
                            people are using the expression “one sword
                            throat-slashing strike.” [一剑封喉] This
                            forbidding term refers to the United States’
                            seven-year export ban on China’s </span><a
href="https://www.commerce.gov/news/press-releases/2018/04/secretary-ross-announces-activation-zte-denial-order-response-repeated"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>second-largest
                              telecom supplier, ZTE</span></a><span>,
                            which threatens its very existence and has
                            put the company “</span><a
href="http://www.scmp.com/tech/article/2142557/zte-calls-us-government-ban-extremely-unfair-vows-fight-its-rights"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>in a state of
                              shock.</span></a><span>” In the Chinese
                            language, the “one sword throat-slashing
                            strike” means that in battle a master
                            swiftly strikes a death blow before the
                            victim has a chance to resist. Chinese use
                            of this idiom with high frequency in the
                            context of the Sino-US trade war shows that
                            there is both a feeling of helplessness and
                            a fighting atmosphere dispersing though the
                            Chinese society.</span></p>
                        <p><span>In January this year, the United States
                            blocked Chinese tech company Alibaba’s
                            acquisition of American remittance company
                            MoneyGram; also in the name of national
                            security it forced AT&T to end
                            cooperation with Huawei. At the same time,
                            the Trump administration ordered high
                            tariffs on imported steel and aluminum and
                            threatened several rounds of tariffs on
                            China. On March 22nd, Trump signed the
                            presidential memorandum and announced the
                            Section 301 investigation of China, which
                            was widely regarded as the focus of the
                            outbreak of trade disputes between China and
                            the United States. In April 16th, the United
                            States launched its “throat-slashing strike”
                            on ZTE. While some analysts are still
                            discussing whether a Sino-US trade war will
                            happen, on the other side of the Pacific the
                            war fire has already begun to burn, as a
                            sense of economic conflict develops between
                            the two largest economies in the world. The
                          </span><i><span>New York Times Chinese version</span></i><span>
                            characterized the Sino-US dispute over
                            technology and trade as a “</span><a
href="https://cn.nytimes.com/business/20180326/trump-china-tariffs-tech-cold-war/"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>New Cold War
                              Era</span></a><span>.”</span></p>
                        <p><span>After the news of the US sanctions on
                            ZTE came on April 16, all of China is
                            engaged in a big discussion of this event. A
                            large number of articles about it emerge in
                            the mainstream media and social media
                            platforms every day. The strength of the
                            reaction have probably exceeded the
                            expectations of American society, and even
                            China’s own. On the whole, Chinese society
                            has discovered that its high-tech industry
                            is weak and unable to resist the US punch,
                            especially because of its dependence on US
                            semiconductors. It has been pointed out that
                            none of the 20 top semiconductor companies
                            in the world is in mainland China (see the
                            table below, which shows only the top 10).
                            Civil society, academia, industry, and even
                            the government are contemplating the
                            fragility of China’s industrial development
                            and trying to provide effective solutions.
                            The fact that ZTE violated American law has
                            not been evaded in China. But China fears
                             that just as a few days ago America
                            launched a precise strike against Syria, the
                            United States is now launching an accurate
                            and fatal strike to Chinese national
                            enterprises.</span></p>
                        <p><br>
                        </p>
                        <p><span>After ZTE’s violation of the embargo
                            two years ago, it has paid  892 million US
                            dollars for its mistakes and has reached a
                            settlement agreement with the US government.
                            Because this strong penalty against ZTE was
                            closely followed by the fierce Sino-US
                            tariff war, Chinese people do not believe
                            that America’s main concern is just ZTE’s
                            violation of the sanctions. According to the
                          </span><i><span>Wall Street Journal</span></i><span>,
                            the US Trade Representative Office (USTR) is
                          </span><a
href="https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-is-examining-ways-to-retaliate-against-chinese-restrictions-on-u-s-tech-companies-1523910784?"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>considering
                              actions against the business of Alibaba
                              Cloud</span></a><span> in the US. </span><a
href="https://www.uscc.gov/sites/default/files/Research/Interos_Supply%20Chain%20Vulnerabilities%20from%20China%20in%20U.S.%20Federal%20ICT.pdf"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>A US
                              congressional report </span></a><span>also
                            accuses other Chinese companies, such as
                            Huawei and Lenovo, of facilitating
                            commercial espionage. The latest news shows
                            that the US Justice Department </span><a
href="https://www.wsj.com/articles/huawei-under-criminal-investigation-over-iran-sanctions-1524663728"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>has launched an
                              investigation</span></a><span> into
                            whether Huawei breaks the Iran embargo. This
                            series of actions make the Chinese worry
                            that ZTE is just the first step in a bigger
                            war.</span></p>
                        <p><span>Americans may not realize that these
                            actions can be counterproductive. They
                            provoke nationalistic sentiment in Chinese
                            society. In history, whenever China has
                            encountered damaging and perceived unfair
                            treatment from outside, there was always a
                            strong nationalistic reaction. Signs of this
                            familiar pattern are appearing again. On
                            April 6, China’s central news agency used
                            very tough words and phrases after the extra
                            tariff on China’s $100 billion exports to
                            the US was announced, such as “the Chinese
                            will struggle resolutely! And do not blame
                            us for not having forewarned you!” [勿谓言之不预!]
                            These words are generally used for the
                            announcement of a war in Chinese diplomatic
                            rhetoric. The ZTE chairman said that “we
                            have the support of 1.3 billion (Chinese)
                            people, and we have the ability and
                            determination to tide over this difficulty,”
                            after Hou Weigui, the founder of ZTE,
                            retired and at 76 years old, rushed to the
                            United States to plead but without any
                            fruit, which aroused huge empathy by </span><a
href="https://m.21jingji.com/article/20180419/herald/2778441bb91bbbe0189f188b09405445.html"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>a picture </span></a><span>spread
                            widely in WeChat, the biggest social media
                            in China . Then ZTE further issued </span><a
href="http://www.zte.com.cn/global/about/press-center/news/201804CZY/20180420-1"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>a statement </span></a><span>that
                            the sanction was “unacceptable.”
                            Subsequently, a spokesman for China’s
                            Ministry of Commerce also made a strong
                            statement, saying that China is “ready to
                            take necessary measures to safeguard the
                            legitimate rights and interests of Chinese
                            enterprises.” Chinese netizens even began to
                            discuss whether the country should take
                            corresponding measures on Apple, widely
                            quoting an </span><a
href="https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeanbaptiste/2018/04/18/study-what-if-china-bans-apple-to-retaliate-for-u-s-sanctions-against-huawei-zte/#49d1bf0b1e5d"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>article in
                              Forbes</span></a><span> which suggests
                            that if China retaliates against Apple, it
                            will cause massive layoffs and crash in its
                            stock price. </span></p>
                        <p><span>The US moves have also encouraged
                            high-level political leaders in China to
                            push for abandoning American products and
                            developing their own high-tech industries.
                            Chinese President Xi Jinping stressed on
                            April 21</span><span>st</span><span> that
                            “core technology is the pillar of the
                            country” at the national network security
                            and information conference. And the Premier
                            Li Keqiang also spoke at the Executive
                            meeting of the State Council to promote a
                            national innovation system aiming at science
                            and technology development. In fact, Chinese
                            are concerned not only about the economic
                            losses of the US sanctions, but also about
                            inadequate self-protection, and, what is
                            more, about the future of international
                            trade.</span></p>
                        <p><span>In a more profound context, these
                            actions of China and the United States are
                            not only solutions to the trade deficit, but
                            an abandonment of globalization. Since the
                            end of the US-Soviet Cold War, the world
                            entered a golden age of “neoliberal”
                            globalization. International trade promoted
                            the growth of the world economy. According
                            to </span><a
href="https://www.wto.org/english/res_e/statis_e/wts2017_e/WTO_Chapter_03_e.pdf"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>the statistics
                              of the World Bank</span></a><span>,
                            whereas the average growth rate of world
                            trade in goods was 1.5 times that of the
                            world’s GDP since the end of World War II,
                            and in the 1990s trade grew more than twice
                            as fast as GDP. Trade exchanges between
                            China and the United States have brought
                            great benefits to both sides. The low-cost
                            manufacturing industry in China provides a
                            continuous supply for the high consumption
                            society of the United States. The huge
                            demand and advanced industrial technology of
                            the United States have brought a strong pull
                            to the Chinese economy. While the order of
                            economic globalization was established by
                            the United States, it is now the United
                            States who destroys it. Today’s trading
                            system is so closely intertwined that it is
                            not all beneficial for the US to undermine
                            the order it built. The share prices of
                            ZTE’s U.S. suppliers fell on the news of the
                            ZTE ban. </span><a
href="https://www.brookings.edu/blog/the-avenue/2018/04/09/how-chinas-tariffs-could-affect-u-s-workers-and-industries/"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>Research by
                              Brookings </span></a><span>also points
                            out that China’s proposed tariffs would
                            affect about 2.1 million jobs spread across
                            2,783 US counties.</span></p>
                        <p><span>The damage wrought to the Sino-US
                            economy and the global economy by a trade
                            war will be huge, but it is even more
                            worrying that the global free trade order is
                            being disrupted. On the Boao Asia Forum on
                            April 10th, </span><a
href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/11/business/xi-jinping-china-trade-boao.html?mtrref=www.google.com&gwh=D31A11675F599E1C6551FFB29003BCA7&gwt=pay"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>Xi Jinping
                              announced further opening up </span></a><span>of
                            the Chinese market and strengthening the
                            protection of intellectual property to
                            integrate China deeper into the world trade
                            system. But the Trump administration seems
                            to ignore this deliberately. As mentioned
                            above, Chinese society is worried mainly
                            about the prospect of its national
                            development in the context of the times.
                            Therefore, if more trade wars happen, it is
                            not only likely to lead to China’s
                            aggressive self-protection measures but also
                            is likely to have a far-reaching impact on
                            how Chinese understand international rules.
                            Solving the impartiality of trade rules is a
                            process that requires stakeholders to sit
                            down and negotiate. A direct blockade might
                            well backfire.</span></p>
                        <p><span>If we look at the Sino-US trade dispute
                            from the perspective of Internet governance,
                            it can be found that the Internet seems to
                            be splitting up. A one-world Internet should
                            be interconnected across the borders of
                            states, but now territorial governments are
                            trying to strengthen their control by
                            aligning the Internet with national
                            jurisdictions. China has selectively
                            rejected the products of some American
                            Internet giants, and now, the United States
                            has also begun to block China’s products. </span><a
href="https://www.internetgovernance.org/2018/01/05/cfius-blocks-deal-u-s-becoming-chinese/"
                            moz-do-not-send="true"><span>The United
                              States is becoming Chinese</span></a><span>.
                            The state has labeled Internet equipment one
                            by one and excludes it from its own
                            territory in the name of national security
                            or the protection of its own industries.
                            Some commentaries assert that the actions by
                            the United States against Huawei and ZTE are
                            trying to keep the US the leading position
                            in the 5G technology. But the establishment
                            of walls to exclude competition deviates
                            from liberalism. The United States is a
                            strong advocate of the freedom of the
                            Internet. It developed the multi-stakeholder
                            model, advocated bottom-up technical
                            autonomy and open industrial competition; it
                            has resisted giving governments too much
                            control of the Internet. But now, on the
                            contrary, the government of the world’s most
                            powerful Internet country is holding high
                            the banner of national security to expel
                            market actors who place it at a competitive
                            disadvantage. </span></p>
                        <p><span>When the advocates of rules break the
                            rules, global confidence is badly damaged.
                            But it is still hopeful that United States
                            Secretary of the Treasury Mnuchin is on his
                            way to China to negotiate. So the rule of
                            free trade and Internet openness has not
                            been completely abandoned yet.</span></p>
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