The Problem With Jon Stewart - U.S.-China Tensions: Threat Inflation and Balloon Deflation
Episode Date: February 8, 2023When a Chinese spy balloon was spotted above the U.S. last week, Americans reacted the only way they know how—by shooting it out of the sky with a missile. But why do we keep insisting that... China is our sworn enemy? We’re talking with Jessica Chen Weiss, the Michael J. Zak Professor for China and Asia-Pacific Studies at Cornell and Senior Fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute’s Center for China Analysis, and John Glaser, adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and host of Cato’s Power Problems podcast. We discuss America’s reflexive urge to escalate even the smallest threat, why our geopolitical position is actually way more secure than we’re led to believe, and whether we might figure out a way to share the world stage with China. Writers Tocarra Mallard and Robby Slowik also join us to talk about why the State of the Union is always so overdramatic. Season 2 is now streaming on Apple TV+.CREDITS
Hosted by: Jon Stewart Featuring, in order of appearance: Tocarra Mallard, Robby Slowik, Jessica Chen Weiss, John Glaser Executive Produced by Jon Stewart, Brinda Adhikari, James Dixon, Chris McShane, and Richard PleplerLead Producer: Sophie EricksonProducers: Zach Goldbaum, Caity GrayAssoc. Producer: Andrea Betanzos Sound Engineer: Miguel CarrascalSenior Digital Producer: Freddie MorganDigital Producer: Cassie MurdochDigital Coordinator: Norma HernandezSupervising Producer: Lorrie BaranekHead Writer: Kris AcimovicElements Producer: Kenneth HullClearances Producer: Daniella PhilipsonSenior Talent Producer: Brittany MehmedovicTalent Manager: Marjorie McCurryTalent Coordinator: Lukas ThimmSenior Research Producer: Susan Helvenston Theme Music by: Gary Clark Jr.The Problem With Jon Stewart podcast is an Apple TV+ podcast, produced by Busboy Productions. https://apple.co/-JonStewart
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Hold on, hold on.
I wish I could figure out, okay, speaker,
I just switched it to speaker, come on.
Welcome to Evenings with Grandpa.
All right, here we go.
Hello everybody, welcome once again to the podcast,
The Problem with me, The Problem, John Stuart.
This is the, I don't know what it is,
first week of February, second week of February.
It all runs together when it's winter time and you're aging.
Don't forget to watch the Apple TV Plus show.
We got more episodes coming.
I like everybody else right now and beyond myself.
In fear of balloons, they could be coming from anywhere,
ladies and gentlemen, they could be coming from the north,
from the south.
If they are to rub together and you feel the hair on the
nape of your neck go up, that is just static electricity.
That is not the Chinese in any way trying to infiltrate
into your spinal column.
But these balloons are obviously very dangerous.
And today's program, we're going to talk to Jessica Chen,
Vice Professor of China and Asia Pacific Studies at Cornell
and Kato Institute Scholar, John Glazer,
about why we're not at war already.
Are we to just stand here on our hands and let balloons run
roughshod over this great country that we all love?
Takara Mallard and Robbie Sloak, our writers,
are joining us today.
Guys, thank you very much for being here.
I hope you are staying safe.
I crawled out of the bunker to be here.
I crawled out of the bunker.
The second I saw that balloon in the sky, I went underground.
I knew it was time.
When I was a boy, balloons were nothing but joy.
They were either at your birthday party or they were a blimp
overhanging a football stadium.
But ever since the movie It,
balloons have been nothing but danger for this world.
Yes, yes, China and clowns working together again
to instill fear in our hearts.
Is that what they're doing?
Takara, have you been safe?
Now you have children who are still somehow naive
about the power of balloons.
I'm sure when you go somewhere and they offer them a balloon,
they will say, sure, I'd love a balloon,
not realizing the Chinese, Takara.
I have a patriotic household.
There are no balloons welcome in my home.
Can I tell you something?
You're an excellent American and I've always said that.
Thank you so much.
And this balloon situation has been in the news
for like a week now.
This killed me.
CNN tweeted, tonight's planned broadcast of Dionne Warwick.
Don't make me over.
We'll be preempted for continuing live coverage
of the US military's downing of a Chinese surveillance balloon.
Wild.
However, there are some people who are taking this incredibly
seriously and like balloon is like code word for weapon.
So like, you know, they're, you know, they're talking about,
they're on CNN or Fox News talking about TikTok.
And they're like, a hundred million people have TikTok.
That's like a balloon in every home.
And it's just like, well, that's a party.
Will the balloon now be the metaphor?
Like in the way that the Trojan horse is done.
Absolutely.
The Chinese balloon is the new Trojan horse.
I think Maria Bartiroma was saying something along the lines of
this balloon when it, were they planning on it being shot down
and now it's dispersed thousands of solar powered surveillance
devices for forever.
That's wild.
Unlimited surveillance.
And you're like, they have fucking satellites.
What is wrong with you people?
Yeah.
She blamed woke transgenderism in the military.
And, you know, when you talk about threat inflation,
the rights work on trans people.
Boy, what a textbook.
What a textbook example of threat inflation.
That's their fucking Chinese surveillance balloon.
Watching the media like fight with themselves here to like elevate
the threat, but also have fun with a light store.
There's literally like, they're like, tensions are already high with
the nuclear superpower.
And experts are concerned this could degrade into a human annihilation event.
Or is it all just hot air?
They're like, they're like.
They still got to do the punny segues that are the hallmark of any,
of any fine news organization.
Yeah.
You know, it's just nuts.
They're all, and the news anchors have to pretend that they're also very
sad about it.
They're very hug, hug your children tonight, folks.
But while you're doing that, I'm going to come all over the teleprompter
because I am excited.
Time of my life.
Dionne Warwick will not be heard tonight for continuing balloon coverage.
But we'll learn more about it and what is to be done of this balloon
transgression with our two guests.
And then we'll come back and you guys let me know what you think.
Fantastic.
All right.
All right, everybody.
This is very exciting.
Two great guests today.
We've got Jessica Chen Weiss.
She is the Michael Zach Professor for China and Asia's Pacific studies
at Cornell University, senior fellow at the Asia Society Center for
China Analysis.
And we have John Glazer, Cato Institute Scholar and host of Cato's
Power Problems podcast.
Hi there.
Good to meet you.
Thank you both for joining us here today to talk about.
It has been two days, three days since China traversed our airspace,
our airspace with a balloon.
Why are we not at war yet?
Shouldn't we have fired nuclear missiles by now?
I want to hear your thoughts.
First, we'll start with Jessica.
Is it your sense that America is slightly overreacting to what is a
banal provocation between two countries that are so intertwined
economically and security-wise?
What do you think is happening?
I think it's a really unfortunate symbol of where we are at this point in
our relationship with China.
There was definitely a degree of domestic overreaction, particularly on
Twitter and amongst a number of the commentariat, including sitting
members of Congress.
I was at the administration, handled it pretty prudently.
But ultimately, I think their hand was a bit forced by the domestic
outcry.
There's a looming symbol in our sky of something alien.
Nonetheless, I think this was really a blunder on the Chinese side in
terms of the left hand not knowing exactly what the right hand was
doing on the eve of Secretary Blinken's visit, the first time in
several years to China.
And so it really, I think, has made it harder to get to that place of
greater stability in the US-China relationship that that visit by
Secretary Blinken was really aiming at.
Jessica brings up an excellent point, John, which is an overreaction by
our commentariat and Twitter and a government that reacts.
And the only question I have about the prudent response from the United
States is, it was a balloon.
And we shot it down with, I think, a missile from a $200 million airplane
when, from what I understand, and I've been to Coney Island many times,
I think a dart may have done it.
I think we could have done it with a tack, maybe a pin, something along
those lines.
What's your thoughts on that idea that we've overreacted to a sort
of banal provocation?
Yeah, I think we're overreacting.
And I think threat inflation is kind of baked into a lot of US foreign policy.
I mean, I think back to, there's a famous, used to be classified document
from the early Cold War called NSC 68.
And the United States did something weird after the Second World War.
Previous wars, we'd always demobilized after the war ended and stopped
spending so much money.
And we didn't do that after World War II because of the Cold War set in.
And leadership, I think, had to face a challenge.
How do we convince, how do we maintain public support for having this
sprawling global military presence that we're not going to leave Europe
and not going to leave Asia and someone's memoirs, they said,
we need to make it clearer than truth.
So they hiked the Soviet threat.
They made it scarier than it really was.
They made it seem more threatening than it really was.
You think about 9-11, right?
What was our reaction to terrorism?
It was the political equivalent of lighting our hair on fire.
We ended up fighting a number of unnecessary lengthy wars
expending enormous blood and treasure.
We changed our whole domestic system around based on the notion that we would
have another 9-11 every couple of years.
It was a harbinger of things to come as opposed to a kind of lucky shot.
So we exaggerated the threat of terrorism to maintain military operations
in a number of countries with no borders or no end in sight,
no victory that we can then come home from.
And so it's very baked in.
About existential threats.
It's always, everything is existential.
Terrorism is an existential threat.
Jessica, you know, John makes a point.
We're coming out of 20 years of the global war on terror.
We rewrote our intelligence policies.
We all have to still take off our shoes so that we show the terrorists
that they can't take away our freedoms, but they can take away our shoes.
But immediately after pulling out of Afghanistan,
I noticed the commentary, everything shifted to
now we're in the era of great world rivalry again,
great world power rivalry and China.
Remember when we told you it was the global war on terror that was the existential threat?
What we meant was it's China and it's Russia and it's existential again.
Where are we in that?
Is this a calculated move?
Or do they just not know what to do with themselves with this military-industrial apparatus
and they have to shift it to something?
You know, I think there are a lot of different factors at work here.
John, I don't want to say that this is all kind of an instrumental ploy to pad budgets,
although there may be an aspect of that taking place.
I do think that there is, at the heart of it, a kind of strategic diagnosis
that, you know, China seeks to supplant the United States as the sole global superpower
and it has just been biting its time for decades while we were, you know,
actually working together, frankly, in the war on terror.
And now that China has emerged more powerful, more capable,
it's now finally, you know, looking to take its place in the sun.
Now, I want to say that that's a strategic diagnosis that I don't necessarily agree with,
but I think that there is that sort of that underpinning here
that leads many to see this in, if not existential terms,
nonetheless, you know, deeply threatening to all that they hold dear.
And I would say that here where I think we've gone a little bit astray is assuming the worst of China,
assuming that China has these maximalist intentions to really replace us at the top.
Whereas I think even in the words of the, you know, U.S. intelligence community
and the 2022 threat assessment, you know, that China seeks to become the preeminent regional power
and a major player, a major power on the global stage.
And so I think there's a big gap between a power that wants to, you know,
be able to, you know, seek, you know, deference, security for itself globally
and then a degree of preponderance in the region.
That's very different from a country that in the words of, you know, for example,
the Trump administration, you know, seeks to rape the United States
and subvert democracy around the globe.
Like these are, you know, there's a big gap there.
And I worry that we have in assuming that China has these maximalist assessments
or intentions that we are in fact headed down a path where we, you know,
give China little choice but to seek to take us out
because we are going to prevent them from gaining any kind of influence and standing.
That's the mindset that I want to talk about with you guys.
This mindset that there is a global world order, we sit atop it.
We are the dominant superpower.
And if your economic engine of 1.2 billion people, if you're going to ascend,
I'm afraid we're going to have to fight you as opposed to it's a big world,
economic conditions change, military conditions change,
and we have to cooperate to best coexist in this environment.
I don't understand and part of it is the global war on terror in many ways
is what has allowed China quietly with their Belt and Road project in Africa
to corner markets for rare metals and those types of things.
Our own interventionist ego has given them the space in the first place.
And why can't we say it's a big world?
Congratulations on your economic success.
You're our biggest customer. We're your biggest customer.
How are we going to do this, guys?
Rather than, oh my God, you sent a balloon our way, everybody to the nuclear silos.
Yeah, I think you basically hit the nail on the head.
I think what we're talking about with the U.S.-China rivalry is we're talking about
the United States has this identity about this role that it's supposed to play in the world.
And we are indispensable. We are this benevolent hegemon.
We're supposed to provide public goods.
We're the actor of First Resort in this order.
We design this order. It's ours.
And China's rise in power is simply threatening that and we're clinging to it
and not thinking strategically. This is how I basically think it works.
Outsize power leads states to adopt outsize interests.
As a state's power expands, it's what it considers to be its interests also expands.
And then we have this narrative about indispensability and that requires exaggeration.
When you're talking about foreign policy, the farther things get away from merely defending the country,
you have to exaggerate it in order to maintain public support.
And then over time, new generations of elites are socialized into these ideas.
Then you have special interests, not only bureaucratic, but the military industrial complex.
They all have an interest in keeping us hyped up and fearful and thinking that every threat is existential.
I think politics generally give the advantage to hawks.
Nobody wins voters really by saying, we're being too tough on China.
And then finally, I think the news media is basically complicit in this hype and fear and threat inflation.
Because that's where that money comes from. They're incentivized for that.
Yeah, but they want viewers and subscribers and that's how you get people to pay attention.
And so it's this kind of cycle in this feedback loop where everyone's fearful
and everyone's exaggerating every conceivable threat.
And it's not a real smart way to devise wise strategy.
No, I think to simply absolute power apparently corrupts absolutely.
And it is, you know, Jessica, this isn't so much on the, you know, China rivalry,
but I wonder if World War Two, if we learned the wrong message.
The message in World War Two was we saved the day.
Our military is what prevented the world from falling into darkness.
And I don't necessarily disagree with some of that.
But then afterwards, the idea was, well, let's stay in Germany and Japan through the Marshall Plan
and we'll rebuild it in our image.
And we will create freewheeling democratic allies in regions that will allow us to expand
even our military reach is the lesson that we seem to have learned
not only that we can influence the world, but we can control it.
That we actually have the power to control through sanctions
or military intervention or bombings or currency manipulations
or all kinds of other levers to not just influence but control
and is that why China is seen to us as this anomaly that we have to stop?
I think that I would probably look at the end of the Cold War
as a set of lessons that we need to be very careful about learning from
because I think that many are now taking China as the new Soviet Union
and we all dust off that playbook at the end of the Cold War.
The Soviet Union collapsed and I think that was when you saw
growing willingness on the United States part to intervene overseas
in addition to what we did during the early aftermath of the World War Two.
But really it was really in the 1990s and the early 2000s that we kind of went
I think above and beyond in trying to remake other places in our own democratic image.
We've been pulling coups though.
We've been couping and influencing in South America and everywhere else
and then there's the Korean War.
Absolutely.
We've been at this a while.
We absolutely have.
But I do think that we're at a really interesting point in our national conversation
around endless war, around the wisdom of doing this
because you have even very hawkish voices like Representative Mike Gallagher
staying in his op-ed or maybe in a recent interview
that we no longer seek to transform others in our image
and Jake Sullivan has said that we don't aim to transform China
and yet I think that there is still a kind of an overhang of habits
that we have gotten into in terms of our human rights policies, our sanctions, etc.
where we are accustomed to standing on the moral high ground
and using all the tools at our disposal
by persuasion, inducement, threat, coercion
to get other countries to fall into line.
And I think that there is again this disconnect here
between what we recognize as now kind of this new reality of a world
in which we are no longer enjoying the same degree of preponderance
that we enjoyed either at the end of World War II or the end of the Cold War.
But we haven't quite caught up, I think, in terms of our rhetoric
and our actions in many cases to kind of discipline ourselves to this new reality
and I think that means that we're still kind of in this still precarious position
of potentially provoking more of a kind of counter reaction
to some of the more punitive coercive measures.
Yeah, it's a cycle.
Without the ability to kind of really back it up ultimately.
And by the way, let's not kid ourselves.
You know, this idea of a moral high ground that somehow our problem with China
is their treatment of Uighurs or their labor camps like that's a joke.
Like America's problem with China is they cornered the market on precious metals in Africa
and there are supply line and, you know, globalization gutted our manufacturing sector.
Like I don't understand why we consistently pretend that this is all about, you know,
where Diogenes looking for one just country that we can play with.
John, what do you think of that?
Well, I agree.
I mean, the notion that, you know, U.S. policymakers really, really care about
what's happening to the Uighurs or for Taiwanese independence or for democracy in Hong Kong.
This doesn't pass the smell test to me because they're also simultaneously, you know,
for years we've been helping the Saudis bomb the smithereens out of a defenseless and impoverished Yemen.
Different.
That's for a delicious, delicious oil.
That's a whole other mistake.
Well, right.
I mean, think about the 90s in Iraq, how many people died as a result of the sanctions
that we insisted we keep on.
Or the sanctions in Iran.
Yeah.
We're always allying with brutal dictatorships.
Some brutal dictatorships won't obey us and fall in line and therefore we need to hype
up the democracy and human rights rhetoric.
Look, I think it's worth taking a look.
Theory of mind is valuable in international politics.
You want to be able to have an understanding of the way your adversary sees things.
And I think it's worth taking a look through China's strategic lens, so to speak.
So first of all, they have this narrative of century of humiliation.
This 19th and early 20th century China was weak and taken advantage of by imperial powers.
But what do they see when they look out?
They see one of the highest concentrations in the world of U.S. military forces at the
very southern end of the Japanese archipelago.
I think we added four bases in the Philippines last week.
We just added four bases in the Philippines.
We've been feeding up our presence in Australia.
We have tens of thousands of troops in South Korea.
We are the largest naval presence in the eastern South China seas.
And we constantly patrol those seas in order to signal to China that we are going to defy
their sovereignty claims.
It's a little bit provocative to China considering that those sea lanes are the ones that they
use to import much of their commodities through the Malacca Strait, particularly oil.
It's a major vulnerability for them.
But, John, couldn't you make the case, though, that we're just trying to now catch the balloons
as they launch?
That if you can get the balloon before it gets to 30,000 feet.
Well, just think about if the reverse was the case.
The United States, as you said, used its most advanced warplane to shoot out a balloon of the sky.
By the way, first air-to-air kill for the F-22 was the balloon.
Yeah, we have the Monroe Doctrine.
We're very itchy about people getting in our neighborhood.
And we're all over China's neighborhood.
And we're provoking them on some of their most sensitive issues.
So we shouldn't be surprised if they're on their haunches and we should control ourselves
and try not to get hysterical over things like balloons or China's growing power.
And Jessica, this is not to suggest that China and the United States are not rivals,
but rivals is different than adversaries, is different than enemies.
And we are turning a rivalry into an adversary, into an enemy, just through the gravity of our reaction cycle.
Is China playing into that as well?
Because, look, if it's good politics for us in a nationalist way,
probably good politics for China in a nationalist way, everybody loves an enemy.
Is that how it's being perceived over there as well?
The worst tendencies on both sides feed the other and give the other side evidence to say,
here, look, we are really, there is no possibility of a peaceful coexistence,
even though I think that there are plenty of pragmatists in both capitals.
And frankly, I think the leadership in both countries right now doesn't want a war,
doesn't want to let this rivalry descend into open conflict.
But that said, they do face pressures, especially in the face of something that seems to be flagrantly provocative.
They do need to respond in ways that enable them to signal that toughness that they're not going to be pushed around.
In conversations with Chinese colleagues over a virtual Zoom,
where essentially this is a defensive measure, they feel existentially threatened by our continued dominance
and unwillingness to even allow China to continue to develop the kind of base level of economics,
but in terms of particularly high-tech growth areas ranging from semiconductors to clean-tech and biotech.
And then I think they're most concerned about the direction of travel in terms of US policy toward Taiwan,
where we for decades have not recognized Taiwan as an independent state,
but now you have former policy makers, including Mike Pompeo,
and there's a resolution in Congress calling for the United States to recognize Taiwan as an independent entity.
And so that's throwing out the notion of one China, we have this policy, they have a principle.
This is really suggesting that we are on this most important issue to Chinese Communist Party leaders,
saying that it's just no longer something that we just need to manage.
We're just going to completely overturn the kind of modus vivendi that has prevented outright conflict in the Taiwan Strait for decades.
Let's be realistic about, nobody's really preventing anybody from this idea of China being humiliated
or the United States being humiliated by a balloon.
China's economic development, since Nixon went there in the 70s, has been astronomical.
Truly, like nothing I think the world has seen since the Industrial Revolution in terms of the speed at which it has created industry
and the wealth that it's generated, like they're doing unbelievably well.
And the idea that somehow they're being humiliated economically,
we basically outsourced all of our manufacturing to them.
And so I guess I'm not quite understanding their issue.
I understand it in terms of Taiwan.
What do you think is behind this sudden interest in the provocation cycle?
Is it just that we no longer have the global war on terror to occupy ourselves with?
What's behind this sudden escalation on both sides?
Yeah, I mean, there's probably a number of things going on.
It's over-determined.
There's just different causes and conditions that produce this kind of escalation spiral.
One is this weird moment that we're in.
I was not a fan of the previous president by any means,
but occasionally you could catch him in some weird rhetoric where he didn't seem like he wanted to continue global war.
I mean, his policies differed from his occasional rhetoric,
and his rhetoric differed from his rhetoric.
I didn't know what he was talking about.
But I think that there was a moment, there is a moment of post-war on terror kind of...
The American people aren't really sure what we're up to in the world.
They're not sure what gives drive and purpose to our foreign policy,
and China represents something we can all kind of get around.
You notice Biden is framing it as democracy and autocracy.
That's a way to frame the rivalry that will get American support that appeals to our identity as democracy good guys,
and just shuts out any nuance about how we could possibly reach a strategic agreement where we have peace,
as opposed to escalating spirals and possibly war.
Right, and economic growth.
I mean, for God's sake, we're already in a proxy war with Russia.
That's already on the books.
We're already in there.
I mean, we've gotten to the point where we're like,
you're gonna have tanks, but you can't have planes.
You're gonna have planes, but you can't have people.
You'll have people.
We're already in that proxy war cycle.
Is this China trying to take advantage of that, or is this just...
It's the only political way that these leaders feel like they get a win.
I don't doubt that there are people that believe very strongly that democracy and autocracy are at odds with each other,
and I think they are.
But a lot of the chaos that the United States interventions have caused has actually strengthened the hand of the autocrats,
because people turn to them in times of chaos.
Jessica, are we in some ways the architect of our own precarious war position right now,
by destabilizing other parts of the world?
I would say that I don't see leaders on either side looking to take advantage of the moment to instigate something.
I see both sides really reacting in a kind of...
They feel that they are entirely innocent, and all the blame lies on the other side,
but that they then are in this period of acute insecurity,
and thus need to react very strongly and do a lot to prepare for a conflict that may not be inevitable,
but seems increasingly likely.
I think it's that kind of mutual fatalism combined with a sense of extreme urgency
that is kind of leading to sort of wayward statements.
But they see no alternative path, you think, Jessica?
Well, I think that the prospects for...
I mean, there are fundamentally, I think, some irreconcilable objectives here,
particularly in the context of Taiwan,
and I think where they see the path for this sort of so-called peaceful unification,
seeming less and less likely given demographic and political changes on the island of Taiwan.
And so in that context, I think it's been much harder for the Chinese leadership to tell their people,
especially in the context of actions that the United States is also undertaking,
that purely a peaceful process will lead to their desired outcome.
Now, this is not a change in their fundamental objectives.
It's been what they wanted really since the...
In their view, an unfinished civil war.
But this has really made it sort of all the pillars of stability in the Taiwan Strait
have really eroded first under the pressure of these political changes in Taiwan,
China's growing military capabilities,
and then also I think this reaction by the United States,
which in turn is doing more to provoke and accelerate that erosion.
It's really hard because in a kind of clear moral picture,
in Taiwan's democracy, China's the autocracy,
why wouldn't you just do everything you could to support Taiwan?
The problem with that kind of thinking is that you have to anticipate,
okay, how is China going to react?
So these kind of congressional visits to Taiwan, which are ostensibly to support the island,
are actually more likely to precipitate the very kind of military reaction
that we saw after Speaker Pelosi went.
And now we're going to maybe, Speaker McCarthy, where does this end?
I mean, this is dangerous because I think it will set in motion potential actions
by the United States or by actors on Taiwan.
They're going to have a presidential election in 2024 as well
that could really just lead to a significant crisis here
that I think we would be very hard pressed to maintain in the current circumstances.
Right.
John, she brings up a really interesting point that you had touched on earlier,
and I want to get back to it a little bit,
but also the forces that exist outside of the political realm in terms of the media
that are built to embrace crisis and catastrophe and urgency.
I thought Wolf Blitzer was going to have maybe a four hour erection
when he thought that they might shoot down the balloon
and he kept saying to every guest that came on, there was a general,
an Air Force general, four star, who says we'll be at war with China by 2025
and the guests all had to be like, I think he was just talking to,
like trying to psych his guys up.
I don't think that he wasn't making that as a prediction,
but are we heading to a conflict?
But the question begs the issue of like, and if we are, should we cover it like this?
There is atmospheric pressure.
There is barometric pressure enforced by media that this is a narrative,
that this is a story, that this has an inevitable conclusion,
and that by not going to war, it will be a disappointing finale.
Yeah, I mean, the news media for sure is kind of set up to amplify
a lot of this threat inflation that we get from the government
on national security threats, and they do.
And even in the less gross form, you know, the print form basically.
Broadcast journalism.
That's how print should advertise itself.
The New York Times should say all the news that's less gross
than the 24 hour news networks.
Well, it is less egregious in this particular sense than radio and television,
but also there are incentives baked in there.
Like if you're a reporter and you get a source providing you information
that suggests a threat, you're liable to give credit to those sources and those claims.
I honestly think a big part of the path to a stable relationship with China
is coming to appreciate how much flexibility we have.
The United States is a profoundly secure nation.
We are one of the richest in the world.
We have huge territory, lots of national resources.
We have weak and plant neighbors to the north and south and a bunch of fish to our east and west.
Perhaps armed.
Could you see us going to war with the dolphin?
Perhaps armed fish.
Yeah, the Chinese might put some guns on a dolphin or something.
But no, we have an incredibly, we're a hegemon in our own hemisphere.
We have no challengers.
We have nuclear deterrent.
Nobody is going to come marching onto the shores of Florida and take us over.
We're incredibly secure.
And yet, everything that we perceive in the outside world is supposed to be this existential threat.
If we chill out, if we just calm down and realize that we're actually really safe and secure,
I think it'll allow a lot more flexible posture with China,
where we can accommodate them in some respects and not in others.
And that's a possible route to developing a stable relationship.
But if we don't take a chill pill, I don't see it happening.
Chill pill.
I don't, yeah.
Well, once, when we're paying more to Lockheed Martin than we are for the entire State Department,
I don't know if chill pills are on order.
But Jessica, you know, and what about China?
They have an enormous standing army.
They have nuclear deterrence.
They're a giant country.
Nobody is going to overrun them.
They're secure as well.
And what I don't understand is whatever happened to the customer is always right.
We are each other's best customers.
It'd be like, you know, you've got a relationship with your local coffee shop,
and you guys, they sell you coffee and you sell them cups,
and yet you decide to go to war over seating by the window.
Like, it's none of this is existential to our freedoms.
These are economic competitions.
And I don't understand, like, who is going to buy all of China's stuff
if they go to war with the United States?
Well, there's a lot to unpack.
Oh, yeah.
Coffee, analogies, everything.
Go ahead.
I mean, I think that there's a, you know, at least some, you know, recognize that China should,
you know, we should still keep buying underwear and teddy bears from China.
It's just that we don't want to be dependent on them for these,
what, you know, consider these choke point or advanced technologies
that will transform the future.
We're not exactly sure how, but, you know, there's this envisioning
of where the future of potential military conflict might go,
and we need to make sure that we're at the, we need to maintain our dominance, right?
I mean, that literally, that is what Jake Sullivan said in his speech last fall.
We need to maintain not just a relatively, but an absolute lead over China
and these, you know, critical technologies that are of foundational importance.
But he didn't spell out exactly how these kinds of controls are going to lead to that
and what that loss of control or even that little advantage what might lead to.
And I do think that there is, you know, here, you know what, there is a, the military piece
when it comes back to what we were talking about at the beginning, right?
You know, does the United States need to maintain primacy across every domain,
across every region of the world?
Is that even, is that an illusion that we have it now?
And then do we need to capture it?
To what lengths are we willing to go in terms of first our own military spending?
Can we do it with only military spending?
Because we're not doing a whole lot of new trade agreements.
And, you know, to what extent are we willing to kind of, again, as we did during the Cold War,
you know, put aside our values, hold our nose and work with whoever it is
that's willing to join with this in standing against China?
You know, we've heard that now India is now, of course, our most important partner in this
and, you know, we invite them to our summit for democracy,
even though that they are, you know, rapidly cracking down on their domestic opposition
and media freedom.
So, you know, it's that kind of like whitewashing of our, you know,
we only call out the abuses where there's a geopolitical interest in doing so
and we're willing to kind of, you know, be a little bit quieter on those issues when it's not.
And so, you know, here I think that there are, you know, I want to be clear that I think
that there are reasons that, you know, the United States and China are going to continue to experience friction.
We're not just each other's biggest customers, although, you know, trade levels are at a record high.
Friction is fine. Friction is fine. War is not.
Absolutely. And so I think what we really need to get down to is the business of figuring out
how could we coexist?
What would be acceptable to us that would also be acceptable to them
so that we can begin to reduce this sense of existential insecurity,
which doesn't make a lot of sense in the context of the geography,
the nuclear weapons that we've all, you know, just laid out.
I think a really critical area here is this idea that somehow we are each inside each other's gates.
I think that the balloon incident really, I think, brought that to the fore here in the United States.
And I mean, I really worry in the, you know, the upcoming presidential election season
that kind of rhetoric is really going to, you know, lead to really excessive efforts to scrutinize
or even just completely kick out foreigners, particularly those...
Or demonize.
...demonize.
Sure.
Because really that's been the secret sauce, you know, to America's, you know, success
and also to what we, you know, stand for on the world stage,
which is, you know, bring us your huddled masses, right?
It's this idea that attracting the best and brightest
and making them, you know, feel included and welcome and to contribute.
That, I think, we're really close to losing that.
I mean, we already did surveys suggest that, you know, 60% of Chinese-born scientists
don't feel welcome or safe here in the United States.
40% of international or early career scientists are thinking about leaving the United States.
Right.
And so this is a really, potentially, an own goal here.
Well, we're certainly not averse to cutting off our noses, despite our faces,
and we've done it in the past.
And, you know, it's interesting, look, we talk about Franklin Roosevelt,
the most progressive president in the history of the United States.
Well, talk about a guy that defied democratic norms.
Four terms, he interned the Japanese.
You know, America has always used threat as an excuse to limit, you know,
rights, democratic norms, all kinds of other things.
And it's just surprising to me, again, I hate to keep going back to that World War II analogy,
but, you know, it's like when the Allied powers in Russia carved up the world to figure out,
you know, Russia, OK, you get this part of Berlin, and we'll take this sector,
and you get that, and they divided the spoils.
And in some ways, that's what we're doing, apparently, with China.
This is what it comes down to is, OK, what are the spoils of the less developed world
going to be for China and the United States?
How are we going to divvy up our profits?
And I know that's a very cynical way to look at it, but it's hard not to look at it as, you know,
it's got, you know, notes of colonialism and notes of dividing the spoils of war, doesn't it?
Sure. Jessica mentioned primacy.
This is the grand strategy that we've pursued for a long time.
And I think one of the things that it does is it makes us unable to prioritize when we're making strategy.
And so you talk about the lessons in World War II.
I think one of the main lessons that policymaking has learned, and I think it was the wrong lesson,
is that we can't wait.
We always have to be deterring first.
We have to act, you know, Munich is like the lesson that everyone took.
You can't make concessions because the adversary's appetite grows with its power, you know,
grows with its hunger.
And, you know, that meant that we had to be everywhere.
We have to be over in Asia to stop China before they even think about it.
We have to be in Europe to stop Germany from rearming and protect Europe from Russia and so on.
And that be everywhere and do everything and deter everyone and fight everyone and keep everyone in line
means we can't prioritize and make real strategy.
And I think that's part of what's clouding our view here.
Doesn't that hollow us out?
I mean, if you think about empire and you look at it in terms of empire,
800 bases stretching across the world, it's a vast amount of territory to police
and isn't what destroyed Russia from the inside trying to manage all these other territories.
Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Czechoslovakia, Poland.
Like, isn't that what had them collapse?
Is that they just got too hollowed out?
And I mean, half of our discretionary budget is military.
Are we not going to be less secure by not at least focusing more on our own infrastructure?
And when I say infrastructure, I mean human capital as well.
So I don't know how you guys feel about that part of it.
Maybe that's getting too theoretical about the idea of like empires that overstretch,
but it feels awfully tenuous to me.
No, I don't think that's over theoretical.
I mean, occupational duties are not profitable and they're expensive.
And that has been the ruin of many nations throughout history.
It's just overextending themselves with foreign priorities and forgetting things at home.
I actually think our quote unquote competition with China,
it would go much better for us if we focused on things at home.
Maintaining that open immigration system where we welcome others in,
having a very healthy and robust economy and investing in education and these kinds of things,
that will give us edges over China in all kinds of ways that spending enormous sums
on weapons systems that we don't actually need will.
So I totally agree with that.
But when the balloons come, who will pop them?
Jessica, final word there.
In your mind, what's a better vision of a rebalancing of this conflict
and what would be a smarter path for, not just China, but for America to choose as this thing develops?
So I think the most important thing is that we are driving toward a positive,
some inclusive vision of the future that includes not just the United States,
but also China, other major powers and frankly the world,
rather than seeing this as you put it kind of something for the United States and China to divvy up.
I don't think that we're there yet.
I think we're not even willing to concede that we would allow China to be dominant anywhere.
I think we're still wanting to be the partner of choice everywhere.
And so I think the most important thing is that positive, affirmative vision.
But beyond that, I think it's really important that we begin to think about making threats
and kind of rewards or assurances much more conditional on China's behavior.
I think right now we are kind of in an all out rush to build our capabilities,
you know, constrain theirs in areas where we think it matters,
which is leading to just kind of the acceleration of this tit for tat spiral.
And we are at risk of over militarizing these frictions
and making it harder to find diplomatic solutions or carefully finessed arrangements
where we avoid coming to blows over issues where frankly we haven't decided collectively
whether or not we are willing to send troops to fight for Taiwan.
And I think it's really dangerous in that kind of setting
where we haven't really had these kind of frank conversations with ourselves
to be putting the rhetoric so far out ahead of that conversation.
And so I don't think that we should precipitously withdraw from, you know, around the world.
I think that could invite more challenges,
but I think we need to be much smarter about trying to negotiate, you know,
conditional ways to lower the temperature to reduce frictions.
I don't think that trust is necessarily what we're aiming toward,
but we could reduce the kind of headlong rush toward enmity.
That's really not actually making us more secure.
Right. And by the way, to be clear, I'm not talking about America curling up in a ball
and ignoring the rest of the world, but I am talking about this mission creep
that has occurred over the last 50 or 60 years that appears to be unsustainable.
John, final thoughts for you on what you think might be a preferable road to go
and what you think we may be headed on?
Yeah, I mean, this goes back to something I said earlier,
which is essentially that we need to appreciate better what our actual geopolitical position is.
And if we understand that we're safe and secure, I think we'll be able to prioritize
and we'll also be able to look around the world and see things that we're doing
that we probably shouldn't be doing.
That'll allow more resources for the things that we should be doing.
Jessica says we shouldn't withdraw precipitously.
Okay, I think we should withdraw.
We don't need to be militarily present in 70 or 80 countries around the world.
We don't need 800 military bases.
And we need to find a way to recognize China's growing need
for an identity that is commensurate with its power.
And we need to acknowledge our own kind of, as you were saying before, John, our own ego.
We have way too much ego in the game of international relations.
And we need to check that.
And I think it's not impossible to come to some rational kind of real politic arrangement with China
that isn't just an engine for hype and fear and threat and conflict.
Well, I thank you guys very much.
And the hope is then that also the mechanism we have in this country that creates that fear
will also have a sobering moment.
And we'll try and consider that ratings aren't necessarily worth getting people killed.
But thank you guys both very much.
Jessica Chen-Weiss, John Glazer, Jessica, of course, the Michael J. Sack Professor for China
and Asia Pacific Studies at Cornell University, senior fellow at the Asia Society Center for China Analysis.
John Glazer, Cato Institute Scholar, host of Cato's Power Problems podcast.
Thank you both so much for being here.
I really appreciated it.
It's so great to be with you.
Well, let me say this.
I always find it interesting when I have a conversation with two people who very clearly know what they're talking about.
And do so with no histrionics, no rhetorical flourishes, no devices, just standard knowledge delivered crisply.
Matter of factness.
Can I just say, when you have the right conversation with a libertarian,
it's like these guys rule, you know, and then you veer off path a little bit.
And they're like, the rich should privatize eyesight.
And you're like, whoa, what happened?
What just happened?
Yeah, it's interesting that the libertarian viewpoint is just one of like, hey, we should really reconsider just how big footing we want to get on the world stage.
Although I think he probably goes further than that.
But she was very much like, I don't know.
They are kind of, you know.
Yeah, she was much more institutional thinking that way.
Yeah, I thought so too.
Fascinating though.
Why do you think it's so easy to just fall into these new rivalries and new teams?
Like we just got out of Al-Qaeda and ISIS being our, they were in our division.
That's who we were fighting.
Then all of a sudden we're in the conference championship against China.
Right.
Yeah, I think there's this like famous like post Cold War saying, right, that like when the USSR fell, we slayed the dragon and it just turned into a bunch of snakes.
Yeah.
And our national security apparatus doesn't know how to sell or handle a bunch of snakes.
You know, we don't know how to do a bunch of little enemies.
You know, when Russia comes back to the forefront like it is, it's like the boys are back in town.
It starts playing because they're like, we love this.
One guy in China is a perfect one guy to aim at for Americans to understand.
You can wrap your head around this guy is the bad guy.
Yeah.
I mean, I think you said it perfectly.
Like we don't know how to handle rivalry.
Like it's a straight pipeline to enemy.
Right.
Rivalry to adversary to enemy.
Right.
Exactly.
That's right.
Yeah.
Takara, what is your, I'm curious, you know, I don't know if you talked to your family about it, but you know, you come from a military family.
Do they look at this and go like, here we fucking go again.
A military intelligence family.
So balloon folks.
Balloon.
Balloon people.
Balloon people.
My sister was like, yeah, I mean, a lot of balloons.
We can talk about it later over an encrypted situation, but not right now.
But I mean, the balloons, they're usually there.
Meanwhile, we've got, we've got balloons up there watching us.
Yes.
100%.
The intelligence agencies have balloons in our skies watching us.
Yes.
I do love that we'll spend billions and billions on satellites in China.
It's like, let's go to party city, a sharper image.
We'll knock this out a couple hundred bucks.
Is there a guy on the ground with a little controller?
My favorite point goes, these are controlled balloons.
These are motorized.
And then they described as like, it has like little fans.
Yeah.
We're going to need the F 22 to take this one out.
By the way, I hope, I hope when that guy landed, no one to high five that, but this was not
a dog fight.
This was a carnival game in the sky.
You don't get, you don't get numbers for this.
Trust me, in the new Top Gun, whatever the third installation will be, there will be
balloon man.
Oh, absolutely.
You have to.
You'll have Iceman.
You'll have Maverick.
And then you'll have balloon.
Balloon boy.
Balloon boy.
What's what?
We got three migs coming up.
And then we also have what appear to be the guy from up.
No, no.
Exactly.
I really hope it's just a bunch of radio shack shit that was throwing it that it actually
wasn't even a spy thing.
They were, you know what they were probably doing?
You know how in everybody's house now you have that one box filled with all your old
electronic shit that you just like is obsolete.
Hopefully it's just them trying to get rid of all that shit.
It's just them passing it off to us to eventually end up in the floating island of trash in
the sea.
Did you watch the, is the state of the union, did that happen?
Did that happen last night?
No, no, no.
We're recording before the state of the union.
Are you going to watch?
Oh, I am going to watch, but only to prime myself for the rebuttal that's going to happen.
Oh.
That Sarah Huckabee is, is reading.
Oh, you enjoy the rebuttal.
Oh, I was like, oh, it's a theater.
Oh my, I'm going to have my popcorn, my opera gloves.
I'm going to have a good time.
Are you, do you, when you watch at home, do you stand and clap at the proper times?
Do you participate in the, the up and down of it?
Yeah, very often I'm singing the national anthem through most of it.
So that's a bit distracting.
You have to.
I always, when I watch the state of the union, the comic in me always takes over and I'm
just like, this is a tough room.
This is 50% of the people hate you instantly.
You've got your opener sitting behind you, just kind of judging the job you're doing.
It's a rough one.
It's just a funny room where you can be like, we need to be a country where people can have
clean water and access to affordable healthcare.
And that hits with 48% of the room.
Everyone stands.
Yes.
Water.
Some people, some people just do this.
What?
No.
How dare you, sir?
Fuck that.
It won't happen.
Yeah.
The only 100% hit is war.
The only 100% hit is like, we need to bomb China, essentially.
Right.
I wonder if, at some point a president will say, you know, and tonight, because I always
wait for that rabble rousing, the orgasm of the speech, though, and the state of the union,
sometimes they'll deliver it up front, sometimes in the back.
The state of the union, and then it just pauses and says, well, quite frankly, it's fucked.
It's been better if I'm being honest.
If I'm being honest, have you been on Twitter?
There are crazy people out there.
They believe crazy things.
Have you guys rode the subway recently?
Yeah.
Robbie, John, can I ask you guys a question?
Yes, please.
You know, I know the state of the union, it's acquired by the U.S. Constitution, but do we
think it's still relevant?
I mean, I think if you're the president, I don't know how you would pass it up.
Right.
It's an opportunity to stand for an hour, and no matter if you're getting applause or not
applause from the other side, and just say how great you are.
It's an address about all the things you say you're going to do that you don't really have
to do.
You know, it might be nice if the state of the union is followed by the midterm report,
where you just talk about all the shit you said you were going to do that, like, yeah.
Yikes.
That thing about universal health care, yeah.
You can't clap during that.
We were dealing with a balloon.
Yeah.
How long before you think the state of the union devolves into a fistfight?
Because we are perilously close to those, you know, public access, Belarus TV, parliamentary,
like, just all out brawls.
Like, we've had a couple of you lies.
A couple of people have shouted.
I mean, the Republicans almost came to blows when they were choosing McCarthy.
That's right.
That's right.
How close do you think we are to just flat out fucking fisticuffs on the floor of Congress
during a state of the union, which is the only time maybe those folks ever get to, like,
really interact with each other?
I would love to see Katie Porter just smack McCarthy in the back of the head with the whiteboard
wrestling chair style, you know?
Oh, actually, a wrestling bra might be the way to go.
I think it's going to break out.
Yeah.
I mean, I remember seeing those Taiwanese parliament fistfights thinking, like, how could this
happen?
And now when I watch American Congress, I'm like, how could this not happen?
Exactly.
How are you guys not hitting each other at this point?
Yeah.
I don't want anyone to get hurt.
All right.
I don't.
I don't want to condone violence.
However.
You didn't need to disclaim her at the top of that score.
Nobody's believing you to have bloodlust.
However.
Yeah.
I would love some proper screaming.
OK.
I really would.
I need some screaming.
I need some name calling.
I need, you know, you're lucky they're holding me back.
I need, like, the thread of violence, but I don't need the actual violence.
OK.
Are you talking about, like, question time kind of shit?
Like, British Parliamentary, like, hold up.
Hold up.
Hold up.
Absolutely.
Or do you mean, like, you know, where to rival groups that are, like, where the-
Sharks and the Jets.
Yeah.
Like, yes.
You want choreo.
A little bit, yeah.
You know, how do we feel about a Royal Rumble-style thing?
I'd love to see that.
You know, because they're already a door opens, one person announces someone.
Last Congressperson standing.
That's what I'm talking about.
That would be the way to go.
Well, then there's some music choices that need to be made.
It would be Seth Rollins.
It would be the way to go.
Guys, thank you very much, as always, for joining.
Takara Mallard, Robbie Slowick.
I also want to thank Jessica Chen-Weiss, John Glazer.
We will see you guys next week.
And remember, the show's on Apple TV Plus.
And thank you.
Nice work, guys.
Thank you, John.
Bye, everybody.
00:58:18,000 --> 00:58:34,000
The Private John Stewart podcast is an Apple TV Plus podcast and a joint busboy production.