The Value of a Summit

Published in El País
(Spain) on 14 December 2021
by Editorial (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Amy Bathurst. Edited by Gillian Palmer.
The meeting that Biden organized has warned against political corruption and authoritarian disruption.

President Joe Biden could not imagine the difficult conditions under which he would fulfill his campaign promise of holding a summit to promote democracy. Although he announced his plan during the 2020 election campaign when the COVID-19 pandemic was at its worst, it was impossible to imagine that the summit would have to take place virtually without the solemnity and helpful context of a bilateral conferences and parallel meetings.

He could not predict the almost simultaneous geopolitical crises with China and Russia over Taiwan and Ukraine respectively, both crises threatening medium- term conflict in China and immediate war with Russia. Nor could he have predicted that Donald Trump and the Republican Party would submit the American democracy to the shameful discrediting episode involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. We are still waiting for the requisite legislative and judicial responses to a such a constitutional violation.

The initial message about the summit signaled a change in attitude from that of Trump, especially how he disavowed a contempt for democracy and affinity for dictators. But the effective message is a sign with respect to Russia and China, and both autocracies have interpreted it as evidence that a cold war is already in progress. Beijing’s reaction was so particularly furious that it has prepared a parody summit and published a white paper entitled, “China, Democracy That Works,” along with a frightening report about “The State of Democracy in the United States.”

The Chinese communist regime has felt especially hurt by the invitation the U.S. sent to Taiwan, an unassailable democracy, although it is also emerging from a dictatorship and is a counterexample of the evolution experienced by mainland China. Taiwan has every reason to fear a forceful annexation by a dictatorial regime. Beijing's reaction to the summit convened by President Biden confirms the obsolescence of the one country, two systems principle, under which the return of Hong Kong took place. That same principle guided the idea of a future peaceful and democratic unification of Taiwan and mainland China and enabled the United States and the international community to support the one-China principle.

Added to the difficult circumstances surrounding the meeting was how incongruent the guest list was. The invitees include democracies that are so defective that they do not deserve to be called a democracy, while other countries where democracy is still possible were not were not invited. The summit has pointed out two dangerous territories for democracy: political corruption and the use of technology as instruments of authoritarian disruption. More interesting is the idea that democracy is not only being defended on the international stage, but that the place where it needs the care of governments and citizens is within each of the democratic countries, starting with the country that convened the summit. Perhaps this is the main lesson and the one that provides the most value to the Biden summit.


El valor de una cumbre

La cita sobre la democracia convocada por Biden alerta contra la corrupción política y la disrupción autoritaria

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Joe Biden, no podía imaginar bajo qué difíciles condiciones iba a cumplir su promesa electoral de celebrar una cumbre para la promoción de la democracia. A pesar de que la formuló durante la campaña electoral de 2020, cuando el contagio de la covid-19 se hallaba en su momento álgido, era imposible imaginar que la reunión tuviera que acomodarse al formato devaluado de la videoconferencia, en el que se pierden la solemnidad de las formas y el útil contexto de los encuentros bilaterales y de las reuniones paralelas.

No podía prever tampoco la casi simultánea apertura de sendas crisis geopolíticas con China y Rusia, alrededor de Taiwán y de Ucrania respectivamente, ambas con amenazas de conflicto bélico, a medio plazo en el primer caso e inmediatas en el segundo. Ni podía entrar en sus cálculos que Donald Trump y el Partido Republicano sometieran a la democracia estadounidense al vergonzoso episodio de desprestigio que significó el asalto al Capitolio el pasado 6 de enero, todavía pendiente de la corrección parlamentaria y judicial que requiere una vulneración constitucional de tal calibre.

El mensaje inicial señalaba el cambio de actitud respecto a Trump, en especial la desautorización de su desprecio hacia la democracia y de su aprecio por las dictaduras, pero el mensaje efectivo es un señalamiento hacia Rusia y China. Y ambas autocracias lo han interpretado como la corroboración de una guerra fría ya en marcha. Especialmente furiosa ha sido la reacción de Pekín, que ha organizado la farsa de una cumbre alternativa, ha publicado un libro blanco titulado China, la democracia que funciona y un informe tremebundo sobre El estado de la democracia en Estados Unidos.

El régimen comunista chino se ha sentido especialmente herido por la invitación cursada a Taiwán, una democracia impecable, aunque también surgida de una dictadura y contraejemplo de la evolución experimentada por la China continental, con todos los motivos por tanto para temer su anexión por la fuerza por parte de un régimen dictatorial. La reacción de Pekín contra la cumbre convocada por el presidente Biden confirma la obsolescencia del principio un solo país, dos sistemas, bajo el que se produjo la devolución de Hong Kong. Ese mismo principio presidía la idea de una futura unificación pacífica y democrática entre Taiwán y la China continental y permitía a Estados Unidos y a la comunidad internacional mantener el principio de una sola China.

A las difíciles circunstancias de la convocatoria se ha sumado la incongruencia de la lista de invitados, entre los que hay democracias tan defectuosas que no merecen tal nombre y otras donde la alternancia todavía es posible pero no fueron invitadas. La cumbre ha señalado dos territorios peligrosos para la democracia: la corrupción política y el uso de las tecnologías como instrumentos de disrupción autoritaria. Mayor interés tiene la idea de que a la democracia no se la defiende tan solo en la escena internacional, sino que el lugar donde necesita el cuidado de los gobiernos y de los ciudadanos es en el interior de cada uno de los países democráticos, empezando por el convocante. Esta es quizás la principal lección y la que da mayor valor a la cumbre de Biden.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Germany: US Sanctions against the EU

Japan: Will the Pressure on Harvard University Affect Overseas Students?

Germany: Friedrich Merz’s Visit to Trump Succeeded because It Didn’t Fail

Austria: Whether or Not the Tariffs Are Here to Stay, the Damage Has Already Been Done*

Canada: Trump vs. Musk, the Emperor and the Oligarch

Topics

Canada: Trump vs. Musk, the Emperor and the Oligarch

Russia: Trump Is Shielding America*

Germany: Peace Report 2025: No Common Ground with Trump

Australia: America’s Economic and Political Chaos Has Implications for Australia

Ireland: The Irish Times View on Turmoil in Los Angeles: Key Test of Trump’s Power

Germany: Friedrich Merz’s Visit to Trump Succeeded because It Didn’t Fail

Related Articles

Russia: Trump Is Shielding America*

Hong Kong: The Lessons of World War II: The Real World Importance of Resisting Hegemony

Spain: Spain’s Defense against Trump’s Tariffs

Mexico: The Trump Problem