In the first Cold War, the United States and our allies had a secret weapon against the Soviet Union and its satellites.
It didn't come from the CIA. Nor was it a product of DARPA or the weapons labs at Los Alamos. It was communism.
Communism aided the West because it saddled an imperialist Russian state with an unworkable and unpopular economic system that could not keep up with its free-market competitors. "They pretend to pay us and we pretend to work" — the quintessential Russian joke about working life in the workers' paradise — goes far to explain why a regime with tens of thousands of nuclear warheads simply petered out.
Now we are entering the Second Cold War, this time with China. That's the takeaway from this month's U.S.-China summit in Anchorage, Alaska, in which both sides made clear that they had not only clashing interests but also incompatible values. Secretary of State Antony Blinken bluntly accused China of threatening "the rules-based order that maintains global stability." Yang Jiechi, his Chinese counterpart, replied that the U.S. had to "stop advancing its own democracy in the rest of the world."
A few days later, China and Iran signed a 25-year, $400 billion strategic pact, including provisions for joint weapons development and intelligence sharing. As challenges to the U.S.-led "rules-based order" go, it's hard to get more frontal than that.
Maybe things will get better. But it would be foolish to count on it, much less suppose that conciliatory behavior by the Biden administration will do anything other than embolden Beijing. Say what you will about either the Trump or the Obama administrations, but they did not provoke China to crush democracy in Hong Kong, or brutalize Uyghurs in Xinjiang, or violate international law in the South China Sea, or help North Korea subvert international sanctions, or use military force to bully its neighbors, or undertake campaigns of cyberwarfare and industrial espionage against American targets on a previously unimagined scale.
So it's worth thinking about what, if anything, our secret weapon might be this time around — not the overt strengths that we can bring to bear on China, like trade sanctions or naval power, but rather the inner weakness that the regime can't get rid of because it's part of its DNA.
Three candidates come to mind.