Biden called Xi a ‘dictator.’ He’s right

The president’s frank remark was a refreshingly honest observation

dictator
President Joe Biden gestures as he meets with China’s President Xi Jinping during a virtual summit from the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, DC (Getty)
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Just as a stopped clock shows the correct time twice a day, so President Joe Biden, amid the plethora of gaffes that regularly issues from his lips, occasionally utters the plain and unvarnished truth. So it was at a Democratic fundraiser in California Tuesday when Biden called China’s President Xi Jinping “a dictator.” Explaining why he gave the order to shoot down a Chinese spy balloon that entered US airspace in February, the president said that Xi had been “embarrassed” because the balloon had been blown off course and “he didn’t know it was there.”

US…

Just as a stopped clock shows the correct time twice a day, so President Joe Biden, amid the plethora of gaffes that regularly issues from his lips, occasionally utters the plain and unvarnished truth. So it was at a Democratic fundraiser in California Tuesday when Biden called China’s President Xi Jinping “a dictator.” Explaining why he gave the order to shoot down a Chinese spy balloon that entered US airspace in February, the president said that Xi had been “embarrassed” because the balloon had been blown off course and “he didn’t know it was there.”

US diplomats, like secretary of state Antony Blinken (who has just inconclusively met Xi in Beijing), may have winced when they heard Biden’s unscripted candid comment. But, for the rest of us, the president’s frank remark — like the child who called out the Emperor’s lack of clothes — was a refreshingly honest observation.

For the Chinese leader is indeed a dictator and a particularly ruthless one at that who is bent on establishing Chinese world domination and hegemony. The Chinese Communist Party which he leads holds a monopoly of power over its citizens. It exercises this in ways that are repugnant to anyone living in Western liberal democracies and enjoying freedom of thought and expression.

Ordinary Chinese people are permitted to savor the fruits of China’s state capitalism — so long as they accept the state’s control of their lives and docilely decline to question Xi’s increasingly arbitrary rule. The CCP decides on such basic freedoms as the number of children they are permitted to have (a policy which only came to an end in 2016), where they can live and what they can watch on TV or the internet.

Anyone who dares to question CCP rule risks a long spell in prison. The persecution of the racial and religious minority Uighur Muslim community has reached levels condemned by international bodies as genocide. Uighurs who cling to their faith and customs face incarceration, re-education, and sterilization in camps reminiscent of the Soviet Gulag in Stalin’s heyday.

Abroad, China is flexing its economic muscles from the Pacific to sub-Saharan Africa, coercing compliant countries into sweetheart deals that leave China in effective command of their trade and infrastructure.

China is on the verge of surpassing the US as the world’s economic superpower and is now challenging US military supremacy too.

Taking a leaf from the playbook of his ally and fellow dictator Putin in Ukraine, Xi is now limbering up for what many experts expect to be an inevitable attempt to reconquer the breakaway Chinese island of Taiwan in the near future.

Biden is right: Xi Jinping is an old man in a hurry and a dictator presenting a very real threat to his own people and the rest of the world too.

This article was originally published on The Spectator’s UK site.