Krugman: Did China just bribe Trump to undermine national security?

In this photo taken May 8, 2018, a man walks past a building with the ZTE logos in Beijing. As Chinese officials prepare to hold talks with their counterpart in Washington the two countries are reportedly attempting a swap: Relief for ZTE in return for Beijing dropping plans to impose tariffs on U.S. farm products. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
In this photo taken May 8, 2018, a man walks past a building with the ZTE logos in Beijing. As Chinese officials prepare to hold talks with their counterpart in Washington the two countries are reportedly attempting a swap: Relief for ZTE in return for Beijing dropping plans to impose tariffs on U.S. farm products. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

Did the president of the United States just betray the nation's security in return for a bribe from the Chinese government?

Don't say that this suggestion is ridiculous: Given everything we know about Donald Trump, it's well within the bounds of possibility, even plausibility.

Don't say there's no proof: We're not talking about a court of law, where the accused are presumed innocent until proved guilty. Where the behavior of high officials is concerned, the standard is very nearly the opposite: They're supposed to avoid situations in which there is even a hint that their actions might be motivated by personal gain.

Oh, and don't say that it doesn't matter one way or the other, because the Republicans who control Congress won't do anything about it. That in itself is a key part of the story: An entire political party - a party that has historically wrapped itself in the flag and questioned the patriotism of its opponents - has become entirely complaisant in the possibility of raw corruption, even if it involves payoffs from hostile foreign powers.

The story so far: In the past few years ZTE, a Chinese electronics company that, among other things, makes cheap smartphones, has gotten into repeated trouble with the U.S. government. Many of its products contain U.S. technology - technology that, by law, must not be exported to embargoed nations, including North Korea and Iran. But ZTE was circumventing the ban.

Initially, the company was fined $1.2 billion. Then, when it became clear that the company had rewarded rather than punished the executives involved, the Commerce Department forbade U.S. technology companies from selling components to ZTE for the next seven years.

And two weeks ago the Pentagon banned sales of ZTE phones on military bases, following warnings from intelligence agencies that the Chinese government may be using the company's products to conduct espionage.

All of which made it very strange indeed to see Trump suddenly declare that he was working with President Xi Jinping of China to help save ZTE - "Too many jobs in China lost" - and that he was ordering the Commerce Department to make it happen.

It's possible that Trump was just trying to offer an olive branch amid what looks like a possible trade war. But why choose such a flagrant example of Chinese misbehavior? Which was why many eyes turned to Indonesia, where a Chinese state-owned company just announced a big investment in a project in which the Trump Organization has a substantial stake.

That investment, by the way, is part of the Belt and Road project, a multinational infrastructure initiative China is using to reinforce its economic centrality across Eurasia.

Was there a quid pro quo? We may never know.

Step back from the details and consider the general picture. High officials have the power to reward or punish both businesses and other governments, so that undue influence is always a problem, even if it takes the form of campaign contributions or indirect financial rewards via the revolving door.

But the problem becomes vastly worse if interested parties can simply funnel money to officials through their business holdings - and Trump and his family, by failing to divest from their international business dealings, have basically hung a sign out declaring themselves open to bribery.

If there had been even a whiff of foreign payoffs to, say, Gerald Ford or Jimmy Carter, there would have been bipartisan demands for an investigation - and a high likelihood of impeachment.

But today's Republicans have made it clear that they won't hold Trump accountable for anything, even if it borders on treason.

All of which is to say that Trump's corruption is only a symptom of a bigger problem: a GOP that will do anything, even betray the nation, in its pursuit of partisan advantage.

The New York Times

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