American Thought Leaders - The CCP’s Gloves Are Off in Trade War—What’s Next? | Lee Smith

Episode Date: October 18, 2025

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) recently imposed unprecedented export controls on rare earths, escalating the U.S.–China trade war.How is it that the Chinese regime managed to gain control of many... of the most essential supply chains, from critical minerals to pharmaceuticals? How should the Trump administration approach this threat to national security?In this episode, we sit down with Lee Smith, author of “The Plot Against the President,” and the soon-to-be-released book, “The China Matrix: The Epic Story of How Donald Trump Shattered a Deadly Pact.”“It was simply American corruption that has allowed all of this to happen. And that’s certainly the point that [U.S. President] Donald Trump makes in the book,” Smith says.What is Trump’s strategy when it comes to China? How does he actually view Chinese leader Xi Jinping?Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.Editor’s Note: Lee Smith previously hosted the EpochTV program “Words That Matter.”

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Chinese Communist Party has taken its gloves off, imposing unprecedented controls on rare earths. Why? It's a communist party. They're not in the global system to play fair. They believe in dominating the system. In this episode, I sit down with Lee Smith, author of The Plot Against the President and his new book, The China Matrix. Wow, penicillin and everything else is made in Wuhan. Almost all of our pharmaceuticals come from the people's Republic of China. What will we do? From pharmaceuticals to critical minerals. China's a major producer at this point. Who allowed the CCP to gain such deep control over America's critical resources? It was simply American corruption. That's allowed all of this to happen. And that's certainly the point that Donald Trump makes in the book. This is American Thought Leaders. And I'm
Starting point is 00:00:51 Janja Kellick. Lee Smith, so good to have you back on American Thought Leaders. Jan, it's always a huge pleasure to be back with you on American Thought Leaders and to speak with you, my dear friend. You have written a book for the ages, my friend, The China Matrix. Recently, something happened that I describe as communist China taking off its gloves, and that is these very, very detailed international rare earth export. restrictions. Why don't you lay out what you think happened here? Yeah. Well, this was in particular
Starting point is 00:01:38 response to the Trump administration's Commerce Department listing a number of different Chinese entities. And as it turns out, these entities, what they'd been doing is they had access to U.S. technology, which they bought, and they passed it on to the Iranians. And the Iranians passed it on to their proxies, Hamas and the Houthis. And in fact, it was found October 7th that was used in the October 7, 2023 massacre. So what the Trump administration is trying to do is trying to protect U.S. national security from adversarial regimes. The Chinese are trying to help adversaries, or they are helping adversaries of the United
Starting point is 00:02:16 States. And so when Donald Trump, the Trump administration, came down and said, this is bad. We're not going to let you do this anymore. We're going to sharply restrict your ability to do this. The Chinese said, oh, really? How about if we go nuclear and get it? you no access to rare earth without having to go through an arduous process. So that's what happened. Yon, the way you put it as accurate. It's like they've taken off their velvet glove
Starting point is 00:02:39 and shown what they really are. The argument in my book here, the China Matrix is that velvet glove was stitched here in the United States over the course of the last half century. As you've been saying here, as your colleagues at the Epoch Times, I've been saying for years is, let's remember it's a communist party. That's what the regime is. It's a brutal regime. It's brutal. It's brutal to Chinese inside of China, outside of China, and it's brutal to all of its adversaries, including the United States and our allies. And it's really Americans who have corporate as well as political elites, and again, this is the subject of the book, who have protected the Chinese Communist Party regime and who have advanced this regime, made it the threat
Starting point is 00:03:23 it really is today. Well, so we were founded back in 2000 to actually explain their of communist China, to Americans, I mean, people the world over, in fact. It's actually been an incredibly difficult thing to do because in the end it's not that complicated, as you said. It's a communist regime. Human life is not at the top of the list of priorities for any Communist Party, especially to the Chinese Communist Party, nor win-win relationships with other nations. But how did we even get to this point? point where the Chinese Communist Party holds control over such a significant portion of the supply chain. And we can use the rare earths or the critical minerals as an example.
Starting point is 00:04:11 Well, I mean, what they did was they can underbid almost anyone. And this is what they did in the pharmaceutical industry. And you'll remember after COVID, people were deeply concerned to realize like, oh, wow, penicillin and everything else is made in Wuhan. Almost all of our pharmaceuticals come from the People's Republic of China. What will we do? What can we do? And the way that they did, they did this with steel. They've done it with a number of what people call strategic industries. And what people mean by strategic industries is if you need steel, for instance, to build ships and you need it to build a whole bunch of other different munitions. If you don't make your own steel, then you're dependent on what is what is right now your number one adversary.
Starting point is 00:04:52 I mean, there are other countries around the world that makes steel, but China's a major producer at this point. We're talking with the same thing in terms of pharmaceuticals. I mean, imagine if we really wound up in a hot conflict with the Chinese Communist Party, right? I mean, what happens with different, one different American soldiers, Marines, airmen, sailors are wounded and they need medication. Well, that's coming from China. So, but the Chinese had a plan for that, and that's what they did. And, you know, there were no measures or few measures to protect American industries. People just figured, well, what are we going to do?
Starting point is 00:05:34 We can't compete with them. We'll have to do something else. And this is part of what we saw in the 90s when it was the whole idea like, well, we don't need to do manufacturing anymore. We'll become a service economy. And a lot of people made fun of it at the time. And a lot of other people thought it was a stroke of genius. And look, it wasn't just the Clinton administration.
Starting point is 00:05:53 There were a lot of Republicans as well, and that's the story the book tells. It's not just Democrats here. It's Republicans. Remember, this relationship started with Richard M. Nixon and Henry Kissinger, who first went to the city once called Peking in February 1972. So some of it at a certain point was honest miscalculation. And at a certain point, there was no way to rationalize it or excuse it anymore. It was simply American corruption that's allowed all of this to happen. And that's certainly the point that Donald Trump makes in the book.
Starting point is 00:06:26 And I interviewed Donald Trump at a great length in this book. He has the first word and the last word in the book. How could the Chinese Communist Party dominate the market so thoroughly with steel? Can you walk me through that process? Well, I mean, I have a couple people talk about it. I talk about it in here, including a former steel executive, a guy named Dan Demi. I was really great, big fan of Donald Trump. And what happened was that the Chinese, they just dumped it on the market.
Starting point is 00:06:56 It subsidized, right? It's subsidized by the party so they can afford basically to underbid anyone they want. And this is a huge problem for the United States around the world, that they can underbid us because it's subsidized. So it happened with steel. It happened with pharmaceuticals. Look back, I guess it was, again, I quote Mr. Domeco in this story. It's like, you know, the United States, we weren't the top manufacturer of steel, but we were way up there. The Chinese were way down.
Starting point is 00:07:24 You know, I think Japan was on top. And the Chinese just decided they were going to target the steel industry. So they just started producing steel, overproducing steel. And they just started dumping it on markets and they destroyed, you know, they greatly damaged our steel industry. And they do that up and down the board. This is something that they do. This is not really the fault of American executives. This is something they do.
Starting point is 00:07:47 it is the fault of American, American political officials who should have been looking at this for a long time and saying, what are we going to do when we can't make our own ships? What are we going to do when we can't make our own munitions? Again, Dan Domeko talks in it. It's like, we don't, we, we don't have a very limited smelting facility. So this is a huge deal. And Donald Trump is the first president, first American president who has brought people's attention to it. There have been other figures in the past on the right like Jesse Helms and on the left like Dick Epart. But. Donald Trump is the first man who's elected president who talked about China, and he's been talking about the problems with China dating back at least to the year 2000.
Starting point is 00:08:26 You know, one thing I wanted to kind of spell out is that this dumping, the subsidizing you described, that's an effect of state-level industrial policy. This is, so there really, there is no independent, you know, kind of steel industry in communist China. No, it's a function of national security policy. And something you talk about in the book, which is a is incredibly important, which I talk about quite a bit, but I'd like you to talk about a bit to start, is this idea of unrestricted warfare, of using any means as a means of warfare outside of actual kinetic warfare. Well, you know, General Spalding, I believe that you've spoken with him, General Spalding
Starting point is 00:09:06 wrote an excellent book on this, and he went back and looked at these two Chinese colonels who said, you know, the United States, they pulled off an astonishing victory in Operation Desert Storm. but there's never going to be another war like that, and we're going to make sure there's never going to be another war like that. So we'll just use every other means to make war against the United States. And really, and really, if you look at the different things that have gone on since the 1990s, whether we're talking about the China's entry into the World Trade Organization, whether we're talking about its position in the World Health Organization, whether we're talking
Starting point is 00:09:40 about, as you say, it's industrial policy. This is all the means of making war at the United States. and you look at how the U.S. has been targeted economically. The big hold up in Donald Trump's first term, Donald Trump wanted a comprehensive trade deal with the Chinese. What was the problem? Donald Trump wanted an end to currency manipulation. He wanted the Chinese to stop stealing American intellectual property with American companies who were in China.
Starting point is 00:10:10 He wanted to stop the forced transfers of tech and a whole bunch of other things, is just China cheating. And they said, no, we can't do that. And why? It's a communist party. So I think that during that first term, Donald Trump understood what that industrial policy was about, right? They're not in the global system to play fair. They're not in the global system because they believe in balance of powers. They believe in dominating the system. And the fact that, you know, it's not like Xi Jinping needed it pointed out to him that they manipulate the one. Yuan, the fact that Donald Trump and his negotiators talked about this with them, and they finally
Starting point is 00:10:50 came back and said, no, sorry, we can't do it. As it turns out, it's against Chinese law. We have to keep cheating. So that was one instance that Ji gave Donald Trump evidence to distrust him. And that's where we are now in Donald Trump's second term. I think it's important for us to realize this. He does not trust Xi Jinping. He does not trust the Chinese Communist Party. Well, I'm going to now read, this is the perfect moment, to read the President's observation that you cataloged in your book through your interview with him. So this is what he said, and this is looking at that precise trade deal that you mentioned, right? He said, I think you have some very powerful forces in China. President Xi is a very smart and powerful man, but you have other forces
Starting point is 00:11:37 that are strong. I saw it firsthand. He viewed my relationship with him and my position as president is very important. They were very embarrassed when they said this to us because this was like having a deal ready to be signed and the deal was virtually ready to be signed and then they withdrew it. And I believe that they had some additional forces in China that did not want to. I have no doubt in my mind, but that deal didn't happen. So this is incredibly interesting because there was this, you know, agreement, verbal agreement from Xi, yet the deal was withdrawn and then this sort of second highly watered down version of a deal came through. I'm going to get your thoughts on this. Well, Jan, I'm really glad you picked that out because I think it's a really
Starting point is 00:12:24 important thing and really fascinating because it gives an insight into what Donald Trump not only thinks about G, but how Donald Trump is trying to position G, right? Does Donald Trump, does he really believe that there are powerful forces behind Xi that made it impossible for Xi to strike that deal? Or is Donald Trump basically saying, because he says somewhere around there, what does he say? It says, not disrespect. But it's based on that. I don't mean to be disrespectful, but there are really powerful forces there and he couldn't get it done. So is he trying to poke Xi? Do you know what I'm saying? Or is it a combination of all different things? He's saying, she's not as strong as he lets on. There are other more powerful forces behind him. So do you
Starting point is 00:13:05 what I'm saying? I think it's a combination of different things. I think Donald Trump also believes, you know, different people told me about that negotiations for that deal. They said, well, you know, even communist parties have politics they have to deal with. So that's one way to understand it, and that's one way that Donald Trump is talking about it. But I also think that Donald Trump is zeroing in on G there, right? He knows, you know, he's sensing he's going to deal with him again. He's going to have to negotiate with him again. And what does he want Xi Jinping to know about what Donald Trump thinks about it? I thought when the president was talking about this, it was super interesting and super masterful.
Starting point is 00:13:40 What will Xi make of it when he says, oh, so Trump says that I don't, that I'm not the, I'm not the ultimate power, a general secretary of the Communist Party, president of the state and also head of the military. I'm not the main power. Okay. So yeah, I'm really glad you picked up my life. Well, it's very interesting because I do think there's an element of what you just described. I'll tell you what I was thinking as I read this piece. And that is President Trump understands that the Chinese Communist Party or the survival and supremacy of the Chinese Communist Party is the number one priority in this system,
Starting point is 00:14:18 even above that of the survival, of the general secretary, and so forth. So the way I read this, right, is I see him understanding that there's basically some powers, let's call it the 200, you know, top families that rule the country. Let's call it the people who have influence in the military, in the Politburo Standing Committee, the Politburo itself. And especially now, as we know, that she has lost a considerable amount of power.
Starting point is 00:14:46 Some people argue very convincingly that perhaps even the military isn't really under his control anymore. These powers are kind of ascendant and, in fact, playing a much bigger role in the decision-making. Well, what struck me when I was speaking with President Trump about this, and later as I started to look at it more, it's like the different things that they were asking for, again, stopping, basically stopping cheating, right? But that's the nature of the regime. So Donald Trump is basically demanding. That was his deal. That's what he wanted. The deal was, you must change your nature, Chinese Communist Party regime. If you really want to enter the world system, you must change your nature. And the regime, with Xi at the top. And again, it's unclear what the president was describing and how much he was poking at G. But certainly, yes, the Communist Party regime spoke as one. No, we're not going anywhere. We will not erase our character at the request of the American president. So that's a very
Starting point is 00:15:50 important thing, I think, to keep in the background or perhaps the foreground as we understand the different negotiations and different talks now. But Donald Trump, other American presidents talk about it, right? They say, oh, China must stop doing this. They must stop doing that. And we must challenge China and do this and that. Well, Trump is right up against it. And look at where he is right now with the tariffs.
Starting point is 00:16:13 And look at what he's talking about. I mean, I mean, 100% tariffs. I mean, this is astonishing. Right. So Donald Trump is actually fighting it. And he understands what it means. Again, I'm certain that he understands. understand what he's asking for is something that the Chinese Communist Party cannot do.
Starting point is 00:16:32 And now, as opposed to the first term, I mean, Jan is as you describe and as others have talked about it. This regime is more fragile now than it was eight years ago. So I want to jump into the bigger picture of how we ultimately got there because you chart that incredibly well in the China Matrix. Before I go there, I want to explore a little bit more. about this specific particular moment, right? Arguably, this whole tariff regime liberation day, right? That this, from what I saw back then, and I still continue to believe this, as I see the activity, a lot of it is centered on forcing China either to participate in the system, the rules-based system, so to speak, when it comes to trade, or, you know, suffer
Starting point is 00:17:21 immensely. But the reality is that there's this deep, deep economic integration, which again, you chart very in detail in the China matrix. And this is something that was part of the project of the Chinese Communist Party all along. Like if we're going to have pain, you're going to have a lot of pain yourself. So here we are. What can happen now? Well, part of the integral part of what people talk about this deep integration, well, one of the things that we saw during COVID was, is that those supply lines are, again, somewhat fragile, that they can be broken rather easily. They can be disrupted rather easily. And so that's why a lot of American companies actually have chosen to reshore.
Starting point is 00:18:06 I think that one of the things that people meet when they say how interwoven we are is, and this is a very, very important thing to understand about the trade deficit. When Donald Trump notes that our trade deficit now, over since China entered the World Trade Organization in 2001, our trade deficit is worth many, many trillions of dollars, right? But a lot of that money, it's important to understand. That's American companies. We're running a trade deficit not only with the People's Republic of China. We're running a trade deficit with American and other Western companies who have chosen to take their manufacturing to China where there are no, there's no regulatory regime. Labor is very cheap. Obviously, there's no protection for,
Starting point is 00:18:56 no protection for labor. And so they're making tons and tons of money, exporting from China back to the United States. So that's what people mean in lots of ways when they say so integrated. What they mean is they're making tons of money. Americans and other Westerners are making tons and tons of money in China, and they're very reluctant to let that go. And they have one, they have one important card in their hand, and that is that Donald Trump has three years left, right? And there's no indication that whether, I mean, look, I think that most of the people who appear, who would be running for president from the Republican side appear to be very good on China. Democrats, certainly, someone like Gavin Newsom, much less so.
Starting point is 00:19:40 But this is what American manufacturers, and this is what Chinese officials are counting on. And that in the meantime, people will throw a whole bunch of stuff at Trump to keep him off balance to make sure that he's not able to focus on China. And when he is able to focus on China, they'll do stuff like they did last week with the rare earth, rare earth minerals. But to come back to the idea of the integration, this is, by the way, why President Trump always likes to talk about Tim Cook, why he had him at the joint session of Congress in February. why he's talked about him in the White House, because Tim Cook says, yes, we're coming back, we're investing a lot of money in the United States. So Donald Trump wants to promote that American corporations that are coming back, moving back their facilities to America. Because it's a big thing is American jobs. It's a very, very important thing, getting American jobs
Starting point is 00:20:36 back. But another big thing is it's that trade deficit that we've been running with China that's basically paid for their military. And that's an enormous deal. So I think that, really Donald Trump's idea of the terrorists and the trade deficit, the trade imbalance being the fundamental problem, I think that's a really holistic way to see it. Well, you put it really well. Okay, we're talking about the jobs. That's one, right? Two, funding, you know, military and, you know, the growth of an adversary, if not enemy.
Starting point is 00:21:08 I don't know if the distinction between those two words in particular. But finally, you're talking about an unbelievable. unbelievable amount of lobbying power. Because if your manufacturing facilities of some of the greatest country, some of the greatest companies in America are actually dependent on that import, right, on importing goods from there, you have a wild amount of leverage, right? So, I mean, it really is a holistic, comprehensive issue. Let's talk about that because the way that the China lobby operates is fantastically interesting. interesting. You know, the way that I, the book, you know, Jan, it's a story. The protagonist,
Starting point is 00:21:52 the good guy is Donald Trump, and he stands in for all the good guys. The bad guy is Henry Kissinger, because not just because Henry Kissinger was at the, you know, was at the origins of this relationship with Nixon, but because Henry Kissinger made a career out of it, and he made a lot of money off it, and he made other people a lot of money. And it's also Kissinger built institutions to protect his interpretation or his version of this very dangerous relationship for Americans. How the China lobby worked was Kissinger was never paid directly by China. People don't understand that. Kissinger was paid by American corporations that wanted to do business in China. So what Kissinger would do was he would take them on long trips to Beijing and they'd be
Starting point is 00:22:38 wind and dine. And I mean, this started with, you know, it started in the 1970s after Kissinger, after Kissinger left government and went on until Kissinger's death in December 2023. So what they would do is the American corporations would hear counterpitches from Chinese officials saying, yeah, sure, we're very interested in doing business here. But what's really important to us is, and these are big businesses, right? These are not small. mom and pop organizations. These are big American multinationals that have the years at least of the President of the United States and Congress. So they can make a phone call and they can get people on the phone, you know, they can get some of the White House on the phone right away.
Starting point is 00:23:22 So China like that idea very much. They're not paying for anything. They say, yeah, sure, we'd love to have you set up manufacturing here. And but here's what, you know, here's what you have to do. You have to make sure that China stays open. It's in your interest, right, to make sure that China stays open and it's in our interest too. And that's, I mean, there is actually a China lobby that pays people money to lobby for China, but the most influential lobbyists are these, are political donors, right? People with companies worth billions and billions of dollars. So they're not only making the case for China to the people, to the recipients of their donations, they're also telling the people who are getting those donations, like, you better be nice to China. That's what
Starting point is 00:24:07 I want. That's what I'm paying me for to protect China, to protect China in the halls of Congress or protect China in the White House. So it's really an enormous operation. And one of the, you know, it's not just at the national, at the federal level. It's at the state level too, right? States around the country, right, have been compromised, have been compromised by Chinese Communist Party operatives and by Chinese Communist Party money. Look, a story I tell in here, I look back at Chinagate, and a lot of people don't remember what ChinaGate, as we talk about the Clintons a lot, but a lot of people don't remember ChinaGate. What Chinagate was is when Chinese intelligence officers started pouring all sorts of money
Starting point is 00:24:52 into the Democratic National Committee in the mid-90s. And people like, oh, it was, well, you know, people marginally tied to China, so it's weird and this and that, Indonesia, this. These were all people with serious relationships with Chinese intelligence, right? There was actually one Chinese intelligence officer, I think the head of military intelligence, who was also the head of the Navy, the head of the Admiral of the PLA Navy, was sending money in as well. What had happened to Bill Clinton was when he was governor, governor of Arkansas,
Starting point is 00:25:30 as an up-and-coming politician, the DNC saw Clinton the way the CCP did. They saw him as a promising political figure. And I document how different figures, different Chinese allied businessmen, went to Little Rock and cultivated Bill Clinton. So that's what happened. The Chinese tried to, and I'm not saying that Bill Clinton, who I think was a pretty okay president, turned on, betrayed his country, but there's no doubt in my mind that the Chinese actively tried to compromise it, first in Arkansas and then again
Starting point is 00:26:09 is the president. Well, there's two things really important that you just mentioned here. One of them is that the CCP operates at every scale of government and does precisely what you're describing. There's multiple examples of this. They cultivate all sorts of people. in the sense that they develop their relationships, they become friendly. And then those things can be worked on further if someone happens to advance.
Starting point is 00:26:36 But here's the other part that really struck me here, and I don't think this has talked about enough. You're basically telling me that the majority of the China lobbying money isn't actually Chinese money. And that's incredibly important to know. Do you have an estimate of what percentage would be money lobbying for? communist China not being Chinese money? I mean, if we have, we'd have to go and we'd have to look at every American company that has manufacturing in China and whatever, whatever they're making, whatever they're making would have to go into what that lobby is worth. It's, it's trillions of dollars, right? Because all of those, all of those American businessmen, they want that stuff in
Starting point is 00:27:22 China because they're making a lot of money. And so what's the argument? I mean, you just gave a, you just gave a version of it, how they put it, like, oh, you don't understand. We're so interconnected and we're so intertwined and we can't pull ourselves apart. You could. You could, right? We hear all the arguments, oh, China has the supply lines and the training and no one else does. It's like, right, it's going to take some effort. That's true, too. It's going to take some effort for the United States to break free of this. But Donald Trump is the president who wants American companies to do that, and he's offering different ways to help, including very low corporate tax rates.
Starting point is 00:27:56 So a lot of the excuses, that's part of China lobby messaging. We can't do it. It's too hard. We're too interwoven with, we're too interwoven with, you know, with Chinese business elites. That's messaging. That's lobbying, message. I mean, bottom line is you're saying these policies from the current Trump administration are basically designed to, I guess, activate the self-interest of the business leaders to bringing the money to America and pulling it out of China. Yeah, which is hard to do. I mean, there's a lot of people, you know, you may have seen that, you know, Jamie Diamond announced, what was it, $10 billion worth of investment
Starting point is 00:28:38 in important American industries. And so there are a lot of people in the business world who are also starting to see that China's a real danger to the United States, right? This started to happen during COVID. That was a big deal during COVID, when people So not only the criminality of the regime that lied to us about the nature of transmission and origins of COVID, but also the supply lines got all jammed up. So people became concerned about that and they realized, you know, TikTok, there's a whole bunch of different issues that have made American businessmen who are complacent, perhaps complacent before that have put them out there on the front line and they're saying, yeah, okay, I admit
Starting point is 00:29:17 it. I fooled myself about this before or I didn't get it. Now I get it. We have to fight it. Here's what I'm going to do. And Jamie Diamond really comes to the top of the list. He's from a long time. He'd been someone who was someone who got along pretty easily with Beijing.
Starting point is 00:29:33 Explain to me how the visa system was abused. You cataloged that incredibly well in the book. Yeah. Well, this is terrible. What happened? And Donald Trump didn't really have an understanding. A couple of months ago now, Donald Trump was talking like, oh, no, I want 600,000 students, Chinese students here on visas.
Starting point is 00:29:52 And I'm like, okay, that's definitely part of his negotiation because I know for a fact he doesn't. He was very worried to find out there were 300,000 Chinese graduate students on student visas during his first term. And I mean, when the president was notified about where they are, Ezra Cohen is one of the sources. He was an intelligence official in the first Trump administration, great guy, very insightful, very concerned about the threat of the Chinese Communist Party. you know, that, that's how they found out, that's how they found out that there were real dangers. Look, a lot of these students are at, are at not classified facilities, very sensitive facilities like U.S. nuclear labs. And as Ezra explains in the book, a lot of these things, it's kind of messy, you know. It's not like it's a perfect delineation all the time between
Starting point is 00:30:44 classified work and sensitive work. So we've seen different PLA officials, different Chinese intelligence officials, stealing intelligence. We've seen the different people that they, or rather stealing sensitive material or classified material. We saw, you know, we've seen professors at Ivy League universities. And one of the big problems, Jan, is I'm sure your former broadcast partner, Cash Patel knew even before he took the job of FDA director, but with 300,000 Chinese graduate students in the country, and not to say that all of them necessarily want to spy for the PRC, but may be put in compromising positions to do so. The FBI simply can't cover 300,000 people, right?
Starting point is 00:31:27 So it's a disaster. So that's what I mean when Americans, the Americans who have not recommitted to their country need to recommit, and at the top of the list are university presidents. Well, we have to face reality. We have to have this eyes wide open approach. But the current reality, the current status quo that we're in, it was developed without that.
Starting point is 00:31:51 And now we have to deal with the consequences. So how do we approach this? Well, Donald Trump being the first president to act on this. I think it's really, I've talked about this a bit before. I mean, one of the things that he's worried about upsetting markets, all presidents are now. Remember, George W. Bush was worried about upsetting the market after 9-11 and as the global war on terror started. And I understand that. It doesn't want to disrupt our economy and doesn't want to disrupt the country.
Starting point is 00:32:17 But I think it would be advisable. I mean, Donald Trump communicates very well with Americans. That's his whole thing. It's not just truth social, previously Twitter. But look at his rallies. I mean, his rallies are fantastic. The way he gets down there can talk to people, right? That's what people love about his rallies.
Starting point is 00:32:34 They don't like him, you know, reading off the teleprompter. Though granted, you know, reading off stories about or policy that saved his life in Butler, Pennsylvania, when he turned his head to talk about his podcast. policy, but for the most part, people don't like talking, don't like hearing Donald Trump talk about policy. They like him talking to the American people, right, spontaneously, like a great entertainer. So I think that it would be great if the president could basically give people a fireside chat and say, here's what's happening. This is what you elected me for. You elected me to bring jobs back to America. You elected me to keep our, to keep our peace and advance our
Starting point is 00:33:15 prosperity. And that's what I'm doing. But I have to take it. tell you, as you're seeing, things may get a little harder. And this tariff regime, this is an important instrument. Here's why I'm using it. And this is something, as I describe in the book, I, you know, quoting just great, brilliant people, Clyde Prestowitz, you know, Robert Lightheiser, different people who know a lot about free trade and terrorists. Donald Trump might say, look, it's, it's, it's, terrorists have been a part of our system since Alexander Hamilton. I know they're going to tell you I'm a wild-eyed revolutionary. I'm not. This goes back to the founding of our country and tariffs are always about building our prosperity as
Starting point is 00:33:53 well as securing our peace. And that's what I'm doing. So that's one of the things. I would love that if the president could help get people on board, explain what's really going on, explain why this is so important. Because again, in 2016, this was one of the reasons Americans elected him. When Barack Obama said, how are you going to return those jobs? Those jobs aren't coming back. What's your magic wand? Donald Trump did it. He started bringing jobs. jobs back. So that's why we voted for them, and I'd like to see him talk to people about that. A common people with a common purpose. You know, one thing I really appreciated in your book is that you speak with some people who are,
Starting point is 00:34:40 let's say, dissidents who are acting for the benefit of human rights in China, an Uyghur activist as well as a felon gong practitioner. You know, I can't help. It reminded me of interviewing someone years ago who had actually worked in one of these factories. American Citizen, he worked in one of these slave labor camps slash factories, and he was making Homer Simpson slippers for a Hackensack, New Jersey company,
Starting point is 00:35:09 the kind where you kind of put your foot into the mouth of Homer, so this thing. and he was just kind of, you know, himself was shocked to discover this is happening. And the slave labor was part of the dynamic here, right? Right. I mean, in the book, I mean, I find it, it was a very moving interview with, you know, with a Falun Gong practitioner. And he's talking about how he was in prison in China. And he said, the guards would say, yeah, the Americans know all about it. and they don't care. And no one could believe, and the person who spoke and said, no one could believe
Starting point is 00:35:49 it, really, because the Americans would never turn to blind eye to this kind of suffering or this kind of indignity, this kind of torture. But in fact, when this person left, this person came to the United States when he now lives and he saw Christmas time that some of the Christmas lights that he'd indeed been forced to make in prison were for sale in American markets. And that to me, that when he told me that, that just chilled me. And I hope other Americans reading the book are really chilled by it, too, saying, gosh, that's just terrible. And especially, you know, I mean, Christmas time.
Starting point is 00:36:24 And so that's what, you know, that's where some of our, you know, some more Christmas cheer comes from and this incredible suffering and torture. So, yeah, it's, that's one of the things that I wanted it. That's one of the things that I wanted to drive home here. It's not just about foreign policy and it's not just about trade, but this is a communist regime, and they're disgusting, and they're disgraceful. And obviously it's not an attack on Chinese people, but it is making a case saying the people who rise to the top of this regime have climbed atop the corpses of tens of millions of fellow Chinese.
Starting point is 00:37:02 It's just disgusting. And the fact that Americans have strengthened, have empowered this regime, not only now to hurt their own citizens, but to hurt Americans, we're in a very bad place, not just in terms of trade and national security, but in terms of morality as well. So you've been describing this fireside chat that you're hoping, the sort of which the president could have with the American people. I'm struck by this situation where the Chinese Communist Party really only has one leg of the Chinese economy left to stand on. And that's the export economy. That's why it's flooding whatever markets will take its goods,
Starting point is 00:37:50 you know, at, you know, fire sale prices, because that's where all the money they're making is coming from, basically. So here we are. And so it made me think, and especially this element now, this really hits home when you talk about, you know, how U.S. corporations are involved in basically supporting the Chinese system. It's really actually kind of American corporations that are driving those imports. There's a kind of too big to fail argument that strikes me, because this economy is very brittle, export-only economy. These tariffs are making it very difficult for them. I can imagine a situation where basically people are telling the president, hey, we don't want havoc, economic havoc in China. We don't, because, you know, with all these things, you
Starting point is 00:38:42 ultimately have to pay the piper, but this is really, if this fails, you know, they go down, we go down with them. So we have to keep propping up the regime as we have been all along. I don't see that we go down with them. I mean, but that's what I mean. I mean, we are likely to feel some pain. I mean, we're a constitutional republic. We have a very resilient people, right? I guess you can say in some ways the people who, who, who, the elite of the Chinese Communist Party. I mean, just Xi's story itself is insane. His father was, you know, imprisoned and Ji just decided,
Starting point is 00:39:15 oh, instead of turning against them, I'm just going to show him a communist superhero. But I mean, Americans are resilient. I mean, we're a very hardy people, but our resources need to be called upon. The president needs to, or someone, needs to summon our strength and say, look, it might get hardier.
Starting point is 00:39:36 I don't know. But here's the end goal. We can't be tied to this, we can't be tied to this government anymore because they're crazy and they're vicious and they want to destroy us. They want us to live like slaves. Remember everyone what COVID was like? You know, and this is a way that the president can kind of refer to lockdowns without necessarily talking about lockdowns. They're saying that was bad. That's how these people are all the time. No freedom of speech, no freedom of anything. And we can't live like that, and we can't live as slaves to that regime. So we're going to fight, and this is part of the cornerstone of my legacy. I'm your president. I love this country, and here's what we have to do. So, yes, something like that. I would just like to see Americans understand what the purposes, what our fight is about.
Starting point is 00:40:31 I think my book plays some role in that explaining the history, saying how bad that regime is and how bad our regime is to have become a matrix, to have basically folded into the same thing, Chinese Communist Party elites and U.S. elites. It's extremely dangerous. So I think I explain to people what's happened, what some of the astonishing scandals are, and how Donald Trump is the person who's pledged to reverse course and save this country. You know, no one wants to admit they were wrong, especially when that wrong, you know, caused people a lot of pain. But it just struck me, as you're saying this, Lee, that this kind of does offer an opportunity. I mean, President Trump's policies do offer a kind of an opportunity for people that have been involved because they can say,
Starting point is 00:41:23 hey, look, it's the president's policies that are forcing me to get out. And, you know, I kind of have to. and frankly, that'll be, but that'll be for the good of everyone. No, right. That's great. It's like, hey, shareholders or whatever, we have to get out. The president's making life hard. Yeah, I know he'll be out in three years, but in the meantime, he's got a whole bunch of different mechanisms he can use to really hurt us. And plus besides, we're an American company. We're patriots. Our president is summoning us to come back home, and we're going back home. You know, and if you want to fire me, you should fire me.
Starting point is 00:42:00 yeah, I think I can, it's, you know, there's a lot of different arguments that, you know, that people can make about it. Yeah, I think that Trump is supporting them. And again, the idea that he's urging people to come back home, we'll do this for you, we'll do that for you. Well, I'll bring you into a joint session of Congress. Hold up your hand and say, champion, champion, you're a champion, you know, so, you know, and he has done a lot of that. Again, I'm hopeful that the American people understand the stakes that are involved. And also, look then that they also understand Trump's heroism here too. We talk about, you know, rightly, we talk about him getting shot in the face, shot in the head in Butler, Pennsylvania, and getting up.
Starting point is 00:42:40 I mean, the way that I read Russiagate now is Russiagate was partly an operation to keep Trump distracted from dealing with China. But look at all the different attacks he's taken just for going after China. Look at what he's up against. So it takes a, it takes a lot of courage. It takes a lot of a lot of guts. Well, Lee, your book, The China Matrix, I think, required reading, not just for people interested in the kind of the China question, but I would say for everyone. A final thought as we finish? Yes, I want to say one thing. The book that I wanted to write, like the pot against the
Starting point is 00:43:17 present, I wanted to write a story, you know. I wanted to tell a story. And there is a story, and the story is very important. And it's how U.S. elites sold out their country. And the bad guy, Henry Kissinger stands for all the bad guys. And the people who want our country back, right, and there are millions of them, Donald Trump, he's the protagonist, he's the good guy. It's a story about, it's a story about good and evil, because this is truly an evil regime. Yon, you know, no one can speak to that more directly than you can't. It's truly an evil regime. And the idea that American elites have tied us to these beasts, these animals. And so, The people who are trying to free us from them, like Donald Trump, like others, on the left and on the right,
Starting point is 00:44:03 deserve to be celebrated, cheered on, and deserve our support in their battle because the battle is really for us in the future of our country. So that's what it is. It's fundamentally a story. And that's why in the subtitle, it's the epic story. It's an epic. It's been going on for at least 50 years. And I want to thank you so much for letting me come on and speak about it today. Well, Lee Smith, it's such a pleasure to have had you on. Jan, it is always a huge pleasure to be speaking with you anytime, and you and I have spoken in many different places around the world, and I always treasure it. Thank you, Lee. Thank you all for joining Lee Smith and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders.
Starting point is 00:44:46 I'm your host, Janja Kellick.

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