Battlegrounds w/ H.R. McMaster: Tibet: A View from the Top of the World, with Lobsang Sangay | Hoover Institution - podcast episode cover

Battlegrounds w/ H.R. McMaster: Tibet: A View from the Top of the World, with Lobsang Sangay | Hoover Institution

Jul 31, 202450 minEp. 66
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Episode description

In this episode of Battlegrounds, H.R. McMaster and Lobsang Sangay discuss China’s repression of the Tibetan people, Tibet’s efforts to advocate for freedom and rule of law, and prospects for the future in Tibet and in East Asia, on Wednesday July 31, 2024.

Join former prime minister in exile of the Central Tibetan Administration Lobsang Sangay and Hoover senior fellow H.R. McMaster as they discuss China’s repression of the Tibetan people, Tibet’s efforts to advocate for freedom and rule of law, and prospects for the future in Tibet and in East Asia. Prime Minister Sangay shares his insights on how the Chinese Community Party subjugates the Tibetan people, how to foster unity and strengthen a movement in exile, his assessment of the Promoting a Resolution to the Tibet-China Dispute Act, recently signed by President Biden, and what Americans can do to advocate for the rights of the Tibetan people.

ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

Lobsang Sangay served as the sikyong, or prime minister in exile, of the Central Tibetan Administration from 2011 to 2021. Prior to taking this role, Sangay was an academic at Harvard Law School, where he organized multiple conferences between Tibetan, Western, and Chinese scholars, including the Dalai Lama. He was selected as one of the Asia Society’s Asia 21 Fellows in 2007. Sangay holds doctor of juridical science and master of laws degrees from Harvard Law School and a bachelor of laws degree from the University of Delhi. He served as a senior visiting fellow at Harvard Law School’s East Asian Legal Studies Program in Fall 2023.

H.R. McMaster is the Fouad and Michelle Ajami Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He is also the Bernard and Susan Liautaud Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute and lecturer at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business. He was the 25th assistant to the president for National Security Affairs. Upon graduation from the United States Military Academy in 1984, McMaster served as a commissioned officer in the United States Army for thirty-four years before retiring as a Lieutenant General in June 2018.

Transcript

America and other free and open societies face  crucial challenges and opportunities abroad that affect security and prosperity at home. This  is a series of conversations with guests who bring deep understanding of today's battlegrounds  and creative ideas about how to compete, overcome challenges, capitalize on opportunities, and  secure a better future. I am H.R. McMaster. This is Battlegrounds. On today's episode of

Battlegrounds. Our focus is on the region  of Tibet. Our guest is Lobsang Sangay, the former Sikyong or Prime Minister-in-Exile of  the Central Tibetan Administration from 2011 to 2021. Prior to this role, Sangay was an academic  at Harvard Law School where he organized multiple conferences between Tibetan, Western and Chinese  scholars, which included the Dalai Lama. He was

selected as one of the Asia Society's Asia 21  Fellows in 2007. Sangay holds Doctor of Juridical Science and Master of Law degree from Harvard  Law School and a Bachelor of Law degree from the University of Delhi. He served as senior  visiting fellow at Harvard Law School's East Asian Legal Studies program in fall 2023. King  Namri Songsten united the Central Tibetan states into an empire in the early seventh century until  conflict with Tibet's Buddhist leaders fractured

the kingdom in the ninth through 11th centuries. Buddhism spread throughout the western part of East Asia in the centuries that followed, and  Mongol Invaders placed the Sakya Lama or Buddhist spiritual leader in charge of a relatively  autonomous Tibet in the 13th century. Tibet regained effective independence after the Chinese  Ming Dynasty drove the Mongols out of Tibet in the 14th century. By the mid 16th century, the  resurgent Mongols invaded Tibetan territory and

reestablished influence over Tibet. In the late  16th century, Mongol leader Altan Khan made Sonam Gyatso, who was the great master of the Gelug sect  and the third Dalai Lama, the preeminent religious leader of Tibet. Tibet was strategically important  territory, including to Mongol and Manchu factions in China for the following two centuries. British  forces invaded Tibet in the winter of 1903 as part

of efforts to shore up British positions  in Central Asia relative to Russia. In the aftermath of the British seizure of Southern  Tibet, the Dalai Lama fled to inner China. Two years later, Britain and China signed a treaty  granting Chinese sovereignty over Tibet, which the Chinese enforced militarily until the fall of the  Qing Dynasty in 1911 prompted Tibetans to expel the remaining Chinese soldiers. The Dalai Lama  returned to Tibet in 1912, and the Tibetan people

established an independent government that lasted  for decades. In 1950, communist Chinese troops invaded Tibet, and in 1951, the Tibetan government  signed the 17 point agreement to make Tibet an autonomous region of China. China's religious  suppression in Tibet created civil unrest and conflict forcing the Dalai Lama and 80,000 other  Tibetans to flee to India in 1959. Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution continued to destroy Tibetan  religious and cultural institutions in the 1960's

and '70's, but it largely subsided following  Mao Zedong's death in 1976. Subsequently, Deng Xiaoping allowed negotiations with  the Tibetan government in exile, which mainly failed and Chinese repression of Tibetan  citizens intensified in the following decades. Civil unrest in response to Chinese forcible  subjugation of Tibet, including during the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games heightened  international attention concerning the plight

of the Tibetan people. After 2008, the PRC  pursued an aggressive program of synthesizing ethnic minorities, including in Xinjiang and  Mongolia. The PRC tightened its grip on Tibet

due in part to Beijing's insatiable appetite  for critical minerals reserves. Until 2011, the 14th Dalai Lama led the Tibetan government  in exile, the Central Tibetan Administration, which is headquartered in Dharamshala, India. That year, the Dalai Lama relinquished his political power over the Central Tibetan  Administration and Lobsang Sangay took over

as Sikyong. The United States recognizes  the Tibet Autonomous region as part of the people's Republic of China, but it has called on  China to respect Tibetan religious freedoms and civil rights. In 2020, the United States Congress  passed the Tibetan Policy and Support Act of 2020, emphasized the Dalai Lama's religious power  to appoint his successor, promised sanctions against Chinese interference in that process,  and called for an American consulate in Lhasa,

the capital of the Tibetan Autonomous region. We meet with Lobsang Sangay soon after President Joe Biden signed into law the bipartisan promoting  a resolution to the Tibetan-China Dispute Act, which is meant to counter the Chinese government's  disinformation campaign against Tibetans, condemn Beijing's human rights violations towards the  Tibetan people and promote negotiations between

the Dalai Lama and the PRC. We discussed China's  repression of the Tibetan people, efforts to advocate for freedom and rule of law and prospects  for the future in Tibet and in East Asia. Prime Minister Lob Sangay, welcome to  Battlegrounds. Hey, let me begin by saying what an honor it is to have you here. You've been  a courageous advocate for freedom and democracy, and I know that you have my respect  and I'm sure this respect of all of

our viewers. Welcome to Battlegrounds. Oh, thank you H.R. for inviting me to the Battlegrounds, and it's a  real privilege to be on your show. Well, you have such a unique perspective. I mean,  you ran a government in exile for 10 years. You've been studying authoritarian regimes, opposition  to authoritarian regimes, the establishment of

governments in exile for 15 years. You're working  on a book. Could you share with our viewers the challenges that governments in exile, like  the Central Tibetan Administration face, and ways that you can advance your interest  from a government exile, and what lessons do you have for other opposition movements? Thank you. I spent 15 years doing academic research on comparative government exile and the  case study of being the Tibetan government exile.

I just thought I should understand about Tibetan  government exile by doing comparative studies. And then I actually ran Tibetan government exile  for 10 years. And after coming back to Harvard, I have to reflect a bit and I felt that perhaps  if I could turn my dissertation into a book with my colleague, then it could be helpful for other  exile movements because I've interacted with many

and they all go through same challenges, right?  Number one being who's your host country. Host country can determine help or cripple government  exiles and then the infighting, the challenge disunity and caused by again, the trauma is not  necessarily their fault. And then the instigation, intermediation, co-optation, assassination,  divide and rule by the authoritarian regimes

or the dictator regimes, and funding issue. How much funding you can get internationally will determine again, the function and efficacy  of your organization or your exile community and how much you can raise domestically. When  it comes to funding, again, there's issue

of corruption and then some of the government's  exiles have failed because of corruption. And then functionally how you define democracy from  Robert Dahl to Engelhardt or all the giants, essentially the conventional definition is no  state, no democracy, no territory, no democracy, but then you are an exile, you don't have  territory, you don't have a state, and how can you define democracy in a new way? So when you  say an exile movement, unity, single leadership,

single voice is very important because you have  one voice and one leader and unity. But then when you say democracy instead of unity, there  has to be diversity. Instead of single leader, there has to opposition parties, instead of  single voice, there has the freedom of speech. So there's a philosophical contradiction between  the two. So that's how you come up with a new

definition of democracy, that is applicable to  exiled communities. Why I say exiled communities is in the last 30 years there has been decline  or what they call backsliding of democracy, but then increase the funding for democracy.  And then in the last 30 years there has been increase of funding for election reform, billions  of dollars we are talking about. And then those who organizations, individuals, consultants  who are engaged in this election reform

or democracy reform have multiplied by like  thousand folds. Yet, democracy is backsliding and the election is not functioning well and  what is the reason? And then here I make the argument that exiled community, because they have  been the victims of autocratic and dictatorial regimes will be the perfect, the strongest  agent to bring democracy back home. To do that, they must practice democracy while in  exile. So that essentially is an argument.

Well, it's a really important argument  and it affects, as you've mentioned, really how we understand democracy. And I think  we have a great colleague and friend of ours, mutual friend of ours, Larry Diamond, who's worked  on democracy for a long time. So I think that your scholarship is going to help, I think, evolve that  school of thinking, but also as you're mentioning how you deliver assistance in democracy promotion.  And Lobsang, I'm just going to say, I mean, this

is a huge problem, right? There are 124 million  refugees, 35 million political refugees, and could you talk more maybe about the human dimension  of this? You mentioned it, right? You mentioned how people can become disillusioned, and what I  wonder is how you restore a sense of agency among people who may be so frustrated and traumatized. When I finished my doctorate dissertation in 2004, I did write this, a crisis of democracy and  hopefully exile community could contribute.

This is 2004. This is like again, our common  friend, Fukuyama of Sanford wrote this book of history and everybody said, "No, democracy  is thriving everywhere. Lobsang, we don't see this democratic backsliding. What are you talking  about? Why are you writing this dissertation?" So I wrote that. At that time, if I'm not wrong,  as per UNHCR, around 24 million refugees,

people, displaced people, of this 9 million  were refugees, political refugees. Now as you mentioned, is 130 plus million refugees, and  then 20, almost 30 million political refugees, displaced people. So you can clearly see in  the last 20 years that refugees have increased by more than a hundred million, and then the  political refugees increased by two or three or

four times now. So this is a serious problem. These dictators, the autocratic regimes are suppressing and denying freedom so much that  people are forced to go into exile and it becomes a global problem with all these refugees  around. So while in exile, often disunity is one of the reasons, there are several other reasons.  One, and then I, till now, even I used to think why? And people blame ourselves. We just don't get  along. Even the funders and the supporters say,

"Why don't you get along? All you need to  do is unite and remove Maduro or Assad or challenge Xi Jinping." So unity, it's just a  common sense. But then people don't understand is that they're coming from different parts of  their own countries, strangers coming together, and there are different personalities. And primary  reason why there's disunity is because they went through a trauma, they lost their country, they  lost their homes, their families, everybody.

And once you go through this trauma, now many  psychiatrists and psychologists who study this, they say that people who go through trauma are  more emotional, less rational, more stubborn than reasonable, because they see world in black  and white. There is dictator. I lost my freedom. I must fight for my freedom, and then I have to work  hard to make this possible. So in that context, you must understand the blame for disunity is  partly because of dictators and autocrat regimes

and also the funders. So we have so many funders  when they fund 10 different organizations of let's say Venezuela or Hong, Kong or Chinese dissidents,  what do you expect? 10 different organizations with 10 different leaders speaking 10 different  voices and having 10 different events. So if you fund one organization primarily and  give limited funding to other organizations, even through funding, you can bring exiled  communities in a bigger platform, stronger

platform. So there are three ways why there is  trauma and disunity among exiled communities. Yeah, this is really important because you're  pointing out that there are very practical policy implications for your observations about  disunity and the delivery of assistance. And I think this gets to your observation on the  definition of democracy. We tend to think of it as pluralistic and many different groups. But  of course for authoritarian regimes, they don't

have to be that strong, really. They just have to  be stronger than any organized opposition. So can you share some other ways that you would foster  unity and try to strengthen a movement in exile? When we define democracy, generally, when we  define freedom of speech, we define terms of absoluteness. So you can say whatever you want,  you can do whatever you want. That is essentially the definition of freedom of speech in America.  Now, again, I'm a student of democracy and

freedom of speech, so I might be bearing into some  controversial area. Having said that, let's say a small example, in America, you can wear American  flag anywhere you want. You can wear as a T-shirt or a shorts or a socks, and you can burn American  flag. The freedom speech covers it, but now for Tibetan, if you say, "Hey, you can make a Tibetan  flag as your shorts and socks", that's like sacrilegious because for us, we are fighting for  our nation and freedom and flag is sacred, so we

can't accept that. So that's why I'm sure because  you're in exile, you lost your country, you lost, your dignity is being challenged here, and there  are certain symbols that you cannot compromise. So it's one example where freedom of speech  defined in America might not be applicable in other countries, especially in certain exile  communities. So we must understand that. So now, a common friend, Larry Diamond, I made a  presentation, Stanford, he was in presence

as well. I said the same thing, all of you  studied democracy assumes state and territory, but then if you go with that definition  of democracy and advise exile communities, this is how democracy defined in America. This is  what you should practice in exile, they will say, "It's not applicable to us." They need a different  definition of democracy, which is unique because all these 10 challenges that they face is like  a do or die kind of situation. In America,

you can afford to have one president elected, and  after four years you can change the president. But in exile, you get a wrong leader, wrong movement,  you exile movement or government will collapse and it'll take long time ever to come back. And then the autocratic leaders will exploit the freedom of speech in your community to create,  divide and rule. More voices, more differences, more division the better. So they use co-optation,  they buy you off, they silence you, and then they

divide you. So divide and rule is their main  strategy, and then they murder you as well, from Russia. There's so many examples. China,  there's so many examples where they essentially murder you. So they use all this tactics. So  we should be aware of all this reality and take into context and define democracy, coming with  a strategy which is unique but very effective

in challenging autocratic system. These are really important points, and I'm thinking of the work that Leopoldo Lopez  is doing in the World Liberty Congress and some of the tremendous guests that we've had from Iran,  Mongolia, Venezuela, and China. Could you maybe talk more about these mechanisms of authoritarian  control? What are the Tibetan people encountering

now? I'm thinking of some of these heinous  practices like the colonial boarding schools and the degree to which penetration into  everybody's home with their phone, which is their little CCP minder that they have to carry  around with them all the time. And of course, what they've done to subvert Tibetan Buddhism.  I mean, could you share the experience of the Tibetan people and how the Chinese Communist  Party is subjugating the Tibetan people?

These are very good questions. So I think it's  comparable to other exiled communities as well, what Tibetans are going through. So there  is internal repression, external repression, and transnational repression now. So internally,  you're right, 1 million Tibetan students, children from nomadic and farming areas are  forced to send to boarding schools where they're taught about communist doctrine, not  Buddhism, Chinese culture, not Tibetan culture.

We're talking about six-year-olds,  right? Six-year-old [inaudible 00:20:02]- Six-year-old, seven-year-old, yeah, from  kindergarten all the way to high school.

So they're forced, otherwise the incentives are  taken away. Tibet has 6 million population. When you take 1 million children from their families  and force them into boarding school and salute to Mao Zedong and Xi Jinping and insult and  protest against Dalai Lama and religious leaders, I mean, a young child, you're trying to  brainwash them into making them think they are Chinese, and not just Chinese, they're Chinese,  not Tibetan, but they're superior civilization

as to inferior Tibetan civilization, and then more  advanced values, which Chinese values to backward values. So that's how they try to indoctrinate and  try to influence. Having said that, I do believe Tibetan civilization is very old. Tibetan identity  is very rich and Tibetan sense of pride and nationalism is also very strong. So I don't think  they will succeed, but that's how they're trying. Now monastically they are shutting down even  private schools run by monasteries just to

teach Tibet language and culture. So I came across  a data where in Lhasa, the capital city of Tibet, 93% of the publication and printing press that  publishes books and articles and journals take place in Chinese language, 93%. Can you  imagine when population in Tibet is Tibetan? So that's how they try to influence Tibetans  inside Tibet. Externally, what they do is,

for example, if I want to go to Tibet, I  have zero chance. I'm banned from going to Tibet or any of my family members or any Tibetan. You must be sponsored by a Communist Party member in Tibet, full-fledged Communist Party member  in Tibet. You don't get that sponsorship, you

are denied visa. So what it does is that if you go  to Tibet because of a favor by a Communist Party member, and that person will control you, even  you are an American citizen in America, because that person will have all the data and facts about  all your relatives, that family members back home, and whatever you do or say will impact all your  cousins, not just your siblings, and then your promotion, jobs and that even voting, even go  to school, anything. That's how they control.

They control your life choices is the  way Stephen Cockin says it here, right? Yes. And when you apply for visa, if you go  to Chinese embassy, they'll say, "So do you go participate in protests?" If you say yes, you  are denied visa. "So do you contribute?" We have this freedom tax, Tibetan identity book, which  is that $96 or $100 a year. If you pay that, you

are denied visa. So they ask you, they go through  the checklist just to deter you, intimidate you, and to overwhelm you into not doing anything  when it comes to exile movement and then make you in a hostage even while you are in exile. So  this intimidation that they use is very common. For example, is it October, November, I was giving  a talk at Cornell. So I had late evening flight. As I landed at Ithaca airport, there was one  Chinese person speaking Tibetan and a few words,

he greeted me and he said, "Oh, I'm a big fan  of yours. I want to a selfie and all that." I said, okay. We took a selfie. Then I went to  give a talk. The next day he was there in the auditorium taking video, and then we had a dinner  at a faculty with faculty members at a restaurant within the campus. He was there with a Chinese  students. Now, most surprisingly early morning I had like 7:30 AM flight or something. So I was  there at the airport at 6:30 and he was right

there at the gate of my flight. Then when I saw  him at the talk and the dinner, and I suspected he was sent by Chinese embassy, and then at the gate  I said, "Hey, now you took my selfie yesterday and now I want to take selfie with you today." And  then he ran away. He didn't want to take selfie. So what they're trying to do, they literally track  you. Your flights, literally wait you outside the gate on your arrival and then at your departure. And this is happening in the United States, right?

It's happening all over the world, these illegal  police stations that the CCP set up, and Lobsang, I don't know if you've seen this at Harvard, but  this Chinese Students and Scholars Association, which is a front for the Ministry of State  Security, or this is China's spy agency to keep tabs on students. I mean, I think every university  president should vow to insulate their campus from

that kind of intimidation. Can you tell our  viewers more about the experiences that you've seen of your Chinese students and others who are  intimidated by the Chinese Communist Party abroad? I was giving a talk at University of Toronto when  I was holding my official position. 50 Chinese students came with the Chinese flag and started  singing National Anthem outside the auditorium. And surprisingly, I was giving a talk at a  law school in South Africa, Cape Town. It's

a private university, and then they announced  it. And what happened, a hundred plus migrant laborers hired by Chinese embassy and 30 plus  Chinese people came, stormed the auditorium, climbed on the stage with big banners, and then  essentially drowned out and chased away the audience. So I had to speak at an alternate  classroom where maybe half the people came.

And now in America, they tried to intimidate you  by holding protests outside. But in South Africa, they were holding protests inside the auditorium  and then shouting slogans and making sure there are no attendees. So then the Chinese embassy  issued a press release about my visit, and Lithuania also issued a press release. So  I have encountered several of your general and fought many wars. But when it comes to political  activism, I have had small battles with these

protesters as well. I'm quite used to it. We have a colleague, Stephen Cockin I mentioned already, who studies Stalin. And from his study  of Stalin, he's concluded that authoritarian regimes really need five things to stay in power.  They need cash flow, they need security forces, they control your life choices, which we've  been talking about, they need stories to tell their people to create this narrative that  everybody's out to get you, but the Chinese

Communist Party is going to protect you and  make your life better. And then finally, they need an international system that's benign,  that doesn't challenge their authoritarian rule. Could you maybe talk about what you think are some  of the critical initiatives, efforts that could be made to weaken authoritarian regimes' grip on  people and their ability to stifle human freedom? You mentioned there were international  organizations. Of the 15 UN agencies,

last I checked, four or five are headed  by Chinese officials. Of the remaining 10, I think either the senior director or the vice  chairman are Chinese. Now after America, China has become the second-largest donor. Third is Japan,  and Japan used to second. Now when they donate, it's like quick pro quo, it's conditional.  So we give this much money to this agency,

but we demand that ahead of the agency be  our person. So there's this huge, the UN agriculture related agency approved all kinds of  fertilizer and chemicals to be used in African countries because these were the countries where  agricultural products were exported to China and they didn't care about the erosion of soil. And  after two years of using that kind of fertilizer,

that soil will be useless for three or four years. What happened to these farmers? Their income? But then the UN agency is approving that fertilizer  to be used in that country, and then you find that head of agency is Chinese and the export of  the agricultural product goes to China, and that's how they use it. So we should be very aware of how  international agencies are infiltrated and then

misused by Chinese government and in collaboration  with other communities as well. For example, UNHCR, the Human Rights Commission, came up  with a report saying that there is crime against humanity in Rigo region. And a fact America  says, so Canada says, so even UN Human Rights Commission came out with the report and then  this was tabled to pass a resolution at the UN General Assembly. Only 51 countries voted with  vigours more than 150 countries didn't vote with

vigours. Can you imagine? Human Rights Commission  is saying there is crime against humanity, support this and 150 countries don't agree  with you and don't support you. So that means even the UN bodies are very much compromised  and weakened by China and other countries. Yeah, Lobsang, it's even worse, I guess, when  you consider China's allies. For example, Russia is now the rotating chair of the Human  Rights Council, for example. And I wonder also

if you might comment on how to advocate within  international organizations. I think that oftentimes people think there's just a prize for  membership, if you're a member of an international organization. But as you're pointing out,  they're really a battleground in themselves, a contested space. And China's been very,  very successful in promoting its authoritarian model and its mercantile status economic  model in various international fora.

Yeah, I mean, you're right. And it's a fact that  there are more non-democratic countries in the world than democratic countries. In that sense,  we are losing. So and then, yes, China has allies, all this autocratic, non-democratic. What they  say is, "Look, we'll not tell you how you run your government. And no matter what kind of  corruption repression you have, as long as we have this business deals, we give you a loan  with high interest and then you can't pay back,

we take the ownership of your seaport or airports  and all kinds of even agricultural land." So that's the strategy. And then unfortunately, it  seems to be working. So we have to use, I think, all international forums including United Nations,  Human Rights Commission. I know on the one hand it's an uphill battle. They have the majority.  If the chair is a Russian representative, what do you expect from human rights Commission? Having said that, we must use every forum possible

and maximize the time and then speak out.  So that's the only way. So that's the only way we can fight. So at the public discourse,  private discourse and then coordination and collaboration with like-minded countries. Don't  go alone. Take as many countries as possible with you and speak in unison. Otherwise, Chinese  government, again, Russia also, they divide and rule. So fewer representation there, fewer  voices are there for freedom and democracy,

good for them. So I think coordination is  very, very important. And then we should keep pushing back at every international forum. You know, Lobsang, just I think two months ago, about two months ago, Congress passed the  Promoting a Resolution to the Tibet-China

Dispute Act. It calls, I think, for resolving the  dispute. I think the language is in connection with international law, including the UN Charter  and highlights, the distinct Tibetan religious, cultural, linguistic and historical identity,  what China's actually trying to extinguish. And it accuses China rightly, accurately,  of violating international legal obligations

by denying the rights of Tibetans to  self-determination. And President Biden recently signed that act, but when he signed it,  he issued what I think is kind of a weak statement that diluted the impact of the law. Could you  maybe give us your assessment of the act and the President's letter and what more can America do  to advocate for the rights of the Tibetan people?

I was in India when the bill was passed, and then  the US congressional delegation was also there. I really welcome the act passed by the Congress.  As you rightly said, it talks about, one, that China claims Tibet has always been part of China  since ancient times. It's wrong, and based on international law, Tibetans are entitled to have  self-determination. And then the US government is for negotiation between the Dalai Lama or as  representative and the Chinese government. So

there'd be a mutually agreeable solution. So this  was as far as negotiation is concerned, this was mentioned in previous acts as well. The historical  part was very new, so we all were very excited. But then when it was signed, president  Biden clearly said that this act does not change the fact that Tibet Autonomous  region and Tibetan areas of China, he already acknowledged Tibet Autonomous  region and Tibetan areas as China, of China,

is part of PRC. So we were very excited about the  historical part, and that was very much diluted with the statement of the president. Having said  that, we really appreciate what the US Congress

has done. We really appreciate the American  government continued support for negotiation and to resolve the issue of Tibet and their  support, yes, but to see that historical being taken away and to recognize that Tibet Autonomous  Region and Tibetan areas of China is part of PRC, that defeated the historical element of the  Congress act so that I think many Tibetans have

expressed their apprehension and disappointment. I think it stems from this idea that we should manage the relationship with China instead of win  the competition with the Chinese Communist Party, which is actively undermining your sovereignty,  our sovereignty through its various programs from Belt and Road and the Global Development  Initiative and the Global Security Initiative and the Global Civilization Initiative. I agree  with you that probably we should certainly stop

trying to qualify these kind of statements. If I may, I want to acknowledge, because you are part of the previous administration,  Tibetan Policy and Support Act of 2020 was clearly passed in 2020. And in that act, I think  we got everything what we wanted when it comes to Tibet being very important from environmental  point of view, natural resources point of view,

reincarnation of Dalai Lama is very important. It  is for Dalai Lama to decide that no one else and to set up an American Consulate in Lhasa and  funding including Tibetan government exile, and my office was acknowledged in that law  and it was signed by president without any condition or any of his own opinion statement.  So we are very appreciative of that act. And then Tibetans in general have really welcomed that  act inside and outside Tibet. The historical part

was not dealt with at that time. And so this  time the historical part was dealt with, yes. Lobsang, could you maybe share with our viewers  your assessment of the general geopolitical situation? Of course, really, Tibet had, right  in the center of a lot of conflict, obviously the internal efforts by the CCP to suppress the  Tibetan people. You have this genocidal campaign against the Uyghurs in East Turkestan, Xinjiang.  You've had the border dispute between India

and China, the bludgeoning of Indian soldiers to  death on the Himalayan frontier. And more broadly, you have what seems to me to be the emergence of  an axis of aggressors who are engaged in what we might view as cascading crises from Europe  to the Middle East and these looming crises in the Indo-Pacific. How do you see that the  world today? How concerned are you about these geostrategic trends that we're witnessing? Yeah, it's quite disturbing. Obviously the

now great power rivalry is on, and China wants to  be number one. They have already said so. In 2049 at the hundred anniversary of Communist Party of  China, they want to be number one in the world, militarily, politically, economically. They want  to be the numero uno as when it comes to super

power. So hence it's bound to have conflicts.  But I just want to touch on, like you said, how important Tibet is or the Dalai Lama is.  For example, in the Tibetan Policy Support Act, reincarnation of the Dalai Lama is clearly defined  and said it is for the Dalai Lama to decide, and no one else. Now imagine, okay, how important  that is. Whole of the Himalayan Belt of India, they largely follow the Dalai Lama as a spiritual  leader. Then up north it's all Tibet, right? So

they follow the Dalai Lama as a leader. Then up north of Tibet is Inner Mongolia. It touches Inner Mongolia. A last number of  Mongolians, follow the Dalai Lama. And then up north of Inner Mongolia is Outer Mongolia or  Mongolia. Again, there they follow the Dalai Lama. And up north of Mongolia is Buret and Tuba,  two republics of Russia. They also follow the Dalai Lama. So can you imagine from all the way to  the Himalayan region to Tibet, to Inner Mongolia,

Outer Mongolia to Russian republics. And then on  the east side of Tibet or the south side of Tibet, or the east side of India is Burma, Cambodia,  Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, all Buddhists, and further down Singapore, South Korea and then  Japan. So in terms of we talk about Buddhism, you can clearly see the huge territory  of that area. And many of the countries, Southeast Asia, they follow Buddhism as  a religion. So Tibet sits right in the

middle when it comes to geography, territory. And then most importantly, water. Tibet is the source of major rivers for Asia. Of the 10  major rivers of Asia, sixth floor from Tibet, Yangtze and Yellow River, cradle of Chinese  civilization, lifeline for China. That's where 90% of Han Chinese people live between Yellow  River and Yangtze River. And rest of these 60% of territory of China belong to Tibetans and  Uyghurs and Mongolians and Manchurians and

other "minorities". It was always 40%. And then  Brahmaputra River, lifeline for Bangladesh and northeast of India, Mekong River, we all read  about Vietnam War and Mekong River, it starts from Tibet and then know Irrawaddy River. And then on this site of Pakistan, India, Indus River, Sutlej River, all flow from Tibet.  So Tibet is the roof of the world. And compared to Antarctica Arctic, when the ice of Antarctica  Arctic melt, it goes to ocean, becomes salt water,

not drinkable. When the glaciers of Tibet melt,  it becomes streams and rivers, drinkable. So hence it impacts 1.4 billion people in that part  of the world. So China sits on top of the roof, which controls the flow of rivers. So that's why  it's so important. And then from natural resources point of view, you just name it, uranium,  gold, copper, lithium, 70% of lithium reserve

of China is in Tibet. So you can clearly see, so  geopolitically speaking, geographically speaking, and from resources point of view, again, which  has strategic implication, Tibet is very rich. It is such a critical place from a cultural  perspective, a religious perspective, as you've mentioned from a resource perspective,  and we have limited visibility into what's going on these days. And for example, we closed the  consulate in China's Chengdu region. And so I

think Americans have a hard time understanding  what's really happening in Tibet. How do you stay connected? How do you get around China's  great firewall to remain connected to the Tibetan people? Can you share some of what you're  doing to tell Tibet's story to the world, make sure Tibetans are not forgotten, and also  to reach back into Tibet with real information, information that's not controlled and  manipulated by the Chinese Communist Party?

On the one hand, China has created this firewall.  99% of Tibetan people in Tibet are denied passport to travel. Even those who had passports were  taken away now. So they are really shutting down Tibetans' movement because more they move  out means more information and more reality about Tibet will be shared outside, and the criticism  against Chinese government will increase. And then every kinds of firewall, media firewall,  internet shut down, all this are taking place

in Tibet and the check posts and high-tech  ID being issued. So each time you swipe it, your movement is tracked. So all that is taking  place. Having said that, 30% of exiled Tibetan population were born and brought up in Tibet  in eighties and nineties and fled to India. So they still communicate with their families back  home. A lot of challenges, a lot of intimidation, a lot of listening going on. So that's how we  get our information. Now, most importantly,

they essentially shut down the border between  Nepal and Tibet. So normally thousands of Tibetans used to flee from Tibet through  Nepal to India. So that is shut down. So Chinese government is doing everything possible  to shut down physically and technologically, and so that we don't have access. But fortunately,  we still have 30% of exiled Tibetans who were born in eighties and nineties and fled to  India. And through them, we get information.

This is really illuminating. Could you maybe  tell our viewers, just maybe that we can end on a lighter note, what they might  know about the rich Tibetan culture, the tenets of Tibetan Buddhism, and what they  might read or follow to learn more about Tibet. The general public, you mean to say, right? Yes. General public. Yes. Right. I think his Holiness often quotes him a great  scholar of Nalanda called Shantideva, and he said,

"If you can solve a problem, why worry about it?  If you cannot solve the problem, what is the point of worrying about it?" So if you can solve a  problem, you should not worry. If you cannot solve the problem, what is the point of worrying  about it? So the world, the challenges that we are

facing, we must make efforts. So on the one hand,  we should worry, yes, but then work more, work harder to bring changes and maintain equanimity,  because eight empires collapsed in 20th century, in 21st century, also, some of these evil  autocratic regimes, they come and they go, and Buddhist notion of impermanence, one who's born  has to die, all these dictators will die anyways

one day, and the good guys will win, ultimately. So democracy will prevail. So we all must make efforts and don't get over-intimidated by,  oh my goodness, there are more undemocratic countries than democratic countries. They're less  freedom, which are all true, but you must face it with Shantideva's quote, and keep marching  forward to make this world a better place, more democratic, more freedom. That's where  we are marching towards and we'll prevail.

Lobsang Sangay, I can't think of a better note  to end this on, but I do want to just ask you one final question. Is there anything  else you want to share with our viewers, maybe about the CTA's goals and objectives  and anything you'd like to impart? Yeah, I think we started with that. I would like  to say CTA or the Tibetan government exile is the

most functioning, effective government exile there  is. And I would urge all the exile communities, yes, I'm giving many workshops to exile  communities now, that they should study this and then replicate it, which would be good because  we, the Tibetans, have been in exile for 60 years now. We are the elder brother, so to speak, of  all the exile communities. And we have faced so

many obstacles and challenges along the way. And  through the visionary leadership of His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, and with the support of  Tibetan people, we have created something which is an exile, but a democratic functioning  government and a movement. And we would urge other exile communities and those who study  democracy to study this and then share it

with others and encourage others to follow suit. Lobsang Sangay, thank you for joining us and on behalf of the Hoover Institution, I just want  to tell you how much we admire your courage, your determination, and appreciate you  sharing your invaluable perspective with our viewers on Battlegrounds. Thank you so much. Thank you H.R. so for your great initiative in

this Battlegrounds and Liberty games, and  hope you a great success. And then through your project and our collaboration, we'll see  more democracy and freedom around the world. Thank you, Lobsang. Battlegrounds is a production of the Hoover Institution where we generate and promote  ideas advancing freedom. For more information about our work, to hear more of our podcasts or  view our video content, please visit Hoover.org.

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