OIO
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First of all, Xinjiang being chaotic does not necessarily lead to Sino-US confrontation. If that be so, we could conclude that any chaotic place in China could lead to Sino-US confrontation, which doesn't seem to have strong logical support.
Second, nobody likes chaos, even bad people who only wish chaos on other people but not on themselves. Look how orderly Italian mafias managed Las Vegas.
Third, many ways to deal with chaos. Fundamentally, we want to reduce and even eliminate chaos. We certainly don't want to just sweep it under the rug, which will surely show up again sooner or later. That is why I don't think CCP's simple and rude method is constructive in the long run. They are simply attacking at the symptom but not at the cause. Xinjiang has been the fertile ground of chaos every since CCP took over. Many people outside of that region simply don't know much about it until it shows up on the newspapers. Unfortunately, CCPs don't understand the cause. So Xinjiang is stuck along with millions of people who still live there.
If you attribute Xinjiang’s problems to the Chinese Communist Party, there is nothing to discuss. Xinjiang’s problems are mainly the influence of the external world and the result of the painstaking efforts of hostile forces. For internal reasons, they are mainly economic backwardness and population growth exceeding land Carrying capacity.
You said that there is something wrong with the details of the Chinese Communist Party's governance of Xinjiang. I agree, but there is no problem with the overall situation in terms of direction.