The Strategy for Creating a Movement Against China’s Ideology of Genocide to Maintain International Order The world has a moral imperative to end the Xinjiang genocide because it fits the definition of punishable genocide established by the United Nations at the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide in 1948 in response to the Nazi atrocities. With no consequences, there can be no international order. With China’s denial despite all the evidence to the contrary, Under Secretary of State Krach determined that the government could not be effective alone in ending China’s crimes against humanity. The strategy would require an all-of-society approach in the form of a movement and would necessitate Krach being the first US official to label the Xingjian atrocities as genocide which he did in national TV broadcast on the fourth of July 2020. Krach used the “Trust Doctrine” as the platform to create a movement the CCP’s human rights abuse that advocates shining the light of transparency and calling on—government, business, universities, pension funds, stock exchanges, financial institutions, the press, and civil society—asserting their moral responsibility and fiduciary duty to establish governance principles to prevent enabling or investing in any entities that facilitate human rights abuses. He also sent letters to all corporate CEOs, university governing boards, and leaders of civil society groups, and called for divestment. The Athenai Institute, a student-founded nonprofit comprised of College Republicans and Democrats, has responded to this call for divestment by organizing a grassroots movement that has rapidly spread across thirty college campuses that are pressing universities to \vote with their wallets. Washington Examiner: “Krach laid the groundwork for the Uyghur genocide university divestment movement and was the first public official in the world to refer to the persecution of Uyghurs in China as a genocide, an act of conscience that has stood the test of time and which gave hope to many in the Uyghur community that justice will be done.”