Bombings, Blood Debts, and Mutual Suspicion
By Ryan Dunch History News Service
The events of May 1999 may mark a decisive turning point
toward mutual suspicion and hostility in the relationship
between China and the United States, with perilous
implications for the twenty-first century.
"A blood debt must be repaid with blood!" This Chinese
proverb with its blunt logic of retribution rang out from
student demonstrators across China as they vented their
outrage against NATO following the bombing of the Chinese
embassy in Belgrade on May 7.
Ten years ago the same proverb was emblazoned on gates
and banners in Hong Kong, with quite a different target --
the Chinese government, for its bloody suppression of the
democracy protests led by another generation of Chinese
students.
Then, as now, the demonstrations were massive,
impassioned and brimming with patriotic anger. In Hong Kong
in June of that unforgettable year, on some days the number
of marchers approached a million people, a staggering
one-fifth of the total population of the colony. The walls
and barred doors of the New China News Agency were plastered
with placards and petitions of protest. Like the U.S.
embassy in Beijing after the bombing, it was unable to open
for days due to the vehemence of the protests.
Same slogan, different targets. Why? In brief, because
the Chinese government has since 1989 carefully promoted a
sense that China is under subtle threat from hostile
international forces, and that patriotism means defending
the Chinese government from these forces. In both cases the
policies and proclamations of Western powers have provided
the Chinese state-run media with an abundance of material to
work with.
The sense of international threat emerged soon after the
crushing of the democracy movement on June 4, 1989. The
authoritative People's Daily published a lengthy analysis in
July 1989 explaining how the "anti-communist forces" of the
capitalist world, led by the U.S. government, were engaged
in a coordinated effort to undermine world socialism through
peaceful means.
Specifically, the article linked the Voice of America,
which had been a news source of choice for the Tiananmen
demonstrators, to this capitalist conspiracy, thus
transforming the students with their demands for democracy
into naive dupes of the hostile forces of global capitalism.
Events of the latter half of 1989 made this view look
positively prophetic. One after another, most of the world's
Communist governments collapsed, in an eerie reversal of the
Cold War's "domino theory." Then in 1991 the first and
greatest of the Communist powers, the Soviet Union,
astonishingly annulled itself. The eagerness of leaders in
the self-styled "Free World" to claim credit for the
"victory" of course lent credence to the Chinese
government's conspiratorial view.
The Chinese government's efforts to redefine patriotism
to mean support for the regime also began soon after the
1989 crackdown. The Tiananmen demonstrators had demanded
democracy in the name of patriotism, claiming its mantle
through hunger strikes, petitions, and ultimately martyrdom.
By contrast, the logic of the new patriotism ran like this:
China is socialist, socialism is threatened by a worldwide
capitalist conspiracy; therefore patriotism means defending
socialist China against outside pressures.
The result of these efforts has been the creation of a
climate of suspicion in which any dispute with the United
States can easily appear to be part of an American-led
attempt to weaken China and its socialist system. The
Clinton years have provided a multitude of such disputes,
from the relatively tangible -- intellectual property
rights, say, or arms proliferation -- to others viewed by
the Chinese as entirely lacking in justification -- human
rights complaints, televised slights of Chinese athletes,
the U.S. double standard on greenhouse gas emissions,
politically charged allegations of Chinese espionage and
influence-peddling. In such an international climate, the
Chinese people have been encouraged to value firmness above
all else, to value a "China that can say, No!" as one
Beijing bestseller put it.
And now this debacle in Belgrade, killing three Chinese
citizens and injuring 25. In the circumstances it is hardly
surprising that Chinese leaders have declined to accept
publicly that this attack was nothing more sinister than an
intelligence error, albeit a tragic one. Certainly the
demonstrators who mobbed the U.S. consulates in China were
not convinced by NATO's apologies and explanations. And the
government no doubt secretly welcomed the chance to provide
an external focus for popular discontent as the tenth
anniversary of Tiananmen approaches.
Of course, a similar climate of suspicion towards China
prevails on the U.S. side. With the release this week of the
Congressional report on Chinese espionage the relationship
between the two powers looks set to plummet to its lowest
point since Nixon's historic China trip in 1972.
What both sides must remember is that the pragmatic
recognition of common interests overriding great differences
remains the only viable basis for the US-China relationship.
As Nixon himself put it in 1972, "While we cannot close the
gulf between us, we can try to bridge it so that we may be
able to talk across it." Twenty-seven years later, the gulf
remains wide and the bridge all too fragile, at both ends --
barely strong enough to talk across, and certainly too
flimsy for blood debts!
Ryan Dunch teaches modern Chinese history at the
University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, and writes for
the History News Service. He lived in Hong Kong from 1987 to
1989.
[Ryan Dunch, Department of History and Classics,
University of Alberta Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2H4. Phone:
(780) 492-6484; fax: (780) 492-9125; e-mail: ryan.dunch@ualberta.ca]
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This article was posted on May 26, 1999.
Pictured at top (left to right): Cleopatra,
Justinian I, Thomas Paine, Ulysses S. Grant, 1954 sit-in at
Woolworth's lunch counter protesting segregation, Che
Guevara.
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