Links » Crème » Today’s China Readings May 20, 2012

Links » Crème » Today’s China Readings May 20, 2012


Today’s China Readings May 20, 2012

Posted: 19 May 2012 05:56 PM PDT

In China Soft-Power Watch: the Yang Rui 'Foreign Bitch' Factor James Fallows weighs in on CCTV 9 Host Yang Rui's comments about foreigners and the impact his outburst may have on both China's soft power efforts and Yang's own Dialogue show.

Yang Rui responded to Fallows on Sina Weibo and over the course of several subsequent messages seemed to try to walk back some of his more offensive statements, statements that have the support of many Chinese netizens. Yang's key points–that foreigners should obey the law, they should not get special treatment and that western media coverage of China sometimes is biased–are not unreasonable. But his delivery destroyed any value in his message and turned what could have been fairly anodyne discussion into an international news event. China just launched CCTV USA, it is spending hundreds of millions of dollars pushing its media overseas, and Yang Rui's Weibo outburst may have done significant and very expensive damage to those plans. As Fallows points out, which foreigners will now be willing to go on his show?

Coincidentally, James Fallows opened a Sina Weibo account a few days ago and already has 35,000 followers– JamesFallows的微博.

Is Yang Rui really a loose cannon? Yang did not get where he is by not being cautious and extremely sensitive to the political winds. You only get a CCTV News show by gaining the trust of those above you in the system. He may not have been directed to say such incendiary things, but perhaps Yang thought this attack was something that fits with the current environment and would be welcomed by those above him in the propaganda bureaucracy? And he may also really believe it. His specific attack on Melissa Chan–"We kicked out that foreign bitch and closed Al-Jazeera's Beijing bureau"–is strange. Why now, and why her? Is there an internal report about her case going around CCTV and other bureaucracies?

Yang Rui makes several references to foreign spies in China. This is worrying. In addition to the crackdown on illegal foreigners and the bellicose rhetoric towards the Philippines we have also a surge of official media warnings about foreign threats and Westernization. Even SASAC is now warning central SOEs to be on guard against hostile, and specifically foreign, forces–国资委:警惕敌对势力借维权煽动群众制造事端. It certainly feels like there is more going on here than a simple crackdown on misbehaving foreigners. I hope this is just a brief blip in an already strange year, but given the decelerating economy and the political environment…

Yesterday I joked on Twitter that "Yang Rui was the Lou Dobbs of China, and we foreigners are the Mexicans here." If only China had a Stephen Colbert to give us the Yang Rui version of Estaban Colbert's interview with Lou Dobbs.

In good news for US-China relations Chen Guangcheng has Arrived in the U.S. NYU paid for his business class tickets on the United flight from Beijing to Newark, and while he and his direct family are now safe in America he has left many relatives behind.

In Chinese Security Chief Seems to Keep Grip on Power, the New York Times questions the recent Financial Times report that Zhou Yongkang has given up China security roles but is being kept around to preserve the facade of political unity. As usual, I do not know who is right.

Question for readers: Now that I have added commentary I am thinking of changing the title of this post. Suggestions are welcome. Thanks for reading.

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