Jamaica Gleaner

China voices strength, pushes nationalis­m around trade war

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WHAT DO tilapia, Jane Austen and Chinese revolution­ary poster art have in common?

All have been used to rally public support around China’s position in its trade dispute with the United States, as the ruling Communist Party takes a more aggressive approach — projecting stability and stirring up nationalis­tic sentiment in the process.

“If you want to negotiate, the door is open,” anchor Kang Hui said Monday on state broadcaste­r CCTV. “If you want a trade war,” however, he added, “we’ll fight you until the end.

“After 5,000 years of wind and rain, what hasn’t the Chinese nation weathered?” Kang said.

The toughly-worded

monologue on the banner evening news programme followed days of muted official responses to President Donald Trump’s decision to hike tariffs on US$200 billion worth of Chinese imports. Trump startled financial markets with his May 5 announceme­nt that US tariffs would rise to 25 per cent from 10 per cent as of Friday.

After negotiatio­ns in Washington ended last week with no agreement, China retaliated Monday with higher tariffs on $60 billion worth of American goods, raising duties of five per cent to 25 per cent.

Then came the government’s public relations onslaught.

“Overnight, we saw official media — in the People’s Daily,

China Daily, CCTV — all run spots about the United States as being a problemati­c negotiatin­g partner,” said Jake Parker, vice-president of China operations for the US-China Business Council.

President Xi Jinping, the ruling party’s most powerful leader in decades, has made China’s foreign policy more assertive while nurturing the growth of a redblooded but tightly controlled nationalis­m.

The approach reflects a new willingnes­s to allow a shift in domestic public opinion where the trade war is concerned, Parker said.

Weibo, a Twitter-like social media platform which generally censors political discourse, has featured an unusual amount of tariff-related content since Monday. The site’s ranking of ‘trending topics’, usually dominated by celebrity news, highlighte­d Kang’s monologue and the subject ‘American stock market plunges’.

Internet users shared patriotic memes expressing confidence in China’s economy and contempt for the US. The commentary echoes earlier times when the US and China were adversarie­s in the Korean War and for decades afterwards.

“All the trade wars are paper tigers,” said a riff on a poster showing People’s Liberation Army soldiers stamping on a pile of skulls. The poster alludes to Mao Zedong’s famous pronouncem­ent that “All reactionar­ies are paper tigers” — a derogatory term which he also applied to American imperialis­m.

Still, the nationalis­tic bent of social media comment is a poor measure of Chinese public opinion. In the past, the government has paid people to publish posts supporting party policies, and any expression of dissent faces strict censorship. One Weibo post simply asked what impact the trade war will have on ordinary people. A counter at the bottom of the post indicated that

it had 1,290 comments, but none were viewable, and further comments were “prohibited”.

A number of Chinese exporters contacted by The Associated

Press refused to comment on the record because they fear government retributio­n.

Beijing is trying to reassure worried Chinese businesses and consumers that the country is strong enough to withstand the trade conflict.

“I think this administra­tion is different from previous ones in its diplomatic policies,” said Li Chanjuan, a manager at an insurance company. “People expect the government to make a tougher gesture.”

There are limits to how far the party will go in pushing public sentiment.

David Bandurski, a co-director of the University of Hong Kong’s China Media Project, said the country’s current aim is to promote stability rather than foment patriotic fervour.

“China is keen to project calm,” he said. “The last thing it needs or wants is to whip up popular anger, which can turn quickly,” sometimes in ways that the party can neither

predict nor control.

People’s Daily, the party’s official mouthpiece, called the trade war “no big deal”. It also paid tribute to Jane Austen’s famed novel Pride

and Prejudice in a tongue-incheek critique of the Trump administra­tion.

“Pride makes it impossible for other people to love me, while prejudice makes it impossible for me to love others. Today a few American politician­s are just like the characters that

Austen assailed,” the paper said. CCTV on Wednesday aired interviews with both Chinese and American economists who condemned the US’s approach. The state broadcaste­r also emphasised how the tariffs will hurt American consumers.

Meanwhile, the Hainan Tilapia Sustainabi­lity Alliance, an industry group on the southern island province, is appealing to Chinese taste buds.

China’s exports of the popular fish are a target of Trump’s tariffs.

In an article calling for Chinese consumers to eat more tilapia to help the industry survive, the group said: “There’s no problem that eating cannot solve.”

 ?? AP ?? A social media post exhorting Chinese consumers to buy more tilapia to offset the effects of China’s ongoing economic dispute with the United States is seen on a computer screen in Beijing, on Wednesday, May 15.
AP A social media post exhorting Chinese consumers to buy more tilapia to offset the effects of China’s ongoing economic dispute with the United States is seen on a computer screen in Beijing, on Wednesday, May 15.
 ??  ?? In this August 13, 2018 file photo, a man walks by a poster depicting a mural of US President Donald Trump stating that all American costumers will be charged 25 per cent more than others, beginning from the day President Trump started the trade war against China, on display outside a restaurant in Guangzhou in south China’s Guangdong province.
In this August 13, 2018 file photo, a man walks by a poster depicting a mural of US President Donald Trump stating that all American costumers will be charged 25 per cent more than others, beginning from the day President Trump started the trade war against China, on display outside a restaurant in Guangzhou in south China’s Guangdong province.

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