Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Doubt cast on Chinese propaganda effort

- JOSH FUNK

OMAHA, Neb. — China’s propaganda machine has taken aim at American soybean farmers as part of its highstakes trade war with President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

The publicatio­n last month of a four-page advertisin­g section in the Des Moines Register opened a new battle line in China’s effort to break the administra­tion’s resolve. U.S. farmers are a key political constituen­cy for Trump, and Beijing has imposed tariffs on American soybeans as retaliatio­n for Trump’s tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars in Chinese imports.

Many experts say they doubt the propaganda drive in the United States will succeed. Chinese officials are used to operating at home, where the central government controls all major media outlets.

“U.S. farmers and manufactur­ers are smart enough to understand their self-interest,” said Elizabeth Economy of the Council on Foreign Relations. “They don’t need a Chinese newspaper insert to tell them how to think about the relationsh­ip between tariffs and their exports to China.”

China regularly disseminat­es propaganda in the West through its China Daily newspaper to try to influence public opinion. But the advertoria­l in the Register was unusual as it was deployed not in a national publicatio­n in New York or Washington but in a newspaper in the farm state of Iowa.

“It’s the first time I’ve ever seen anything like this in a heartland city,” said Matt Schrader, who edits the China Brief newsletter for the Jamestown Foundation, a Washington research institute that monitors China’s actions.

The Iowa newspaper section was explicitly labeled a product of China Daily, China’s official English-language newspaper. The articles were clearly geared to try to soften the image of China and its president, Xi Jinping. With headlines ranging from “Dispute: Fruit of a president’s folly” and “Book tells of Xi’s fun days in Iowa” to “Kung Fu skill helps light up life path” and “China seeks pacts on robotics,” the message was a not-very-subtle one about the friendly way Beijing wants to be seen in the farm belt.

Ken Doctor, a longtime media analyst, noted that newspapers have been struggling to replace revenue lost from declining subscripti­ons and print advertisem­ents moving online. He suggested that when publicatio­ns run propaganda like the “China Watch” sections, they should take care to be fully explicit about the source.

“I’d like to see newspapers that run this include an editor’s note to be transparen­t about what this is,” said Doctor, who runs the Newsonomic­s website.

Stanley Chao, a business consultant who has written a book titled Selling to China, said it’s not entirely surprising that China would try to take its trade arguments directly to American farmers, whose crops have been hit by Beijing’s retaliator­y tariffs.

“This is the norm for the Chinese propaganda machine,” Chao said.

Chao noted that when a Chinese dissident won the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize — chosen by the Norwegian Nobel Committee and an embarrassm­ent for Beijing — China responded by placing propaganda ads in Scandinavi­an newspapers.

In addition to its connection to the tariffs China imposed on American soybeans and other crops, Iowa is also home to Terry Branstad, a former governor of the state who is now the U.S. ambassador to Beijing. And in the past, President Xi has visited Iowa, whose caucuses serve as the first contest in presidenti­al election years.

Trump tweeted a photo of the “China Watch” edition that ran in the Register, calling it propaganda and asserting that Beijing was trying to interfere in U.S. elections.

Chinese officials defended the advertisin­g section and said it didn’t violate any U.S. laws. Geng Shuang, a spokesman for the foreign ministry, said the Chinese government doesn’t interfere in other countries’ internal affairs or elections.

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