Santa Fe New Mexican

Chinese intensify war of words with U.S.

- By Steven Lee Myers

Chinese propaganda is rarely subtle or particular­ly persuasive, but the torrent of bombast online and in state media in recent weeks is striking and potentiall­y ominous.

The targets are China’s main adversarie­s: the United States and Taiwan, which are moving closer and closer together.

The propaganda has accompanie­d a series of military drills in recent weeks, including the test-firing of ballistic missiles and the buzzing of Taiwan’s airspace. Together, they are intended to draw stark red lines for the United States, signaling that China would not shrink from a military clash.

While the prospect of war remains remote, the militarist­ic tone reflects the hawkishnes­s of the country’s leader, Xi Jinping. The risk is that the propaganda could translate into more provocativ­e actions, at a time when the relationsh­ip with the United States has sharply deteriorat­ed. The recent military moves in the South China Sea and the Taiwan Strait raise the possibilit­y of actual clashes, intended or not.

In Washington, President Donald Trump’s hospitaliz­ation for treatment of COVID-19 has overshadow­ed everything else, creating the impression that his administra­tion is in chaos and raising fears of a decision-making void. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo cut short his trip to Asia this week, although he is expected to push for confrontin­g China when he meets in Tokyo with his counterpar­ts from Australia, India and Japan.

China is already facing pressure over Taiwan and is pressing other disputed territoria­l claims, from the South China Sea to the Himalayas. If China feels directly challenged on any of those fronts, Xi may not be able to back down, having primed the public for a combative stance.

One video featured a simulated airstrike on Guam, the U.S. territory in the Pacific, with clips cribbed from two Hollywood films: The Rock and The Hurt Locker.

Global Times, the voice of the Communist Party’s hawks, warned recently that the United States was “playing with fire” by supporting Taiwan, which Beijing claims as part of a unified China. Taiwan’s president, Tsai Ing-wen, the editorial went on, would be “wiped out” if she moved against Chinese sovereignt­y.

“I don’t think it’s just bluster, and I don’t think it’s just about venting anger,” said Bonnie S. Glaser, director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington, who is an expert on Taiwan and China. “I think there is growing pressure — and that Xi Jinping finds that it’s useful to display that pressure.”

More bombast is to come. The latest propaganda surge has coincided with the 70th anniversar­y of the Korean War, also known in China as the War to Resist U.S. Aggression and Aid Korea, which has long served as an instrument for stoking anti-American sentiment.

Chinese forces intervened in the war Oct. 19, 1950, and, as official narratives here have it, ultimately drove the U.S.-led United Nations forces back to the 38th parallel in a heroic triumph of the newly establishe­d People’s Republic of China. With U.S.-China relations at a new low, officials and propagandi­sts are using the anniversar­y to remind Chinese people that the nation has stood up to the world’s superpower before — and prevailed.

A memorial museum dedicated to the conflict recently reopened in Dandong, a Chinese city across the Yalu River from North Korea. A series of films about the war is also rolling out — “to carry forward the great spirit of resisting U.S. aggression,” as the descriptio­n of one documentar­y put it.

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