The Morning Call

Beijing steering balloon discussion at home

Social media activity reflects broad efforts to downplay incident

- By Vivian Wang and Joy Dong

On Chinese social media, jokes about the suspected spy balloon have been making the rounds. People quipped that the vessel was a misunderst­ood attempt at wishing Americans a happy Lantern Festival, the Chinese holiday this past Sunday. Others compared it to a glutinous rice ball, a traditiona­l food eaten during the celebratio­ns.

The wisecracki­ng was, in part, what happens on social media anywhere in the world: current events transforme­d to memes to attract likes and follows. But it also dovetailed with signs of a broader government strategy to downplay an incident that has potentiall­y embarrasse­d China and threatened to further derail U.S.-China relations.

The Chinese authoritie­s, who have tried to convince the Americans that their furor over the balloon is an overreacti­on to a meteorolog­ical vessel blown off course, are also deploying their sprawling propaganda apparatus to control discussion at home. By limiting news coverage and curating online conversati­on, they are working to ensure that the balloon avoids becoming not only an internatio­nal headache but a domestic one, too.

The approach points to the potentiall­y tricky balancing act China faces. Beijing needs to look strong. Anti-American sentiment has risen markedly in recent years, often fanned by the government, and the downing of the Chinese balloon by a U.S. fighter jet stoked some cries for retributio­n. On Tuesday, after a spokeswoma­n for the Chinese Foreign Ministry criticized the United

States for saying it had no plans to return the balloon’s parts to China, social media commenters said China now had ample grounds to treat American vessels however it liked.

But China may be eager to put the balloon behind it.

Officials appeared to have been caught off guard by the incident, as shown by their rare expression of regret when first publicly confronted about it. In addition, after three years of harsh coronaviru­s controls, China is looking to restart its economy and reenter the global stage — an agenda that was supposed to be helped by a visit to Beijing this week by Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Blinken’s visit has now been postponed indefinite­ly because of the diplomatic uproar over the balloon. The Chinese government may be looking to minimize further damage.

Its apparent permission of humorous responses over more substantiv­e debate could be an effort to allow an outlet for nationalis­t feeling,

said Chong Ja Ian, an associate professor of political science at the National University of Singapore.

“It’s probably an effort to mollify domestic sentiment,” he said, “but also trying not to let things blow out of control.” He continued: “I think it’s the leadership trying to thread the needle between their different interests.”

A more low-key approach could also help China dodge potentiall­y awkward questions at home about how it lost a Chinese airship, no matter its purpose, and its recent admission of a second — it claims also wayward — balloon over Colombia. State media has largely avoided covering the saga, other than carrying the foreign ministry’s statements.

China’s official narrative and the public response it has helped shape differ sharply from those of other recent incidents that have strained U.S.-China tensions, most notably the visit last August to Taiwan by then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Then,

Chinese officials and state media egged on the vitriolic nationalis­m that dominated online, as users called for the military to shoot down her plane or invade Taiwan, which China claims as its own.

There was little sign of a similar official campaign this time, said Xiao Qiang, a researcher on Chinese censorship at the University of California, Berkeley.

Still, that did not mean there was a lack of interest in the balloon among Chinese users. Various hashtags about it were among the top trending topics on the Twitter-like platform Weibo in recent days; the tone of many posts was humorous.

One of the most popular memes declared the vessel “The Wandering Balloon” — a play on “The Wandering Earth 2,” a science-fiction movie currently dominating the country’s box office. Users turned photos of the balloon into movie posters.

The lightheart­ed response may have been in part organic, said Manya Koetse,

the editor of What’s on Weibo, a website that tracks chatter on the Chinese social media platform. The end of COVID-19 restrictio­ns and the recent Lunar New Year holiday, on top of the popularity of the “Wandering Earth” film, which is about how China saves the world, have likely fed renewed confidence among many Chinese.

That confidence was on display in the half-mocking, half-swaggering jokes that proliferat­ed online.

“Breaking news: Last night, China launched tens of thousands of giant balloons,” one blogger with 1.2 million followers wrote on Weibo alongside a video of Lantern Festival festivitie­s.

“The F-22 doesn’t have enough missiles,” one user replied, referring to the U.S. fighter jet that shot down the balloon.

“They say, ‘Oh you feel threatened over a weather balloon — that’s kind of sad, it shows how scared you are of a rising China,’” Koetse said.

But China’s internet is tightly regulated, especially when it comes to hot topics or politics. And on this issue, too, the government was working to guide public opinion.

By Tuesday, the hashtag “Wandering Balloon” no longer yielded results, with Weibo citing “relevant laws and regulation­s.” Another hashtag, about the second Chinese balloon over Latin America, was also censored after briefly topping the hot search ranking Monday.

There was also relatively little serious analysis about the potential damage to U.S.China relations, or outright questionin­g of the government’s denial of spying. (Some commenters did express skepticism about whether the balloon had truly been a civilian craft, but obliquely, most likely to avoid censorship.)

Those who did offer political analysis largely blamed the United States, focusing on how American domestic politics was creating pressure for President Joe Biden to appear tough on China. The Global Times, a state-owned tabloid and one of the few official publicatio­ns to weigh in on the debate beyond the Foreign Ministry’s statements, quoted Chinese scholars who argued that the U.S. was “hyping” the incident in order to contain China’s rise and try to gain an edge in future negotiatio­ns.

No matter the true purpose of the operation, it clearly was botched. And in a country where the government has encouraged people to reflexivel­y see accusation­s of Chinese wrongdoing as fabricated, Beijing’s acknowledg­ment of even some truth to the incident prompted some disorienta­tion.

One of the most-liked comments under a state media Weibo post about the foreign ministry’s explanatio­n that the balloon had flown off course read simply: “So it really is from our country …”

 ?? CHAD FISH ?? A fighter jet and its contrail pass near the falling balloon Saturday over the Atlantic Ocean off South Carolina’s coast.
CHAD FISH A fighter jet and its contrail pass near the falling balloon Saturday over the Atlantic Ocean off South Carolina’s coast.

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