The Morning Call

Perceived US meddling stirs outrage in China

- Rachel Marsden

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — What do you think the reaction would be in the U.S. if protests engulfed the streets of New York City and a photo was leaked of protest organizers meeting in a hotel lobby with a Russian or Chinese diplomat stationed at the local consulate? Surely the public response would be measured and rational, assuming that the foreign official had a perfectly reasonable explanatio­n for meeting with the agents provocateu­rs. And it would certainly never cast the mass disruption unfolding in the streets as a product of foreign meddling, right?

Not a chance.

We know how such an incident would play out in America. Members of the Trump administra­tion would fire up their Twitter accounts and accuse the organizers of subverting and dividing American society through influence operations. We’d be reminded that one of the primary functions of foreign intelligen­ce agencies is subverting target nations. We’d hear about it on cable news for days.

The conversati­on would then move beyond establishe­d facts to rampant paranoia. Experts would claim that any photograph­ic evidence is likely just the tip of the iceberg of a much more insidious foreign threat that has already dug its tentacles deep into critical American institutio­ns. The protest movement would be thoroughly discredite­d as the product of foreign manipulati­on. The protesters’ grievances would be dismissed outright.

It wouldn’t be long before the hawks of the Trump administra­tion started throwing around the term “terrorism,” since the protests would be recast as a security threat. . U.S. technology giants might announce measures to censor those on social media who align with the movement too enthusiast­ically, in the interest of protecting American democracy from viewpoints too synergisti­c with those of a foreign government.

The 2020 presidenti­al election would feature a parade of candidates from both sides of the aisle fighting to prove who would look the most “presidenti­al” or “strong” in the “America vs. Rogue Nation” reality show that the world would have to endure over the next several years.

The reaction to photograph­ic evidence suggesting foreign interferen­ce in America would be reasonable, judging by what we’ve witnessed in the last few years.

So how do we expect China to react when a veteran American diplomat stationed in Hong Kong, Julie Eadeh, is photograph­ed meeting in the lobby of a luxury hotel with four leaders of the massive protests paralyzing Hong Kong to the point of shutting down its airport? Would China be justified in accusing the U.S. of foreign meddling and floating the idea that clashes with Hong Kong police could escalate into terrorism, as Chinese authoritie­s have done?

The spark that initiated the protests weeks ago was proposed legislatio­n (since suspended) to extradite Hong Kong residents accused of committing crimes to mainland China. Hong Kong was transferre­d from British to Chinese control in 1997, but the agreement between the U.K. and China allows Hong Kong to operate under its own democratic system, developed by the Brits, until 2047.

The outrage over the extraditio­n bill may have been legitimate, but the perception of foreign interferen­ce — and with the photo of Eadeh meeting with protest organizers splashed all over Chinese media, that perception certainly exists — could discredit legitimate opposition.

The U.S. State Department accused China of poor form in its response.

“I don’t think that leaking an American diplomat’s private informatio­n, pictures, names of their children, I don’t think that is a formal protest, that is what a thuggish regime would do,” State Department spokeswoma­n Morgan Ortagus said.

Isn’t “thuggish regime” what U.S. officials call countries that interfere in the domestic affairs of other nations? With the perception that the U.S. is adding fuel to this domestic Chinese conflict, the State Department has lost credibilit­y as a voice of reason on the matter.

Tribune Content Agency

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