Chinese have a different take on the cult of Obama

November 15th, 2009 11:42am

By Geoff Dyer, FT China bureau chief

If the White House believes President Barack Obama’s charisma can be a foreign policy asset, that theory is about to face its toughest test in China where he arrives on Sunday night, the latest stop in his inaugural Asia tour.

Perhaps more than anywhere else in the world, China has been immune to the popular love-in that surrounded the Obama election. For sure, young Chinese like the president – they think he is cool and they understand the symbolism of an African-American in the White House. But they have not been caught up in the hero-worship witnessed in, say, parts of Europe.

After their own experience with Mao’s cult of personality, Chinese these days are pretty suspicious of politicians with a saintly air. Indeed, around Beijing in recent days, there have been T-shirts for sale with an image of Obama wearing a Mao suit.

China was also one of the few places in the world that was quite happy with George W. Bush. Obama’s fans in Europe were counting down the days until Bush left office, but in China there was none of that ecstatic sense of relief.

And maybe it is just because Obama simply does not have the same profile in Chinese media that he enjoys elsewhere. Obama made his major Asia speech on Saturday where he pledged that the US would not try to contain China, yet on the main CCTV news programme that night he did not get a mention until a full 27 minutes into the broadcast.

Obama’s speech followed three separate stories on President Hu Jintao’s meetings of the day and a long profile of a model policeman in a rural area of eastern China who seemed to spend most of his time helping old women husk their winter corn.

Obama has a brief Bush linguistic moment

November 14th, 2009 11:24am

By Mure Dickie, FT Japan bureau chief

Foreign travel is always a learning experience. The first Asia tour as US president for the usually hyper-capable Barack Obama is a good chance for him to master one important skill needed for diplomacy in the region: how to say the name of Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

In just about the only duff note in his speech in Tokyo, Obama stumbled badly when his teleprompter reached the bit about Burma, first pausing and then reading it “soo kee?” in a questioning tone. The usual pronunciation is “soo chee”.

Not the end of the world, but hardly helpful given that Obama was trying to show he means business in finding a way to persuade the Burmese regime to release Suu Kyi and liberalise generally.

Nor, on the face of it, is Obama’s “new approach” all that compellingly different from the old. He refreshingly admitted that neither US sanctions nor engagement by others (such as Japan) had succeeded in improving the lives of the Burmese.

So what does Obama have to offer instead? Er, this blend of sanctions and engagement: “We are now communicating directly with the leadership to make it clear that existing sanctions will remain until there are concrete steps toward democratic reform”. Don’t hold your breath.

How would Mao Zedong have seen Obama’s Asia tour?

November 12th, 2009 3:21pm

By Mure Dickie, FT Japan bureau chief

Here’s an interesting question ahead of Barack Obama’s arrival in Tokyo on Friday for the first leg of his Asia tour: would Mao Zedong have approved of the US president’s itinerary? Or would he have worried that Obama was not doing enough to make sure that Japan felt loved?

It might be surprising to some, but the late Chinese chairman was an astute observer of the impact that trip scheduling could have on sensitive Japanese sentiment. So much so that he discussed the matter in forceful terms with Henry Kissinger way back in 1971. Continue reading "How would Mao Zedong have seen Obama’s Asia tour?"

Apec Schmapec

November 12th, 2009 1:31pm

By Alan Beattie, FT World Trade Editor

To the usual putdowns of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation - “four adjectives in search of a noun” and “A Perfect Excuse to Chat” - my colleague Kevin Brown has added another ahead of this week’s big meeting: “a grouping that speaks for half the global economy but decides almost nothing”. If anything, this is a mild understatement.

Still, Apec has been doing its best to prove its relevance: here is a paper arguing that Apec members see more trade integration amongst themselves than do non-Apec members. It’s careful not to delineate a firm causal link, and just as well - even as it is the paper verges on blatant goalhanging in inviting us to infer some relationship.

More likely is that Apec was lucky enough to include all the countries (Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, later on China and Vietnam, etc) that organised themselves into the “Factory Asia” disaggregated supply chain - and which was focused on western markets. And not even the actual bilateral trade agreements in the region (as opposed to Apec’s “voluntary” i.e. toothless one) contributed much to that process either (see previous link). Meanwhile,  pace one very vocal advocate, the chances of turning Apec into a proper free trade zone are the square root of Doha.

The best reason for Apec, one east Asian official once confided to me sotto voce, was that it forced the US president to travel to Asia at least once a year. But surely any good CEO visits his biggest suppliers and creditors regularly in any case?

Obama and his Shanghai forum still ‘up in the air’

November 12th, 2009 8:54am

By Geoff Dyer, FT China bureau chief

Barack Obama is preparing to get on Air Force One en route to Japan to start his first presidential visit to Asia. Yet one of the centerpieces of his three days in China, a town-hall style meeting in Shanghai, is also still up in the air.

The White House had hoped the Monday morning forum would be President Obama’s one big chance to try and communicate directly with young Chinese people.

But as of this morning, according to a source familiar with the negotiations, there was still no agreement with the Chinese authorities on who would be present or how the question-and-answer session would work. And, most importantly for the White House, there was also no decision on whether it would be broadcast live on television and on the internet.

There is some precedent here. When Bill Clinton visited China in 1998, he ended up appearing live on radio and television on four separate occasions, including a discussion with then Chinese president Jiang Zemin when they debated religion, human rights and the 1989 Tiananmen Square protest movement. An FT report on the Clinton visit noted that by allowing the live broadcasts, “the Chinese government offered tantalising glimpses of prospects of greater political openness”.

Presidential visits always involve last-minute haggling, especially in China. But if the event ends up being cancelled, which my source says is possible, it would be hugely embarrassing to both sides – Obama would look as if he was muffled by his hosts while China would come across as being afraid of its own people.

Tibetan test for Obama’s engagement with China

November 9th, 2009 6:25pm

By Geoff Dyer, the FT’s China bureau chief

You have to hand it to the Dalai Lama for his sense of timing. Only a few weeks ago, he was quietly shunned by the White House - the first time in nearly two decades that he did not stop by while visiting Washington. Yet this week the Dalai Lama is back in the headlines with his visit to Arunachal Pradesh in north-eastern India, prompting outraged protests from China which claims part of the region as its own and calls it ‘southern Tibet’. The visit has been planned for months but coming as President Barack Obama is packing his bags for his first trip to Beijing, it helps keep a bit of a squeeze on the White House. Continue reading "Tibetan test for Obama’s engagement with China"

China has converted me to the importance of the EU

November 2nd, 2009 12:23pm

By Geoff Dyer, the FT’s China bureau chief

China can do strange things to your politics. I know foreigners who purr about the efficiency of authoritarian bureaucracy and others who search Confucian texts for new political ideas. In my case, China has converted me to the importance of the European Union.

Sitting in Beijing, it is all too easy to feel that Europe is becoming irrelevant, as the US and a rising China stitch up the global agenda. The Chinese have become quite adept at playing one European government against another. When Beijing cancelled a summit with the EU last year to punish Nicolas Sarkozy for meeting the Dalai Lama, the response from other EU capitals was an awkward silence. The European Council on Foreign Relations claims Beijing treats the EU with “diplomatic contempt”. Continue reading "China has converted me to the importance of the EU"

China celebrates 60 years of Communist rule

October 1st, 2009 2:42pm

By Richard McGregor, the FT’s former Beijing bureau chief

Most commentaries about modern China these days stress how far the country and the state has moved on from the totalitarian rule of Mao Zedong. The parade to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China through the centre of Beijing today is a reminder of the opposite, and largely overlooked, trend - just how communist the Chinese state still is. Continue reading "China celebrates 60 years of Communist rule"

China makes gains in its bid to be top dog

September 15th, 2009 1:19am

Last week a Tibetan mastiff was flown into Xian airport in central China, where it received a welcome fit for an emperor. The dog was swept into town by a convoy of 30 Mercedes-Benz cars. Tibetan mastiffs are a rare and noble breed – and the pampered pooch had cost his new owners Rmb4m ($586,000, €402,000, £351,000). Reporting the story, the China Daily newspaper commented nervously that such an extravagant display of wealth might “heighten tension between rich and poor”.

This shaggy dog story is just a particularly weird example of the new wealth of modern China. When I last visited the Pudong district of Shanghai, in the mid-1990s, it was a ramshackle area of factories and warehouses. Last week, I found it transformed into a forest of neon-lit, modernist skyscrapers. China has shrugged off the global recession and should grow by 8 per cent in 2009.

This year the country has passed a number of economic milestones. It is now the world’s largest exporter, surpassing Germany. It is the world’s largest market for vehicles, surpassing America. Its foreign reserves, the world’s largest, are now over $2,000bn. The biggest landmark of them all – the moment when China becomes the world’s largest economy – is getting closer. Goldman Sachs famously predicted a couple of years ago that China would hit that target in 2027. But that was before the financial crisis. If America is now set for a long period of slower growth, the big moment could come rather sooner.

The remainder of this article can be read here. Please post comments below.

Paying tribute in Dalian

September 11th, 2009 11:38am

I just bumped into a Malaysian friend, here at the “Summer Davos” in Dalian, up on China’s north-east coast. “What are you doing here?” I asked - “Paying tribute”, he replied.

There is quite a lot of that, here in Dalian.  Last night, Wen Jiabao, China’s prime minister, told us that the economy would grow at the politically-required 8% this year. With the US still reeling, the international business people and foreign politicians here are increasingly looking to China for trade and investment opportunities.

I got a strong sense of that at the session that I chaired on the “The global downturn and the developing world”. Before we got talking the organisers took a poll of the audience, asking them to say what part of the world they expected to do most to pull the world out of recession? There were 67 votes for “Greater China”, about 30 for non-Chinese Asia, five for the US, two for Europe. I felt like finding the two people who had voted for my home continent, and buying them both a drink. Continue reading "Paying tribute in Dalian"