Obama in China: What the media missed

Even through a veil of censorship and propaganda, the Chinese people managed a clearer view of Obama's visit than the US media did.

Saturday, November 21, 2009
Obama in China: What the media missed

Tish Durkin

Let's be frank. The strongest impression that most Chinese people have of Barack Obama is that he is black. The second-strongest is that he is young. And the third-strongest — based on his decision a few months ago to impose a punitive tariff on Chinese tire exports — is that he is perhaps just as willing to screw over China as all his old, white predecessors were.

This is not to downplay the significance of the president's visit here. It's just to refrain from overplaying it.  Having started with the notion that Obama just might come to China and make some history, the American media is now collectively bummed that he didn't. This is silly.

To read the bulk of the U.S. press, Obama fell short on three counts:

One, his contribution to China’s human-rights struggle was limited to one answer at a carefully staged student forum in Shanghai, where he extolled the American people's right to Twitter, internet-surf, and diss him personally. (Naturally, that portion of the program was censored by Chinese news outlets — although a pretty full translation of it was easy to pull up the following day.)

Two, he didn’t talk turkey to the Chinese leadership on anything because the U.S. has sold so much debt to China and needs to sell more.

Three, he can't close a deal. The day after Barack stepped foot on the Great Wall, China was the same repressive, polluting, trade-tilting outfit it was before.

The irony here is that, although the Chinese are the ones who get their information through the twin filters of propaganda and censorship, they are also the ones who seem to have a firmer grasp than Americans on what constitutes a realistic expectation. People in the street — at least those in the malls and market-stalls of Dalian, where I have been living — are giving Obama real credit.

They give him credit for coming here in the first year of his first term.  They give him credit for saying friendly things about the U.S.-China relationship (although they have serious doubts about whether his actions will prove so nice). They give him credit for holding his own umbrella in the rain, thereby emitting a humanity and a humility that they rarely see in their own, distant leaders. Unfortunately, they also credit him for not meeting with the Dalai Lama, who is commonly — if for reasons of long-term state-sponsored collective brainwashing — seen as a slave-master separatist rabble-rouser whom the world should hold in contempt.

In short, if a goal of this trip was to foster a feeling among the Chinese that they can and should work with the U.S., that goal was certainly achieved. 

Other, headier goals were not. But who set those goals in the first place?

The criticism of his uninspiring — if unsurprising — punting on human rights is predicated on the idea that if Obama had come here and forcefully addressed the issue, the earth would have moved. There is no real basis to believe that, and a fairly strong basis not to. It's not as if speaking truth to power hasn't been tried: In 1994, when Beijing hosted the United Nations World Conference on Women, then-First Lady Hillary Clinton showed up and gave them hell about human rights. Her rallying cry — "women's rights are human rights" — stirred the hearts of feminists, including Chinese feminists, and echoed across the world.  That speech scared the wits out of the Chinese Communist Party — but didn’t pry a pinky off their grip on power.

Then there's the idea that Obama is tiptoeing around the Chinese because they’re such a large creditor. Everyone can agree that the level of U.S. debt, including debt to China, is a problem.  But the question at hand is: what specifically did the president fail to address on this trip for fear of debt-related retribution? Human rights? Currency revaluation? Pushing China to pressure its nasty friends, such as Iran? Come on. The Chinese-American debt scenario didn’t even start unfolding until the George W. Bush administration. Those thorny issues, in all the forms they have taken over time, go back a lot further. Precisely what magic were the Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush I and Clinton administrations working before China got all those T-bills?

Last but not least, there is the bupkuss factor: the consenus that Obama, poor jerk, has come away with nothing. No breakthroughs. No deals. Not even an Oprah "a-ha" moment. It's as if everybody thinks that some concrete public concession on at least one of the biggies — carbon emissions or political reform or North Korea — is something a U.S. president just can't leave China without, like a silk robe or a ceramic tea set.

But in reality, it's not like that. Every key element of the Sino-American relationship is too big and too convoluted for the thumbs-up/thumbs-down approach to apply.

So, relax, everybody. Obama came, he charmed, he left. And for now, that's perfectly fine.

Or, as Fox News-certified Maoist and soon-to-be former White House communications director Anita Dunn might put it: Obama's trip wasn't a great leap forward. But it was a step in the right direction.

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14 Comments

Posted by Quyan, Saturday, November 21, 2009, 2:49 pm Yes, President Obama can rightly claim:I came, I saw, I charmed.That's all he needs to do in setting up his relationship with China in his first year of US presidency. He has laid a good foundation for further cooperation between the two countries.

Posted by Shade Tail, Saturday, November 21, 2009, 5:42 pm Sad to say, I am entirely unsurprised at the liberal media's reaction to this. They are, after all, all owned by rightwing republican businessmen who view news as a profitmaker instead of a social obligation. So not only do they look to make money with lurid headlines, they don't like Obama much anyway. Of course they would distort this.

Posted by Jerome, Saturday, November 21, 2009, 7:43 pm I'm constantly amazed at the criticisms from Americans about other countries. The first right of human rights is the right to live and support your family. This includes not to put your parents in foster homes. To most Chinese and Asians, Americans are the greatest violator of this principle. How dare you not live with your aging parents and take care of them??? Fix this before you open your mouths again.

Posted by SmartGuy, Saturday, November 21, 2009, 7:48 pm Hiliary is a joke. If women's rights mean 5060 of divorce rate, why would anyone want to import this broken family module into their country.

Posted by GuyFromOhio, Saturday, November 21, 2009, 7:49 pm In short, if a goal of this trip was to foster a feeling among the Chinese that they can and should work with the U.S., that goal was certainly achieved. Other, headier goals were not. But who set those goals in the first place?David Broder, Charles Krauthammer, David Brooks and Rupert Murdoch and Gaia help him, Obama has utterly FAILED every single one of them. Real leaders don't hold their own umbrellas, they get the driver to do it.Great question! Nice column, too.

Posted by bob, Saturday, November 21, 2009, 9:35 pm Obama and Americans in general have a seriously bloated ego and serious lack of understand of how the world works or what it's made up of, the author is no exception. So, naturally, confusion arise when they are forced to deal with an adversary that has juts as big an ego and knows a lot more about how the world works.

Posted by Steven Moore, Saturday, November 21, 2009, 10:04 pm I frankly was impressed that he went as far as to give the answer about Twitter. The hand shaking and tea drinking is alright for the first trip, but there is a lot of ground to be covered in the USChina relationship, and at some point he has to come up with something to show for the 71 car motorcade. In the bigger picture, the irony that the most liberal President in recent history is the first to throw the Dalai Lama under the bus is quite rich.

Posted by Ashley St.Claire, Sunday, November 22, 2009, 12:14 am Obama and Americas banker HuJintaoNovember 17, 2009 by politicalsnapshots.Obama and Americas banker HuJintaoAs with any nation, America will approach China with a focus on our interests. And it is precisely for this reason that it is important to pursue pragmatic cooperation with China on issues of mutual concern because no one nation can meet the challenges of the 21st century alone, and the United States and China will both be better off when we are able to meet them together. But, all nations are not of equal importance to t

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Tish Durkin »

Tish Durkin is a journalist whose work has appeared in publications including the New York Observer, the Atlantic Monthly, the National Journal, and Rolling Stone. After extensive postings in Iraq and throughout the Middle East, she is now based in ... Read Bio

February 12, 2010