Reuters’ concern-trolling over the low-key Chinese response
to the Philippine Haiyan supertyphoon disaster is revealing, in a relatively inadvertent
way.
Yesterday it was
Today it is
The Chinese government has not been particularly forthcoming
in aid to the Philippines, especially in comparison with the high profile
pledges by the United States and Japan, and the dispatch of the US aircraft
carrier George Washington and its strike group to provide relief.
There’s a dearth of hard data on exactly why the PRC hasn’t
gone all out in opening the aid floodgates to the Philippines, with whom China
is locked in an antagonistic maritime dispute.
China’s activist hardliner newspaper, Global Times, did weigh in with
one editorial urging the government not to snub the Philippines; for the rest,
Reuters has been forced to rely on the usual suspects—pundits, Twitterers, and
Weibo posts—in order to weave a narrative out of the fact that China has provided
less aid than the United States and Japan.
The story could have been as easily spun as “US, Japan Go
All Out to Exploit Supertyphoon to Bolster Strategic Alliance With the
Philippines,” which, indeed, is a certain part of
what’s going on. Japan, in particular,
is eager to use the disaster to strengthen the case for expanding the regional
footprint of its Self-Defense Force (in anticipation of the day when the pacifist
constitution is revised and the SDF is rebranded as a conventional—and rather
large—national military).
One can almost view the Reuters articles as part of that
campaign, highlighting the contrast between the US/Japanese and Chinese
responses in order to gain an additional PR value for the West.
But Reuters’ framing that the Chinese regime is clumsily
botching the only reasonable policy option—backing up its regional power
pretensions with a high profile assumption of disaster relief responsibilities—is
remarkably blinkered in a way that implies that flooding the Asian zone with
more reportorial resources is simply creating an echo chamber of mutually
reinforcing punditry and prejudices, and making it easier to superimpose
Western preconceptions on the Asian reality: an exercise in Orientalizing that
Edward Said would find quite familiar.
There are, I would aver, other forces at work in China, ones
that preclude the new PRC administration of Xi Jinping from blithely laying
himself down in the Procrustean bed of western liberal and U.S. great power
preconceptions of how China should be responding to the Haiyan disaster at this
particular moment.
I see Xi Jinping asserting tight central control and
management over China’s media and public opinion space in order to consolidate
his own power and, quite possibly, in anticipation of domestic rumpus attending
some badly needed and long-expected economic, financial, and political reforms.
One of the relief valves permitted for Chinese public
opinion is the vociferous abuse heaped on countries with whom the PRC are at
odds, like the Vietnam and the Philippines.
Reasserting government management of that space means not giving China’s
easily riled netizens (and the occasional dissident activists who welcome any
expression of on-line discontent as an opportunity to delegitimize the PRC
regime) something to bitch about, reinforce their feelings of individual
agency, and resist the top-down authoritarian guidance that seems to be Xi
Jinping’s preferred governance model.
In my most recent article for Asia Times, Controlling the Media is Xi’s Message, I
posit that the PRC regime is taking care not to get out in front of Chinese
public opinion (which is pretty negative and uncharitable toward the
Philippines, despite the awful Haiyan disaster) by supplying aid beyond the
minimum demanded by neighborly compassion, unless it is recognized inside China
as a matter of overwhelming moral and practical necessity.
Also, undoubtedly Xi would prefer that the relief be
reframed in terms of a regional role that China not only can but must fill,
ideally at the urgent behest of the Philippines, and not just because Reuters
has written a couple bitchy headlines.
Perhaps the real
reason is that Xi has his eye squarely on the domestic ball of public opinion,
and does not want to be seen getting all soft and squishy, pursuing
international popularity will o' the wisps when his main business is to
convince the Chinese populace that the CCP has the domestic
dissent/control/reform agenda well in hand.
Those with longer memories (a characteristic of the Chinese Communist Party hierarchy) might remember how foreign aid issues got rolled up in a spate of horrific school bus accidents that claimed dozens of lives in China in the winter of 2012. Netizen scorn was heaped on the government for concurrently providing school buses to Macedonia as an aid gambit even as China's own children perished on antiquated and unsafe buses.
Those with longer memories (a characteristic of the Chinese Communist Party hierarchy) might remember how foreign aid issues got rolled up in a spate of horrific school bus accidents that claimed dozens of lives in China in the winter of 2012. Netizen scorn was heaped on the government for concurrently providing school buses to Macedonia as an aid gambit even as China's own children perished on antiquated and unsafe buses.
More recently, the
Chinese government came in for considerable criticism in the wake of Cyclone
Fitow. In a few hours in October (in another one of those unprecedented
calamities probably exacerbated by global warming and now recurring with such
frequency that the previous instances are quickly forgotten), that storm
dropped a half-meter or so of rain on northern Zhejiang province - more than
the region had seen in a century - flooding 70% of a sizable city called Yuyao.
There was considerable local disgruntlement at the provincial government's
inability to provide prompt relief.
…
With the Fitow context
(and with the current example of the admittedly lesser losses and suffering
that the Haiyin super-typhoon inflicted on the Chinese mainland), it would seem
logical that the Xi government would not be interested in squandering its
messaging victory by expending moral, political, and economic resources on the
Philippines while the local situation is far from bright, thereby inviting
netizen criticism of the government in the (for China) still privileged space
of protected expression reserved for outpourings of nationalist and xenophobic
bile.
The United States, as part of its pivot to Asia, is eager to
identify and advertise through the Western media roles for China that the PRC
finds awkward and unpleasant to fill.
Disaster relief for Supertyphoon Haiyan is not the first, and will
probably not be the last.
The Philippines have a treaty with the United States and Japan due to post WW II. As a result, the US, Japan and the Philippines are allies.China is a trading partner but has differences in settling the dispute over some islands in the South China Sea.
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