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| Seeking reciprocity: Chinese President Hu Jintao with President Barack Obama |
BEIJING: After speculation to the contrary, President Hu Jintao confirmed that he’s coming to Washington for upcoming nuclear proliferation talks. Not long after, Washington announced a delay in announcing any decision on whether China has been judged a “currency manipulator,” a dictum Congress requires that the US make on each country by April 15th.
What’s more, Hu’s recent hour-long phone conversation with President Barack Obama on April 1 leading to these announcements could signal a much-needed thaw in US-China relations. It’s about time. Here in Beijing, in the wake of the Dalai Lama’s recent visit to the White House, the Taiwan arms sales and Google’s retreat to Hong Kong, one can’t help escape a growing chill towards America. And in Washington, fair or not, many have come to view US conciliatory gestures over the past year as having failed to elicit equal response from Beijing.
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The Obama administration has |
Indeed, since coming to office, the Obama administration has bent over backwards to signal its desire for friendlier relations with China. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Obama both displayed an unusual solicitude towards their hosts on their respective trips to China. Among other concessions, Clinton promised that human rights issues could not stand in the way of the two countries tackling global problems like the economic crisis or climate change, and Obama even postponed his October meeting with the Dalai Lama in hopes of smoothing the way to a successful November summit. In Washington’s view, Beijing responded in a most unreciprocal fashion in Copenhagen and then harped on issues like Tibet, Taiwan and currency exchange, chilling promise for more collaboration.
Then came the Google furor, which deeply unsettled Chinese officialdom. After all, here was the most dynamic, iconic company in the world suddenly walking away from part of its business in the most rapidly growing market in the world. Chinese blogs and chat rooms have been ablaze with defensive rebuttals to the company’s departure and its implicit critique of Communist Party’s ground rules for foreign IT companies operating in the China market. Many insist that internet “filtering” – it’s rarely referred to as “censorship” here – is simply part of China’s quotidian rules and regulations for doing business.
Given China’s new militancy, even truculence, many in Washington began to wonder if the Chinese really do want friendlier relations? And if they do, don’t they understand the concept of reciprocity?
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Many in Washington wonder if the Chinese really want friendlier relations. If so, don’t they understand the concept of reciprocity? |
The truth is that Beijing does want better relations, but often this aspiration gets lost in clumsy political bluster. Curiously, the notion of reciprocity is not alien to China. In fact, the idea is deeply rooted in its own Confucian tradition.
The Analects, or "Lunyu", the classic of Confucian political philosophy that sinologist Simon Leys described as being “to Confucius what the Gospels are to Jesus,” provides a virtual roadmap for creating and maintaining mutually reinforcing relationships. In The Analects, written around 500 BCE, the Sage tells one of his disciples that his doctrine has only “one single thread running through it.” What is it? “Loyalty and reciprocity, and that’s all,” he replies.
Another disciple asks, “Is there any single word that should guide one’s entire life?” and Confucius replies, “Should it not be reciprocity? What you do not wish for yourself, do not do to others.”
In classical Chinese, the character used for the idea of “reciprocity” is shu, which carries a broader resonance of “tolerance,” “generosity” and even willingness to “excuse,” “forgive” and “show mercy.” It also implies that one’s actions towards others – or by implication between countries – invariably conditions their responses, and vice-versa, in an endless dialectic chain of cause and effect.
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In the Confucian universe of shu, concessions made as a demonstration of good intention should not simply be accepted by the recipient as something “won.” |
In the Confucian universe of "shu", a concession made as a demonstration of good intention should not simply be accepted by the recipient as something “won,” but should serve as a catalytic gesture which then presents an opportunity, even an obligation, for the counterpart to reciprocate with a comparable gesture.
So, what has prevented Beijing from re-embracing this Confucian notion? Aside from the fact that Confucianism was savagely attacked and denied by Chinese revolutionaries during the past century, a fear that manifesting an abundance of shu might make China appear too conciliatory, thus weak, has also served as an impediment. President Obama learned something himself about appearing too weak when he was criticized at home for his seemingly supine deportment in Beijing. The Chinese explanation for their own posture is that issues like Tibet, social stability, Taiwan arms sales, are all “hexinliyi,” or, “core interests,” which brook no compromise.
As State Councilor Dai Bingguo, who oversees China’s foreign policy, explains, “China’s number one core interest is to maintain its fundamental system and state security; next is state sovereignty and territorial integrity; and third is the continued stable development of the economy and society.” But, with so many interests coming under the rigid rubric “core,” only a narrow margin of territory remains for Chinese diplomats to maneuver and actually negotiate.
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The Obama-Hu conversation has created a new, unexpected thaw in an increasingly frozen relationship, but the moment could pass. |
Over the past century and a half, the Chinese have come to view international relations as a ruthless competition in which the interests of weak nations like China were almost always trumped by the more powerful. But given its recent rise and new economic power, the idea of China as a victim or a world unto itself as in the Mao era, in a universe where one nation’s gain is always another’s loss, is increasingly outmoded and counterproductive. After all, China has become an ever more prominent member of the global community. As a member of the WTO, it has benefited enormously from the transnational web of connectivity arising around the advance of globalization. Thus, it is somewhat disingenuous for its leaders to imagine that they can irrevocably corral off whole hemispheres of activity as lying completely outside the sphere of common interest. Simply put, with the benefits of global citizenship come new obligations of global responsibility
One way that the US can help China’s leaders feel more comfortable with these new responsibilities and adopt a more reciprocal posture in negotiating them is to ensure that friendly gestures are embraced in a way that allows China to see how such interactions can convey a new self-confidence and magnanimity rather than weakness.
There’s little time to waste. The Obama-Hu conversation has created a new, unexpected moment of thaw in an increasingly frozen relationship, but the moment could pass. After all, it’s still possible that the US-China relations could become derailed in American acrimony over the loss of jobs to China, the US imbalance of payments, the vagaries of currency exchange, or over leadership disagreements or civil unrest in China.
Many issues still divide the two countries. But, Chinese leaders should not fail to appreciate that Obama and Clinton have extended a new hand of friendship. If China’s leaders truly want better relations, now is the time to recognize that these intentions are genuine and find their own ways to respond in kind.
If China’s future increasingly depends on Beijing being more flexible and reciprocal, then there’s no better place to look than its own traditions.




Comments on this Article
Respect national Sovereignty? No, the USA continue to meet with Dalai Llama and sell weapons to Taipei. Its speaking with forked tongue, saying it recognizes Tibet and Taiwan as part of China, but actions speak larger than words, my friend.
Access to higher-end tech? No it refuses to sell it due to 'dual-usage' applications of such technology and then complains about the lack of exports to China. The US complains about trade deficit and imbalances but clothes, cheap electronics and things that US wants to push on to China, China makes and has plenty of it. Its simple China wants is high-end technology and goods it cannot make itself, instead the US refuses to sell them claiming, hence trade deficit.
Lets see what China has done for USA in last 10 years...
Bought U.S. Debt and Bonds during the darkest hours of the financial crisis, helped establish 6 party talks with N. Korea, floated the yuan (until the 2008 meltdown) and etc.
But kindly respect the right of unique peoples, those that remain alive and would also be thriving if it wasn't for the latest episode of brutal sinicization and colonization by the Chinese empire, to exist independently alongside the sinicized Hans, like was the case during China's and Tibet's dynastic past before Tibet's eastern neighbours were Hanified.
In the case of occupied Tibetans, only unreformed imperialists, like the current regime of the People's Republic of China, are using anachronistic excuses like past (or current) Dalai Lamas' personal cases and dealings with neighbouring feudal kings as an excuse for their claims of ownership and colonialism of Tibet. Tibetans in exile have democratic government and all Tibetans wish to establish a modern democracy in free Tibet, one where UN human rights declarations are respected and not banned (and cause for indiscriminate imprisonment) like under Chinese rule.
Even Singapore, a mere city state carved out of Malaysia, can be considered an independent state despite nothing about it except location is unique. If Malaysia reclaimed the territory Singapore's chineseness would continue to exist back in its native territories. But while the Malays lost some territory to the Chinese settlers in Singapore yet the Malays kept most of their native lands so that their language and culture can safely live on.
Not so in Tibet. Since 1950 the whole territory of the Tibetan people has been invaded, destroyed, exploited and increasingly mass-populated by the expansionist Chinese dictatorship founded by Mao.
As a Singaporean you may sympathize with (Tibetan) people's need for self-determination and right to exist as unique, separate people, or if you choose to identify with the Hans you may side with the exploiting Chinese settlers and their expansionism instead. You are free to choose. The Tibetan people have no rights and face the grim future of extinct Manchus or near-extinct South-Mongolians after they experienced similar Chinese invasions and assimilation.
I am glad you have come across Tsering Shakya, a distinguished Tibetan scholar and historian who also gives the Manchu, Chinese and Mongol views fair assessment, unlike the narrow Sino-imperial side and especially the fantastical structures of the communist-era. Unfortunately you are selectively misquoting the 13th Dalai Lama here. He was a reformist who declared Tibet's independence (1) but was unable to enact many reforms due to inertia and opposition from the monastic elite and sections of the nobility. Some mistakenly thought that asserting the declared independence was an unnecessary foreign fad of the era since Tibetans themselves and all their neighbours knew that Tibet was Tibet.
(1) http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?id=26730
Historical facts about Tibetan independence
English:
http://www.jamyangnorbu.com/blog/2010/03/04/independent-tibet-%E2%80%93-...
Chinese translation:
http://lovetibet.ti-da.net/e2982750.html
For the Tibetan rebels out there, you are to be reminded that the 13th Dalai Lama (d. 1933) "had no political will to assert independence." *Read article by Tsering Shakya, Tibet and the League of Nations* His Regent-successor continued his policy. By the time Taktra took over (1942), it was too late for him to try to achieve independence. The Communist victory in the Chinese civil war was swift.
But then, even if Chiang Kai-shek remained in power, he also would not permit Tibet independence.
US political interference in Tibet and Taiwan will have a long term political cost for US itself. Between China and Taiwan, US must make a choice. China's voice will get louder and louder in the years to come - to make sure the message is carried across,
It's much more accurate I think to say that the Little Red Book is still more in the minds of the people than the Analects, and that the world is only just now heading entering the nightmare that we all avoided during the Cultural Revolution - that of a deeply corrupt, xenophobic, dictatorial communist regime who now have a great deal of money and are arming themselves to the teeth.
Some scholars with strong leftist sympathies tend to overlook either accidentally or intentionally that fact.
So how does one deal with a totally remorseless and expansionist dictatorship? Would Mr Schell's advice to share the spoils of conquest with national-socialist Germany or Soviet Union - according to Confucian give-and-take - be today considered decent and morally justified approach?
After the period of possibility after the fall of Soviet Union and some of its satellite dictatorships was lost to the current era of global multinationals' profiteering as the guiding 'political' principle in international relations, rather than freedom and justice as passingly mentioned in the United Nations' charters on the supposed rights of peoples and nations, it again seems that the rights of oppressed and occupied peoples like those under Chinese Communist Party's military rule are being traded over and over again in order to lubricate imperial cooperation.
If the world's democracies fail to rein in the Kissingerian horde of power-wielding multinationals (including private funds) before it's too late, I am afraid that much of the world will end up experiencing future under 'Pax CCP', although hopefully not as devastating as the suffocation of Tibetans, Mongols and Uigurs under CCP's direct military rule and national Final Solution.
What comes to Confucianism as CCP's current "moral" guidance, what happened to the key Confucian teaching of "what you do not wish for yourself, do not do to others" which was also supposed to apply to relations between nations??
Key part of CCP's domestic propaganda is based on playing up xenophobic Han nationalism in the name of foreign powers' past partial imperialism towards Manchu- and Nationalist-ruled China, but somehow CCP's own total and genocidal imperialism is sacrosanct, as stated in the importance the communist party places upon the holiness of their current expanded imperial borders.
Imperial Japan launched a war in Asia to achieve its perceived destiny. I hope that China doesn't go down that path but the rest of Asia & the world should proceed cautiously & remain ever vigilant.
Unfortunately history shows that an autocratic regime can subvert the market to its own ends (Nazi Germany being the obvious example). Although capitalism perhaps thrives best in an open society, it doesn't really need it. To a large extent the Chinese Communist Party controls the capitalists.
The leadership of the CCP are concentrating on keeping 'core interests' frozen. They understand that any change that they don't have full control of is a threat to their power. The US administration can not hope to melt their position. Heat from the people of China will do that. We will see if the CCP can show enough flexibility in the face of popular discontent to ride this out.
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