China Has an Image Problem—but Knows How to Fix It
Many in Beijing realize a declining international
reputation won’t help the country achieve its goals.
| APRIL 6, 2021, 3:02 PM
Protesters walk on an image of Chinese President Xi Jinping in the Causeway
Bay area in Hong Kong on Oct. 1, 2019. MARK RALSTON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
According a recent Pew Research Center survey, 67 percent of
Americans registered “cold” feelings toward China in a rather nebulously named
“feeling thermometer.” The study also revealed that roughly 9 in 10 Americans
see China as an enemy or competitor rather than a partner. A different
poll by Gallup put China’s unfavorability
ratings among Americans at 79 percent—a historic high (or low), since polling
began more than 40 years ago.
It isn’t
just the United States. Around the world, unfavorable views of China have
reached unprecedented heights in the last year, with the percentage of
individuals having no confidence in Chinese leadership to
“do the right thing” in world affairs rising by more than 15 percent across
countries like Australia, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and the United
Kingdom. The reaction among the Italian public is particularly noteworthy,
given the extensive investment and medical aid China
has offered the country during the COVID-19 pandemic.
China
expected that such extensive goodwill would be reciprocated by the country’s
public, especially given the positive reception by the Italian government. On
the arrival of Chinese aid, Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio commented, “we are not
alone. There are people in the world who want to help Italy.”
Elsewhere
too, China’s attempts to court favor and rebuild frazzled alliances through
pandemic diplomacy have been met with mixed reception. Despite reasonable
successes in establishing consolidated supply lines and tentative partnerships
over vaccines and masks in Sub-Saharan Africa and the
Balkans, China has struggled in a number of EU member states, where civil
society backlash is threatening to undo decades of closer ties built as the
country opened up trade and investment opportunities.
Such
cold-shoulder treatment both precipitates and stems from the cooling alliance
between the EU and China. Chinese actions have played a role in it and in the
broader break between China and the West—Chinese diplomats have traded barbs with French counterparts,
repudiated Australian and British politicians, and exchanged fire with icy U.S.
leadership at the recent Anchorage meeting—but simmering resentment and the
anti-China turn in the U.S. foreign-policy establishment have not helped.
The question
now is whether China should care about its global reputation and, if so, what
it should do about it.
Many in
China are unfazed by the starkly souring relations between China and the West.
As a metaphor, hawkish internet users have coined the phrase “Ruguanxue,” which means studying the invasion
through a pass, where the pass is a metonymy for China’s northern borders.
In this
extended metaphor, the United States is compared with the rapidly declining
Ming dynasty while China is equated with the Jurchen invaders that came in from
the north and swiftly seized control of the Ming’s preexisting territory. The
United States’ anti-China uneasiness is viewed as a sign of its existential
angst at being overtaken by China. Meanwhile, in the eyes of
many in the Chinese public, the West’s condemnatory words and actions resemble
the skullduggery committed by the Eight-Nation Alliance that stormed the
country’s capital and ransacked the Forbidden Palace at the end of the Qing
dynasty.
To the
charge that China’s “wolf warriors”—the term that has come into fashion during
the pandemic to describe the country’s arguably more aggressive diplomats—have
been unduly bellicose and disruptive to the international order, the defiant
hawks shrug. Government spokesperson Hua Chunying put
it bluntly: “If the West is adamant on framing our defense of our
sovereignty and core developmental interests as ‘wolf-warrior diplomacy,’ then
so be it—what’s wrong with being ‘wolf warriors’ in that sense?”
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Yet not
everyone is so certain. Seeing the anti-China turn around the world, others are
asking whether it is in China’s best interest to rehabilitate its image and
rebuild relations with the West. And if so, how it can do while still advancing
its own economic and political goals and not foregoing its core commitments to
domestic stability and holistic development. That isn’t impossible, scholars
Daniel A. Bell and Zhengxu Wang argued. China should not “bristle at
discussion of its shortcomings” to “improve China’s image globally.”
Economically,
China needs a modicum of popular goodwill—specifically from the private sector
and civil society—to facilitate the continued expansion of Chinese firms and
capital in prominent markets.
Beijing has
long expected the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI), a proposed
agreement that would further open investment and economic cooperation between
the EU and China, to pass with minimal opposition. Yet the deal looks set to
hit a snag in the European Parliament as a result of recent scrutiny in Europe
over China’s labor conditions and Huawei. If the CAI
stalls, it will mean a heavy setback to a trade partnership that was worth more than $650 billion in 2019.
Outside of
Europe, China must win over the burgeoning middle classes and elite in
Southeast Asia to maintaining the appeal of its Belt and Road Initiative in
undecided states. Yet in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, recent polls have shown public attitudes
swing in favor of the United States over China if asked to pick between the
two.
International
goodwill remains key to some domestic goals as well. Beijing remains intent on
consolidating its domestic political legitimacy and winning the tech war.
Legitimacy can certainly be bolstered in the short run by ramped-up
nationalistic rhetoric, but in the long run, the rise of isolationist hawks in
both China and the United States would undermine both as they decouple their
technology, communications, and trade relationships. In particular, Chinese
buyers remain voracious consumers of Western goods. If
the supply is undermined in a trade war—or if foreign loans dry up—it could
place great pressure on China to go “domestic,” a critical—albeit
nascent—component of its dual circulation strategy.
For now,
China seems to have the upper hand since its access to high-end
telecommunications and digital technology renders its tech firms an attractive
alternative to Western counterparts. Yet its manufacturers remain heavily
dependent on the international market for revenue that can sustain their
research and development. Huawei drew $55 billion (41 percent of total revenue)
from the international market in 2019; 70 percent of technology giant DJI’s
sales were made overseas. Souring public opinions can and will affect the
revenue streams of leading Chinese corporations. International backlash could
well sabotage Chinese leaders’ plans of establishing China as a
self-sufficient, sustainable economy.
So, what’s a
progressive path forward for China?
Leaders and
diplomats would benefit from recognizing that the West is by no means
homogenous and that Western hostility is not inevitable.
To begin
with, the country should seek to mend relations with targeted regional allies
and wavering partners. These include states or sub-state actors that have had
grievances over aspects of Chinese behavior in the past yet remain open to
deepening ties with the country in the future. These include Southern European
states like Greece, Italy, and Spain, which have registered strong complaints over Huawei and intellectual property rights
while also embracing tourism and investment at large from China. The limits to
vaccine and mask diplomacy suggest that beyond the provision of medical
equipment, China should look toward facilitating greater bilateral cultural
exchanges and frank dialogue between citizens and civil societies in ways that
are sensitive to the needs and perceptions of locals in Europe.
Concurrently,
addressing some of the concerns about Chinese overreach in academic spaces and
civil society in Australia and New Zealand would help dial down the temperature there.
Rekindling dialogue with Japan over disputed waters and military de-escalation
could improve relations with what is arguably the most Sino-friendly member of the “Quad,” an
informal strategic alliance that is picking up steam under U.S. President Joe
Biden’s new administration.
In all these
cases, compartmentalization could do China much good in limiting the number of
fronts that it must defend its critical interests. In practice, this may mean
changing its communications strategy as diplomats engage with their
counterparts around the world.
When it
comes to the United States, both sides in the Sino-American relationship would
benefit from dialing down their rhetoric. It is possible to speak to some
Western concerns without undermining Chinese diplomats’ commitments to their
country’s core interests. For example, Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s address to the Lanting Forum, in which he
attributed the deterioration in Sino-American relations to “the previous U.S.
administration, [acting] out of its own political needs,” reflected a conscious
effort on the part of Beijing to extend an olive branch to the Biden
administration. And as former Vice Foreign Minister Fu Ying recently noted at the China Development
Forum, “China and the U.S. should face up to and solve their differences in a
calm and objective way as cooperation is the only right choice for both
nations.”
There
remains a worry in Beijing that the country would come across as weak if it
de-escalates its rhetoric. Yet if anything, the opposite holds true: Stripping
away inflammatory rhetoric and openly acknowledging the room for collaboration
and concession would allow the country’s representatives to stand more firm on
genuine concerns and aspirations. It could also help get the CAI back on track.
The bottom
line is that China can and should repair its international image, and none of
the steps it could start with would require it to capitulate or accept what it
deems is the West’s most unreasonable demands. Doing so would benefit both
sides in the spiraling China-West relationship and benefit all citizens.
Brian Y.S. Wong is a Rhodes Scholar from Hong
Kong and the founding editor in chief of the Oxford Political Review.
TAGS: CHINA, FOREIGN
& PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
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