Xi and Putin give a show of unity in Beijing
...and U.S. cries foul over Chinese fighter pilots | October 18, 2023
Dear reader:
Yesterday’s opening of the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing — which was attended by Vladimir Putin, a senior Taliban dignitary, several leaders of major nations like Indonesia, Chile, and Kazakhstan, and representatives from 140 countries — led me to conclude that “Like it or not, Xí Jìnpíng 习近平 is forging a new world order, and the leaders of most of the world’s countries seem eager to play along.” However, China’s rise is not inexorable. As one former employee of Chinese state media noted on the hellish social media site that used to be Twitter, the official group photos from the Belt and Road fora in 2017, 2019, and 2023 show a shrinking number of leaders in attendance. Our Words of the Day are: nuclear briefcase (核公文包 hé gōngwénbāo) and nuclear football (核足球 hé zúqiú), the nuclear missile launch devices that accompany the Russian and American presidents when they are traveling. The Russian name for their device, which made an appearance in Beijing today, is “Cheget” (Чегет), named after Mount Cheget in the Caucasus, which is rendered as 切格特 qiè gé tè in Chinese. I’ll be talking about China’s international “friendships” on the Sinica Podcast with Eric Olander of the China Global South Project and Maria Repnikova, researcher of media politics in authoritarian regimes, together with co-host Kaiser Kuo. It will be recorded in front of a live audience at our NextChina Conference kickoff dinner on November 1. The next day, November 2, has a full program of interviews and discussions with world-leading investors, scholars, journalists, and human rights activists on everything from electric cars, AI, and the future of private business in China to the mood of Chinese intellectuals, Beijing’s global and domestic policies, and the situation in Xinjiang. We’d love to meet you in New York: details and tickets here. If you’re not already a subscriber, sign up for our Daily Dispatch, or our free Weekly. |
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Jeremy Goldkorn
Editor-in-Chief
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CURRENT AFFAIRS
Xi and Putin give a show of unity in Beijing |
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Xí Jìnpíng 习近平 delivered the opening speech at the third Belt and Road Forum in Beijing today.
Xi had a three-hour meeting with Putin today on the sidelines of the Forum.
There was no mention today of the “no limits” partnership they announced just before Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, but the two sides presented a united front. Barry van Wyk |
NEWS BRIEFING
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Here’s what else you need to know about China today:
The U.S. accused China of “a centralized and concerted campaign” conducted by Chinese fighter pilots toward their U.S. and allied counterparts in international airspace, the Department of Defense (DOD) announced yesterday. The DOD also released photo and video footage that show 15 recent cases of “coercive and risky operational behavior” by People’s Liberation Army (PLA) fighter jets crossing in front of a U.S. aircraft in the East and South China Sea, with one as close as 20 feet from the nose of the U.S. plane. A man who was shot by Hong Kong police during a 2019 protest was sentenced to 47 months imprisonment by a district court today. Tsang Chi-kin (曾志健 Zēng Zhìjiàn) was sentenced to 40 months for rioting and seven months for allegedly assaulting a policeman with a stick on October 1, 2019, when widespread pro-democracy demonstrations took place to “mourn” National Day amid the city’s controversial amendment to its extradition bill. He pleaded guilty to both charges last month. Tsang, who was 18 years old at the time, was shot in his left lung when an officer fired a live round at close range, leaving him in critical condition. He and three others spent two years hiding in safehouses in Hong Kong, after his failed bid to be granted asylum by the city’s U.S. consulate. He was arrested by police last July as the four were about to board a boat to flee to Taiwan. China’s economy grew more than expected according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics, which today reported 4.9% year-on-year in the third quarter. The country’s GDP expanded 1.3% from July through September compared to the previous three months, beating market predictions and putting Beijing’s annual growth target of 5% within reach as it steps up support for the world’s second-largest economy. But the country’s beleaguered property sector is still struggling, with investment tumbling 9.1% in the first nine months of 2023 compared to the same period last year. China approved dozens of genetically modified (GM) corn and soybean seed varieties for planting, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs announced (in Chinese) yesterday. It’s a breakthrough move for a country which imports the largest amount of soybeans and corn, but has long been cautious in adopting any gene-edited or GM seeds in its push for food security. Chinese state media: Xinhua News Agency’s top story today is a brief report on the meeting between Xí Jìnpíng 习近平 and Vladimir Putin. The People’s Daily’s print edition is unusually colorful, with a top story and group photo from last night’s Belt and Road Forum dinner, and two stories on Xi’s meetings yesterday with the presidents of Chile and Indonesia.
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THIS WEEK IN CHINA’S HISTORY
A young Deng Xiaoping in France |
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In the early years of the Chinese republic, progressives looked west for political inspiration. This was how Dèng Xiǎopíng 邓小平 came to be in France in the 1920s.
The France he arrived at was not the liberal paradise the Chinese had imagined. Racism and xenophobia were widespread. French soldiers were returning to civilian lives, and there were few jobs.
Tellingly, when Deng Xiaoping left France in the summer of 1926, his destination was not immediately China. Click through to James Carter’s column to find out where he ended up.
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FROM THE NEWSBASE
Below are links from our NewsBase to other noteworthy reports published in the last 24 hours from and about China.BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:Economic gloom or boom U.S.-China tech war Electric vehicles AI Country Garden SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND ENVIRONMENT:Agriculture POLITICS AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS:China’s detention of foreigners Military modernization Military aerial intercepts Railway diplomacy Espionage BRI Hong Kong Ethiopia Myanmar Russia SOCIETY AND CULTURE:Wenzhou — China’s city of entrepreneurs Vlogging
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