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China's Soft Power Deficit

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Joseph Nye: China's Soft Power Deficit - WSJ.com

China's Soft Power Deficit
To catch up, its politics must unleash the many talents of its civil society.
By JOSEPH S. NYE JR.

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Over the past decade, China's economic and military might has grown impressively. This has frightened its neighbors into looking for allies to balance China's increase in hard power. But if a country can also increase its soft power of attraction, its neighbors feel less need to balance its power. For example, Canada and Mexico do not seek alliances with China to balance U.S. power the way Asian countries seek a U.S. presence to balance China.

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China is spending billions of dollars to increase its soft power. Its aid programs to Africa and Latin America are not limited by the institutional or human rights concerns that constrain Western aid. The Chinese style emphasizes high-profile gestures, such as building stadiums. Meanwhile, the elaborately staged 2008 Beijing Olympics enhanced China's reputation abroad, and the 2010 Shanghai Expo attracted more than 70 million visitors.

China has also created several hundred Confucius Institutes around the world to teach its language and culture. The enrollment of foreign students in China increased to 240,000 last year from just 36,000 a decade ago, and China Radio International now broadcasts in English around the clock. In 2009-10, Beijing invested $8.9 billion in external publicity work, including 24-hour cable news channels.

But for all its efforts, China has had a limited return on its investment. A recent BBC poll shows that opinions of China's influence are positive in much of Africa and Latin America, but predominantly negative in the United States, everywhere in Europe, as well as in India, Japan and South Korea.

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The 2008 Olympics was a success abroad, but shortly afterward China's domestic crackdown on human rights activists undercut its soft-power gains. The Shanghai Expo was also a great success, but it was followed by the jailing of Nobel Peace Laureate Liu Xiaobo. His empty chair at the Oslo ceremony was a powerful symbol. And for all the efforts to turn Xinhua and China Central Television into competitors for CNN and the BBC, there is little international audience for brittle propaganda.

Now, in the aftermath of the Middle East revolutions, China is clamping down on the Internet and jailing human rights lawyers, once again torpedoing its soft-power campaign. No amount of propaganda can hide the fact that blind human rights attorney Chen Guangcheng recently sought refuge in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.

Rather than celebrate the heroes of today in civil society, the arts and the private sector, the Communist Party has taken to promoting the greatness of Chinese culture in general and the historical significance of the Middle Kingdom.

Pang Zhongying, a former Chinese diplomat who teaches at Renmin University, says this reflects "a poverty of thought" in China today. When Zhang Yimou, the acclaimed director, was asked why his films were always set in the past, he replied that films about contemporary China would be "neutered by the censors."

I read the students a recent statement by Ai Weiwei, the acclaimed Chinese artist who's suffered from state harassment. He warned that censorship is undermining creativity. "It's putting this nation behind in the world's competition in the coming decades. You can't create generations just to labor at [electronics manufacturer] Foxconn. Everyone wants an iPhone but it would be impossible to design an iPhone in China because it's not a product; it's an understanding of human nature."

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After I finished speaking, a party official told the students that the Chinese approach to soft power should focus on culture, not politics. I hope this changes. The development of soft power need not be a zero-sum game. If Chinese soft power increases in the U.S. and vice versa, it will help make conflict less likely.

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Mr. Nye is a professor at Harvard and author of "The Future of Power" (PublicAffairs, 2011).

Chinese movie makers(or is it censors) just don't get it that people outside of China are disgusted by the Chinese movie's messages of "Individuals can be sacrificed for the social order, and the individual revolt against government is futile". And the CCP wonders why Chinese movies are unpopular outside of China, when all they show is "Bad guys win, good guys get crushed and dies a senseless death".
 
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:wave:

BBC News - Europe less, China more popular in global BBC poll

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Our soft power isn't great, that is fair enough.

But how can the USA/Europe/South Korea/India lecture us on it, given that they all rank lower than us in the ratings?
 
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All the developed countries plus India see China negatively.

china can afford to be viewed extremely negatively by india and all the developed world combined, and yet the mighty korea that is loved everywhere else (let's just pretend) cannot afford to court the ill will from china. what does that say of the utter haplessness and hopelessness of the korean race?
 
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china can afford to be viewed extremely negatively by india and all the developed world combined, and yet the mighty korea that is loved everywhere else (let's just pretend) cannot afford to court the ill will from china. what does that say of the utter haplessness and hopelessness of the korean race?

Actually, North Korea is one of the least popular countries in the polls. :lol:
 
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Out of the developed countries, only USA and France like SK better than China. But wait, I thought you said that if you make enough awful degenerate pop music and dramas featuring plastic people, then you could 'culturally colonize' others and make them like you...
 
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Interestingly, China is viewed more positively than BOTH the USA and Europe now. :D

Positive views of China rose from 46% to 50%, with the biggest rises recorded in Britain, Australia, Canada, and Germany.

Views of the US remain broadly unchanged, the poll suggests, with 47% of respondents giving positive views and 33% negative views, compared to 48% and 31% in 2010.

BBC News - Europe less, China more popular in global BBC poll

It seems that as our relative power increases, the trend goes upwards.

As of the 2011 BBC polls:

China - 50% have positive views
Europe - 48% have positive views
USA - 47% have positive views
 
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Actually, North Korea is one of the least popular countries in the polls. :lol:

OOPS! i didn't even check. you cannot blame me for this mistake: i just assumed any person of even mediocre intelligence wouldn't attack china for lack of international popularity unless his country fared far better. i guess i overestimated korea and koreans
 
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Out of the developed countries, only USA and France like SK better than China. But wait, I thought you said that if you make enough awful degenerate pop music and dramas featuring plastic people, then you could 'culturally colonize' others and make them like you...

lmao 1/3 of South Koreans hate South Korea. They don't even like themselves and they're talking about "cultural colonization" :rofl:
 
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what is amazing, though, is that at 81% non-neutral opinions china now elicits stronger responses than even US (80%) and japan (79%).

the mighty bonzis, however, people scarcely pay more attention to them (64%) than to south africans (62%). i guess that is the real strategic and national security objective of the vast korean plastic surgery industry: after drastic artificial improvement to their looks, koreans can finally hide themselves among the human family. and this must also be why north koreans wanted to exhort money from their southern brothers by threats of nuclear warfare - northern bonzi (69%) too needed the money to do plastic surgery and bring down somewhat their higher-than-south-korea noticeability in BBC polls.
 
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So soft power deficit or not is it not korea or india problems anyway ,and frankly speaking we dont give a toss what korea or india think of us, especially irrelevant country like india who is by far the most ignored country compare to china, we might take note of what india thinks of us may be in 20 years time if they are on par with us, a lame thread started by a china obssessed false flag indian .
 
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okay, making fun of the unfortunate korean who started this thread (and his co-racials) aside, there is something serious to be said of nye and his op-ed here - which is that this guy is so deliberately deceptive that he must not be taken seriously academically. he invented this phoney concept because he knew americans would have nothing else to hold china down with or hold against china.

this argument that bonzi and nipponzi want to balance against china whereas canadians and mexicans don't do the same against US is so shamelessly dishonest. a country bandwagons rather than balancing against its neighbor only because the power disparity grows too big (the same way austria was finally beaten into submission in 1811), and the day china grows to match US in military power bonzi and nipponzi will ineluctably accost china with the same awe and servitude as canadians and mexicans do now with US. nye just wants to spin this (not to change any of this, of course, because he doesn't want to change US military dominance in north america and wants america to hold canada and mexico like slaves in chains) to persuade china to give up the one tool that can reduce bonzi and nipponzi to chinese enslavement (which, of course, is the historical destiny of bonzi and nipponzi). i despise nye's intellectual dishonesty and the way he placed his academic career in service of american political propaganda
 
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