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China's wobbly transition

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David Ignatius: China's wobbly transition

BY DAVID IGNATIUS | Published: May 20, 2012

WASHINGTON — Perhaps when Chinese leaders began to speak over the last several years about a new “Beijing Consensus” and the triumph of the “China Model,” that was a warning the bubble was about to burst. And we're seeing that hubris play out now, as China's leaders struggle with the greatest internal crisis since the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.

This time, the political machinations have mostly been behind the scenes among the Communist Party elite. The headline event was the purge of Bo Xilai, the ambitious party chief in Chongqing province. But the corruption investigation of Bo has sent shock waves across the system. Bo's network of friends and cronies was so wide that many senior party and military officials fear they might be affected.

Because China works so hard to conceal the workings of its political system, outsiders only get glimpses of the turmoil. The Financial Times reported last weekend that Zhou Yongkang, one of Bo's key backers on the Politburo's standing committee, had been forced to give up control of China's police, judiciary and secret police. The Wall Street Journal wrote Thursday that two senior Chinese military officials, Gen. Liu Yuan and Gen. Zhang Haiyang, had been questioned about their links to Bo. Such rumors abound, all impossible to verify.

Across China, there is said to be uncertainty as officials try to understand what's happening and protect themselves. It's a nerve-wracking moment.

The official line, conveyed by People's Daily, is that the country's leadership transition will go forward as scheduled this fall, with Xi Jinping expected to succeed Hu Jintao as president. But this brave front masks what China-watchers describe as a state of high anxiety. Though Bo has been attacked as a “princeling” son of the party elite, some of the Politburo members who ousted him are princelings, too, including Prime Minister Wen Jiabao and Xi himself. The full array of targets in the anti-Bo campaign is not yet clear, so the fallout is hard to predict.

What dynamics underlie this jockeying among the leadership? I put that question to Kenneth Lieberthal, a senior fellow of the Brookings Institution and perhaps America's most respected Sinologist. He notes three factors that make the current moment so delicate:

The Chinese leadership is rarely so clearly divided. The party rulers prize consensus and believe that it's a key factor in maintaining stability. That essential consensus is now in question.

The Chinese middle class, whose rise has buttressed political stability, appears disgruntled. Social media in China are alive with complaints about product safety, food safety, air quality and widespread corruption. A crucial social force is increasingly disaffected, and the spread of new social media amplifies this discontent.

The Chinese elite worry about a huge migrant labor force, estimated at 300 million, who mostly live on the margins of the rich coastal cities. They represent a potential source of instability because they are denied full urban status, with its attendant benefits.

These problems would be worrying even if the Chinese economy were still in its mega-boom phase. But economic growth is cooling. China's imports and exports have both slowed over the past year, and the country's central bank just lowered its reserve requirements, for the third time in six months, to encourage banks to lend more money.

What does this wobbly Chinese transition mean for America? Lieberthal is surely right that there's little the U.S. can do to shape events, in any event. China is too big and complicated a country for that.

For 40 years, the U.S. has seen a rising and stable China as being in America's interest, and this core interest hasn't changed. But if the Chinese leadership can't contain the current turmoil, new political forces may emerge calling for a more open and democratic China. Americans are bound to be sympathetic, as they were to the Tiananmen protesters of 1989. But the process of change could be wildly unstable: An evolving China is better for everybody than an exploding one.


Read more: David Ignatius: China's wobbly transition | NewsOK.com
 
We thanks the US for her concerns. We been through many tough times in our recent history and we'll manage this little turmoil without much difficulties. In fact what we experienced these days is nothing out of the norm for any country this size. Our leaders are as capable of dealing with these political infighting as anyone else and most likely will gain invaluable experiences.

The common people of China know the world economies are not performing well so any weakness in China is understandable by all. We'll work together and pull the country through what might be an economic downturn.
 
What is NewsOK.com?

Anyway, political infighting is something that will always exist. The only difference is that it is more open now compared to before.

For 40 years, the U.S. has seen a rising and stable China as being in America's interest, and this core interest hasn't changed.

Since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, it was not necessarily in America's interest to see a rising China, but rather just a stable China.

Of course, we are rising anyway.
 
What is NewsOK.com?

It's an Oklahoma newspaper, which reprinted the Ignatius article from the original in today's Washington Post. Ignatius is a foreign policy columnist who works for the Washington Post. For some reason, I could not get a link directly to the Washington Post.
 
China is in the improtant stage Now, the range of GDP of 3000 dollars to 10000 dollars of GDP per capita is a difficult period, many conflict will emerge, Just like what we confront now. I also concern on these, In fact, I don't worry about fierce conflict, What I care is whether it is controllable. conflict will promote the development, not only the economy, but the society progress!
the problem should be revealed, The more it will, The better for our future development and our people.
About USA's concern, through the war and revolution in some countries which USA and its allies ignite, It consolidate my mind that, The western never sincerely help your, their slogan is splendid, but what you should care is their real intention.
Maybe you have democracy and freedom, but do you feel you live better? The democracy and freedom is just the byproduct of their action not their main purpose, I didn't doubt that, If china have revolution, we will have more freedom of speech, like Iraq, But we will be in mess, we will spend more time to stabilize our country!!
I don't like CCP, but I support them, I never trust USA, they just want to maintain their hegemony on the world, which can let them eradicate enemy any time!!!
 
I bet you are madly searching the newspaper for negative news about China 24/7.

Nah.... It only takes about 30 seconds to find a dozen negative news stories about China. I just pick out a few here and there for your entertainment.
 
Such rumors abound, all impossible to verify.

The author summarises a short fiction in 7 words. What a waste of bandwidth!
 
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