Source: Carnegie
"Reprinted from The Asian
Wall Street Journal © 2002 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All rights
reserved."
February 22, 2002
During his visit to Beijing, U.S. President George W. Bush may catch a glimpse
of some of the best that China's burgeoning information culture has to offer
-- from buzzing Internet cafes to streets lined with e-commerce billboards.
But he is unlikely to see any of the sometimes fiery anti-Americanism that characterizes
much of the traffic on China's information highway. In fact, both nationalism
and anti-Americanism have been hot themes on Chinese Internet sites over the
past year -- phenomena at times encouraged, at times reined in by the leadership.
New information and communications technologies such as the Internet present
officials in China with both opportunities and challenges. The Beijing leadership
is aware that it must deftly manage nationalist sentiment in order to maintain
legitimacy. If properly massaged, such sentiment can significantly bolster the
popularity of the Communist Party, providing crucial public support for an undemocratically
elected government. Yet the flip side is also true: Popular nationalistic movements
have posed significant challenges to the Chinese leadership in the past, and
again may help limit the government's diplomatic maneuvering power.
Both extremes have been enhanced by the spread of the Internet. For proof,
witness the impassioned outpouring on Chinese Web sites following the U.S. bombing
of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade in 1999. At that time, the People's Daily
newspaper -- the central government's official mouthpiece -- established on
its Web site a new bulletin board forum specifically designed to provide an
outlet for patriotic fervor and anti-Western sentiment. Called the "Strong
Country Forum," it played a small but significant role in legitimizing
among an elite, wired section of the population the Chinese government's position
that the bombing was deliberate. To this day, many Chinese remain convinced
that the bombing was no accident.
That wired elite has now expanded significantly, with official estimates suggesting
that close to 34 million people in China are now using the Internet. Hence,
subsequent international incidents have elicited a strong, online nationalistic
response among a wider section of the population.
Moreover, the outlets available for such nationalistic venting have expanded
dramatically. Although outside observers often believe the Internet in China
is wholly controlled by the central government, the reality is that the private
sector plays a large role in determining what is and isn't acceptable, in accordance
with how it gauges the prevailing political wind.
While traditional propaganda organs such as the People's Daily still play a
role in shaping nationalist discourse, some of the most anti-American and nationalist
writing now occurs on private sector sites. For instance, following last year's
downing of the U.S. EP-3E plane near Hainan Island the popular private Web site
Sina.com was overwhelmed with nationalistic comments, such as "The Americans
are always mouthing off about human rights . . . we don't want human rights,
we want national honor!"
At the same time, however, the government is trying to ensure that amplified
nationalism and anti-Americanism don't challenge central crisis management.
Following the Belgrade bombing, for instance, the government was quick to tone
down the intensity and volume of anti-American comments allowed on official
Web sites when protests in the streets of Beijing threatened to spiral out of
control.
That may be because officials had already witnessed the convergence of virtual
nationalism with coordinated real-life action a year earlier, at a time when
only a very small fraction of the Chinese population was online. During the
May 1998 riots targeting ethnic Chinese in Indonesia, the Internet enabled the
outrage of overseas Chinese to find its way into mainland China, helping to
inform and politicize Internet users in China. The fusion of overseas Chinese
sentiment, the Internet and a receptive domestic audience culminated in a student-led
demonstration in Beijing to protest the leadership's perceived softness toward
Indonesia. The rapid transformation from online hot air to flesh-and-blood marchers
in the capital both surprised and worried Chinese leaders.
Now, whether representative of the entire population or not, a vocal online
subculture has blossomed in China, nurtured by the government's initial vision
of a coordinated, nationalistic Internet that would serve the purposes of the
central government. Ironically, this may push Chinese policymakers toward a
more militant foreign policy than they prefer and -- in future -- perhaps even
limit diplomatic options with the U.S.
During his visit to Beijing, Mr. Bush and his advisers should engage the Chinese
leadership on issues of Internet censorship and free expression. But they should
also explore what types of values and discourse the Chinese government is promoting
on the Internet. Such issues have become tangibly relevant to America, now that
-- after Sept. 11 -- it has awoken to the fact that its image in the world matters.
They are also important to China, which would like to take its place on the
world stage as a peaceful and prosperous modern nation. Ardent advocates of
technological advances tend to assume that merely spreading the Internet to
China will take care of all these goals. Yet they would do well to keep in mind
that information technology can augment balkanization and isolation just as
easily as global engagement.
Ms. Kalathil is an associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace in Washington D.C. and co-author of a forthcoming book on authoritarian
regimes and the Internet.