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FEATURES: China's Stubborn Anti-Democracy
By Ying Ma
Hoping for change isn't enough.
For more than a
decade, successive U.S. presidents have declared that political
liberalization leading ultimately to democratization in China would be
desirable and decidedly in America’s — and the world’s
— interests. The Clinton administration, after some initial tortuous
twists and turns, fashioned a policy of “constructive
engagement” with the Chinese government that called for close
bilateral economic and political cooperation along with U.S. advocacy for
democracy, open markets and human rights in China. The George W. Bush
administration, though openly suspicious of China’s opaque military
buildup and strategic intentions, has exhorted China to become a
“responsible stakeholder” of the international community while
urging it to embrace democracy. To Washington, a China that is headed down
a democratic path — even as it amasses military, political, and
economic might — would offer the best assurance for peace, prosperity
and cooperation with the United States and the world.
China, however, appears immune to and unmoved by U.S.
wishes. American democracy promotion — ranging from economic
engagement to democracy programs to lofty rhetoric — has not halted
the speed at which the Chinese authoritarian behemoth presses on with grave
human rights abuses. For now, U.S. hopes remain just hopes.
The reasons for democracy’s slow boat to China
are complicated: They range from American delusions to Chinese
authoritarian resilience to Chinese nationalism. Far less complicated is
the reality that as the United States trumpets democracy worldwide as a
strategic objective and a sign of human progress, China is unabashedly
providing a counter-example. Successful democratization in China,
therefore, will not only usher in freedom for 1.3 billion Chinese citizens, but also strike a blow
against the stubbornness of authoritarianism worldwide. It is therefore
vital for U.S. policymakers to examine China’s success in resisting
democratization, reassess the tools and assumptions of current democracy
promotion efforts, and think of new ways to remove the roadblocks to
freedom.
The “inevitability” of change
Many china observers have long been
predicting that China’s encounter
with market forces or liberal institutions and instruments from the West would spur inevitable
democratic change. These observers have been right that China would become
more pluralistic and multifaceted. But they have been delusional in
thinking that Chinese leaders would simply roll over and relinquish power
when presented with new challenges to their rule. On everything ranging
from trade to the Internet, from village elections to the rule of law,
Chinese rulers have consistently proven China optimists wrong.
Economic engagement. The
fundamental underpinning of American policy toward China today — and
U.S. democracy promotion in China — is economic engagement. Since the
U.S. Congress granted permanent normal trading relations (pntr) to China in 2000, an underlying assumption
of economic engagement with China is that the market forces unleashed by
international trade and investment will necessarily spur economic and
political change in Chinese society. Washington’s assumption is
spurred in no small part by the successful democratic transitions
undertaken by other authoritarian regimes — such as those in Taiwan,
South Korea, and Chile in the 1980s — after they had embarked on economic
liberalization. Indeed, two decades-plus of U.S.-China trade have
drastically altered the face of Chinese society, resulting in an
unprecedented expansion of economic, social, and personal freedoms for
ordinary Chinese citizens.
The links between economic liberalization and
political reform, however, have turned out to be much more complicated and
tenuous in the China case. More than six years after pntr, drastic improvements in Chinese
society have not been translated into political liberalization. The Chinese
Communist Party (ccp) shows no interest in meaningful political reforms and has
continued to rely on repression and brutality to maintain its rule. Since 2000, the U.S. Department of
State’s Annual Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices have continued to declare the
Chinese government’s human rights record to be “poor” or
“in deterioration.” Similarly, Freedom House, a nonprofit,
nonpartisan human rights organization, has repeatedly rated China
“unfree” in its Annual Survey of
Political Rights and Civil Liberties.
Certainly, the lack of political progress was not what
successive Republican and Democratic administrations promised. In lobbying
for continued trade with China, President Bill Clinton predicted in 2000, “We will be
unleashing forces no totalitarian operation rooted in last century’s
industrial society can control.” President George W. Bush reiterated
Clinton’s prediction in 2005: “I believe a whiff of freedom in the marketplace
will cause there to be more demand for democracy.” Just how China is
to proceed from “a whiff of freedom” to democracy no one knows.
Meanwhile, the ccp is
determined to show otherwise: It continues to gobble up Western technology,
know-how, and capital without relinquishing its monopoly on power.
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China’s Communist
Party continues to rely on
repression and brutality to
maintain
its rule.
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Institutions and instruments for change. Unfortunately, Washington has met the resilience of
Chinese authoritarianism with grand delusions. Just as successive
presidential administrations have subscribed to the overarching principle
that economic engagement would lead inevitably to democratization in China,
numerous policymakers, scholars, and pundits have touted various
instruments and institutions as inevitable agents of democratic change.
Such institutions and instruments, often evoking different elements of
democratic society, range from village elections to rule-of-law
collaboration to the Internet. In some ways, these instruments and
institutions act as spokes of the wheel of economic engagement. But just as
Chinese rulers have managed to compartmentalize economic modernization from
political liberalization, they have also been determined to neutralize the
democratizing powers of liberal institutions and instruments.
To Washington, all good things go together. If China
encountered some element of what exists in a democratic society, many have
argued, it would be unable to stop that element’s accompanying
democratic attributes from seeping into society as a whole. When the
Chinese government institutionalized nationwide rural village elections in 1998, numerous observers
believed they would inevitably pave the way for broader democratization
throughout the country. When the Chinese government agreed to conduct
rule-of-law cooperation with the United States on legal training,
education, and administrative and commercial law in 1997 and 1998, government and academic experts predicted that any
progress made in the less politically sensitive legal areas would
inevitably lead to liberalization in the political rule of law. When the
Internet revolution arrived in China in the late 1990s, Americans were sure that the
Chinese government would quickly succumb to the democratizing powers of the
free flow of information.
Each time, however, China showed that it was
determined to extract the economic or governing benefits of liberalizing
forces and instruments while stifling their political powers. Though
millions of villagers throughout China have now experienced elections
firsthand, such elections are deeply flawed. Many are uncompetitive; many
others provide little or no choice over the slate of candidates; fraud is
rampant; and those elected, fairly or not, often wield little
decision-making power. Furthermore, the government shows little interest in
expanding the elections to the national level. On the rule of law, though
China now eagerly participates in rule-of-law exchanges with the United
States, it has permitted legal reforms for the purpose of facilitating
economic development and making its governance more efficacious, not more
democratic. As such, Beijing has limited legal reform only to politically
safe areas, such as commercial and administrative law, and has barred legal
reform from politically sensitive areas such as political dissent, labor
unrest, and religious freedom.1 As for the Internet, though China eagerly embraced it as a
vehicle for economic modernization and technological advancement, it has
aggressively neutralized the medium’s democratizing effects. Though
the Chinese online population exploded from a paltry 620,000 in October 1997 to about 123 million in July 2006, the Chinese government uses
sophisticated technology and some 50,000 Internet police to censor Internet content; it
regularly makes high-profile arrests of cyber-dissidents and has
intimidated both Western and domestic companies to engage in
self-censorship.
Through it all, Beijing has pressed on, doing what
Washington believed was impossible: compartmentalizing economic gain from
political challenges. This does not mean that the market forces and various
liberal instruments trumpeted by the United States should be dismissed or
abandoned, but it does mean that as Beijing strengthens the resilience of
its authoritarianism, Washington should cease basking in its delusions for
inevitable democratic change.
Authoritarian resilience
To promote democratization in China effectively, the United States must better
understand the reasons for authoritarianism’s resilience. Various
factors contribute to such resilience, including spectacular economic
growth, regime institutionalization, suppression and cooptation of the
political opposition, and stringent restriction of what democracy theorists
called “coordination goods”.
First and foremost, the Chinese regime’s ability
to deliver continued economic growth has prolonged its ability to govern.
Between 1978 and 2005, the World Bank reports,
China’s gdp
growth averaged 9.4
percent annually. For the past four successive years, China’s eonomy
has grown approximately 10 percent each year.2 This growth has created jobs, raised living standards,
delivered modernization and boosted national pride. According to the United
Nations Development Program, 250 million Chinese citizens were lifted out of poverty between
1980 and 2005. Though some critics,
notably Gordon Chang, have predicted that China’s economy will
collapse before the end of this decade,3 economists such as Thomas Rawski and Barry Naughton and
institutions such as the imf argue that China’s prospects for continued economic
development appear bright.4
Ironically, impressive economic growth has bolstered
the government’s legitimacy and reduced pressures for it to
liberalize politically. As Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and George W. Downs
argue, economic growth, at least in the short term, stabilizes and
legitimizes authoritarian regimes more than it undermines them.5 For this reason,
Chinese President Hu Jintao expects — and fervently hopes —
that China’s gdp in 2020
will quadruple that in 2000.<6
Aside from achieving spectacular gdp growth, the regime has also
increasingly institutionalized its bureaucracy. Instead of weakening,
floundering or over-centralizing, observes Andrew Nathan, the ccp has smoothed out succession
politics, promoted meritocracy over factionalism for the advancement of
political elites, modernized a disparate and large bureaucracy, and
established the means of political participation at the local and work-unit
levels to strengthen legitimacy.7 According to Nathan, this means that leadership
successions, such as the recent ones in 2002 and 2003, now occur in an orderly fashion and are no longer characterized
by the violent factional struggles of the Maoist era. Senior government
leaders arrive at top posts increasingly because of their educational
background and technocratic competence rather than pure loyalty to specific
ccp leaders.
The party has decreased its interference in the work of government organs
and bureaucracies, allowing them more leeway to oversee their functional
responsibilities. All the while, the central government has also instituted
mechanisms for — or created the appearances of — being
receptive to citizen opinions at the very micro levels of society. The
regime, in contrast to previous eras, has shown little internal
disagreement over its overarching approach to governance. Institutionalized
and unified, the regime is determined to tackle China’s major
economic and social challenges, suppress any viable political opposition,
and stay in power.
Of course, regime institutionalization alone cannot
quell political discontent, dissent, or opposition, but this is where the
effective suppression and cooptation of rival political groups come in.
Beijing has brutally suppressed the spiritual group Falun Gong, a Buddhist
sect that surprised and alarmed the regime by massing outside of its walled
leadership compound in Beijing in a 10,000-strong silent protest on April 25,
1999. Similarly, the ccp has effectively cracked down on
the China Democracy Party, which democracy activists in 1998 attempted to organize as the
first national opposition party under communist rule.
Simultaneously, the ccp has keenly and successfully co-opted potential political
competitors. According to Minxin Pei, the party has built coalitions with 1) intellectuals, who were at
the forefront of criticizing the regime in the 1980s and in leading the Tiananmen Democracy Movement of 1989; 2) private entrepreneurs, who comprise
the emerging middle class that many believed would demand more rights as
they acquired fuller stomachs; and 3) technocratic reformers, who focus on the changes necessary
to institutionalize and modernize China’s governance.8 By doling out
everything from party membership to senior government positions to
financial perks, the party has rendered moot the political threat from
these three potent and potential opposition groups.9
The ccp’s suppression strategy is
capped off with the restriction of what democracy scholars refer to as
“coordination goods.” These goods include political rights,
such as free speech and the right to organize and protest; general human
rights, such as freedom from arbitrary arrest; and press freedom. Bueno de
Mesquita and Downs contend that the availability of coordination goods
affects democratization because they drastically influence the ability of
political opponents to coordinate and mobilize but have little impact on
the continued economic growth that is crucial for sustaining an
authoritarian regime’s legitimacy.10 The Chinese government suppresses these goods by censoring
the press and the Internet, cracking down on coalition-building and
organization among dissident groups, diffusing and discouraging protests
through a combination of cash payoffs and outright intimidation, and
trampling on the human rights of its citizens. By suppressing these
coordination goods, Beijing has in effect elevated and prolonged its
survival prospects.
In short, the Chinese regime has not sat haplessly by
when confronted with challenges to its rule but has instead aggressively
fought to maintain power. Its tactics may have differed with each political
challenge, but the result — continuation of ccp rule — has remained the
same.
The Chinese people respond
Fortunately, american
delusions and Chinese authoritarianism
have not stopped the Chinese people from fighting against government
repression and injustice. Economic modernization may not have led to
political liberalization, but it has led to a much more pluralistic
society, offering many more opportunities and outlets for dissent.
Unfortunately, just as Beijing has neutralized the democratizing powers of
market forces or liberal instruments and institutions, it has also
aggressively stifled the democratizing effect of increased social
pluralism.
Today, massive unemployment and unrest plague Chinese
society. Two and a half decades of economic liberalization have resulted in
the state’s withdrawal from the economy and social welfare network.
As a result, the official registered unemployment rate in urban areas
hovers at 4.2
percent. In rural areas, the unemployment rate could be as high as 20 percent. At any given moment,
there are over 120
million rural migrant workers roaming the streets of Chinese cities looking
for jobs. Riots take place in China every day. The Ministry of Public
Security reported 10,000 protests throughout the country in 1994; 58,000 protests in 2003; 74,000
in 2004; and 87,000 in 2005. Against the backdrop of unrest
and unemployment, ordinary citizens — in particular peasants —
are clamoring for the central government to address their grievances on the
local level on everything from corruption to poor health care. In 2004, they filed 10 million petitions for
intervention from Beijing; in 2005, they filed 30 million.
The disgruntled are aided by support networks spawned
by two decades-plus of increasing social pluralism. Protestors and
activists now rely on booming information resources, such as the Internet
and mobile phones. Petitioners and disgruntled citizens are aided by a new
thriving civil society, which once did not exist. Whereas in 1988 there were only 4,500 registered ngos in China, there were 288,936 registered in 2004 and 317,000 in 2006.11 Some estimate that there could be as many as 3 million unregistered ngos in China today.12 Meanwhile,
Jennifer Chou of Radio Free Asia reports that China’s
“vanguard” is finally coming to the aid of its
“proletariat.”13 Intellectuals, lawyers, and activists from the big
cities have begun to help peasants challenge rigged village elections and
uncompensated land confiscation. They have also begun to assist factory
workers seeking health care and pensions, as well as religious believers
fighting against persecution. Journalists, members of China’s fourth
estate, are increasingly pushing against the party line by reporting the
pain, agony, and heroics of dissenting citizens, activists, and
intellectuals alike.
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Beijing has
brutally
suppressed the Falun Gong
and co-opted
potential
political
competitors. |
Top-down control. In many
ways, bottom-up pressures for change in China are intense, spontaneous, and
multifaceted. Every day, Chinese leaders worry about the challenge to
regime stability, but they have responded by continuing to exert brutal and
sophisticated top-down control. Their strategy? To allow diversification of
activism and expression while suppressing organization, mobilization, and
coordination among citizens.
In almost every sector prone to increased pluralism
and dissent, Beijing has refused to tolerate any viable political challenge
to its rule. It has allowed the vibrant ngo sector to take on social work that the government cannot
tackle by itself, permitting them to operate in politically safe areas such
as environmental protection, health education (hiv/aids), and services for the disabled, while barring them from
sensitive subjects such as human rights, labor, and religious freedom. The
Chinese leadership sees rural and worker protests as serious problems, but
as they tend to be spontaneous, leaderless, and unorganized, Beijing
defuses them with a combination of intimidation and cash payoffs. Where the
uprisings are organized and aided by outside activists or urban
intellectuals, the ccp cracks down on them severely before they spread. The
vanguard that dares to fight for the proletariat is often severely punished
through methods that range from beatings by hired thugs to house arrests to
job loss.
In addition, Beijing has become increasingly leery of
the ngo community,
believing that the recent “color revolutions” in Georgia,
Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan were fomented by ngos under Western tutelage. In response, Beijing delayed
passage of a new law that would liberalize some of the restraints on
Chinese ngos,
cracked down on local human rights groups supported by U.S. funding,
suspended plans to permit foreign newspapers to print in China, outlined a
“counterrevolution” against democracy that calls for further
restrictions on the Internet and the media, and began closer monitoring of
the activities of ngos with foreign ties. From one area to another, Beijing is
deliberately choking the crucial catalysts for democratic change.
To the Chinese leadership, economic development
continues to be the first and foremost priority. To alleviate the political
and social challenges from economic liberalization, Chinese President Hu
Jintao has exhorted his cadres to build a “harmonious society,”
one which would alleviate regional economic disparities, combat corruption,
placate protestors, and resist free elections. The government might be willing to
tolerate incremental reforms and an increasingly pluralistic society, but
such tolerance will be complemented by iron-fisted control of mobilization,
organization, and coordination among disparate discontented societal
segments. The increasing pluralism that appears as hopeful signs for
political liberalization might ironically — and at least in the short
term — relieve pressures for democratic change.14
Anti-Americanism and nationalism
Though the chinese people may be pressing for their rights and better
lives in their own ways, they have simultaneously exhibited unmistakable
signs of anti-Americanism and nationalism that make them less receptive to
the virtues of democratization.
In an era when the Chinese communist ideology has
become defunct through the pursuit of market capitalism, China has
aggressively maligned Western-style democracy as chaos-inducing and
unsuitable for the country’s current economic conditions. Chinese
citizens, argues Beijing, have the duty to pursue Chinese greatness that
would result in a strong China, a powerful China, deserving of influence
and glory. Economic modernization is key, with social stability as a
mandatory accessory. Through its media, textbooks, and propaganda
machinery, Beijing emphasizes that democratization, political
liberalization, a free press, and anti-government protests will only bring
about the collapse of the current regime and hence are dangerous and
destabilizing for Chinese society. When the United States criticizes
China’s human rights abuses or advocates democratization, it is
therefore acting as an overbearing and domineering hegemon and is only
seeking to undermine China’s rise.
Ideological indoctrination has its consequences.
Numerous Chinese citizens, particularly those in the emerging middle class,
agree with their government that China is not ready for democratization.
They see post-Soviet Russia’s social instability, weakened economic
growth, declining national power and overall chaos as most unappealing for
China. In addition, they are deeply skeptical of U.S. motives. According to
an opinion poll conducted by the Chinese newspaper Global Times (Huan Qiu Shi Bao) in 2006, some 59 percent of the Chinese people who
live in urban metropolises believe that the United States is seeking to
contain China, with 56.3 percent seeing the United States as China’s competitor.15 In addition,
Chinese citizens recoil at U.S. criticisms of their government’s
human rights abuses. A similar Global Times survey in 2005 reports that almost 79 percent of the respondents have negative views toward U.S.
criticism of China’s human rights abuses: 49.3 percent believe that the United
States is attempting to destroy stability in China; 10.4 percent believe that the United
States is trying to make China look bad, and 19.1 percent believe that America simply does not understand
China’s internal situation.16
In response to the Chinese government distortions, the
United States has done little to understand or assuage Chinese
citizens’ concerns. Most American leaders merely ignore Chinese
concerns about U.S. intentions or about democratization’s side
effects, opting instead to reiterate the virtues of democracy in abstract
terms. As President Bush emphasizes that “every human heart desires
to be free,” many Chinese citizens, sadly, seem to answer,
“Don’t be so sure.”
What next?
Despite the wishes of the United States or the efforts of Chinese
citizens, the Chinese government has so far quashed and neutralized
pressure for fundamental political change. Beijing controls and stunts
precisely those instruments that contribute to the success of a broad-based
domestic opposition: It cracks down on political opponents, co-opts
potential ones, and indoctrinates the masses. It is eagerly attempting to
maximize economic modernization while minimizing its liberalizing effects.
As the West awaits the next set of pressures or instruments that might
force Beijing to reform internally or relinquish its authoritarian rule,
the Chinese regime stands determined to remain in power.
The resilience of Chinese authoritarianism does not
eliminate all possibility that U.S. economic engagement could lead to
Chinese political liberalization and democratization in the long run.
Resilience, however, makes that outcome much less certain or
straightforward and renders America’s disposition to simply wait for
democracy to emerge in China increasingly unwise and untenable. The United
States must do more to spur democratization in China.
At the moment, the U.S. government broadly promotes
democracy in China by supporting democratic voices and institutions from
within while criticizing and shaming the Chinese regime from the outside.
On the former, the U.S. government provides support for a host of
activities and projects that include funding for rule-of-law collaboration
and village elections, direct financial aid for civil society organizations
and Chinese political dissidents, broadcasting of Voice of America and
Radio Free Asia Chinese-language programs, and cultural and educational
exchanges. To pressure the Chinese government from the outside, the U.S.
government frequently criticizes China’s human rights record, presses
for the release of political and religious dissidents, and publicly and
privately calls for the Chinese government to undertake fundamental
political reforms.
While current U.S. efforts to promote democracy in
China are necessary and important, they do not always counter the sources
of Chinese authoritarian resilience discussed here. Certainly, American
actions will not and cannot eliminate all of these sources. For instance,
the United States should not wade into the quandary of slowing Chinese
economic growth and cannot stop the Chinese government from
institutionalizing itself or co-opting its rival political groups.
Nevertheless, Washington should and can do more to combat other sources of
authoritarian resilience by strengthening China’s political
opposition and countering the regime’s restriction of coordination
goods that range from press freedoms to the ability to organize. In
addition, the United States should begin a serious effort to confront the
Chinese government’s aggressive ideological indoctrination of its
citizens against democratization.
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Beijing maligns Western-style democracy as chaos-inducing and unsuitable for China’s
economic
conditions. |
A number of concrete steps might help American
democracy promotion in China. First, the United States should boost funding
and support for the free flow of information through the Chinese Internet.
Already, the Voice of America and Radio Free Asia have committed a total of
$3 million for
technology to counter Internet jamming of their websites by the Chinese
government. Yet more can be done. Each year since 2002, either one or both houses of
Congress have sponsored a resolution titled the “Global Internet
Freedom Act,” the latest version of which calls for a budget of $50 million a year to combat
Internet jamming by repressive governments. Examples of anti-jamming
technologies would range from those that allow Chinese Internet users to
access blocked political websites through proxy servers to those that help
mask the identity of Chinese users against the government’s online
surveillance. As the resolution suggests, the U.S. government should
increase funding to develop and deploy these technologies to counter
China’s Internet censorship, surveillance, and jamming.
Second, the United States should more aggressively
support another coordination good in China: the political right to
organize. After all, technology and information alone cannot deliver
democracy and liberalization; the Chinese people must demand them.
Currently, their demands are dispersed and scattered by the
government’s targeted efforts to prevent organization and
mobilization. In response, the U.S. should strive to support and link
together Chinese groups and individuals, from those who fight for the
ideals of democracy to those who fight against specific injustices.
Some democracy promotion programs funded by the
American government already provide Chinese activists and civil society
organizations with valuable cross-sectional linkage and support. For
instance, the National Endowment for Democracy (ned), which funds a wide range of
democracy promotion efforts, currently supports programs that bring
together lawyers, advocates, and scholars to strategize about protecting
religious freedom according to China’s existing legal framework.
Similarly, the Solidarity Center funds programs that train grassroots labor
rights organizations to conduct advocacy outreach to the local media and
with migrant workers. Intensifying U.S. support for such programs that
strengthen grassroots agents and alliances will help counter the Chinese
government’s chokepoints on democratization. As a recent 67-country study by Freedom
House demonstrates, peaceful, broad-based civic coalitions are a key
instrument for forcing through decisive and enduring political change in
authoritarian regimes.17
Third, the United States should continue to stand with
Chinese freedom fighters who risk their lives and livelihoods for their
country and democratic ideals. Such support is most effective when it
emanates directly and clearly from the executive branch — from the
president down to consular officers. The U.S. government should continue to
meet with political dissidents, press for the release of those detained,
and express solidarity with their goals but should do so more publicly and
persistently. As three Chinese Christian intellectuals who met with
President Bush on May 11, 2006 suggested, the American embassy in China could meet more
frequently and openly with Christians, opposition writers, human rights
lawyers, and reporters to demonstrate U.S. support for their causes.18
Similarly, the administration could do more to stand
with Chinese dissidents who are exiled here in the United States. Since the
Tiananmen Massacre of 1989, China has denied and distorted the truth surrounding the
tragedy, brainwashing the younger Chinese generation while coercing others
against speaking history’s truths. Rather than ignoring the annual
commemoration of the Tiananmen massacre, as it does now, the Bush
administration and its successors should send official representatives to
candlelight vigils organized by Tiananmen-era activists and more loudly
remind the Chinese government that 17 years of sizzling economic growth since the massacre
do not erase the horror on which such growth rests.
Fourth, the United States should engage in much more
proactive public diplomacy efforts to promote the virtues of democracy.
American political leaders often act as if developments within China should
be all about democracy all the time. The U.S. has made little effort
to convince the Chinese people that freedom and prosperity are not mutually
exclusive. Unfortunately, the democratic experience has not always provided
the necessary reassurance. According to recent analysis by Kevin Hassett of
the American Enterprise Institute, from 1991 to 2005, average gdp growth in countries that are economically free but politically
repressed has outpaced growth in countries that are both economically and
politically free by more than 3.6 percent.
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The U.S.
should continue to stand
with Chinese
freedom fighters who risk their lives for
their country. |
As if responding to democracy’s unpleasant
realities, Chinese citizens harbor serious doubts regarding the
compatibility of economic freedom and electoral democracy. The United
States, however, appears uninterested in addressing their concerns.
American policy reports and pronouncements tend to focus on China’s
grave human rights abuses, whereas educational materials focus on the
nature and structure of U.S. democracy. For example, of the numerous
pronouncements and public diplomacy documents that have emerged from the
office of Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy Karen Hughes, none
has defended democracy’s virtues in complementing and sustaining
economic growth. Most of these documents have instead emphasized the
compatibility of combating terrorism and bolstering human rights. Never
mind that convincing economically destitute Muslims of Middle Eastern
countries to embrace democracy over terrorism is a fundamentally different
task from that of convincing a comfortable, confident, emerging Chinese
middle class that embracing political freedom does not mean sacrificing
economic gains or opportunities.
It is insufficient to utter the word
“democracy” endlessly without acknowledging valid reasons for
skepticism. The American government should issue fact sheets, brochures,
and public statements about the freedoms that democratic countries enjoy
and why the risks involved in transitions from authoritarianism to
democracy are worth taking. It should meet head on, rather than ignore or
dismiss, a central debate in the war of ideas against authoritarianism.
Finally, Washington must be realistic about the
limitations of its own influence. The United States — and other
democratic countries — can and should do more to facilitate and
support Chinese citizens’ efforts to fight for freedom. Americans
should also recognize economic progress in China and its compartmentalization from
political liberalization without our previous grand delusions. We should
continue to criticize the Chinese regime’s crackdowns on political
dissidents, activists and nongovernmental groups. We should press on for a
China that is not just rich and strong, but also free and democratic. But
we must expect the ccp to push back aggressively in every area that the U.S. and
Chinese activists tackle. At times China will crack down even more harshly
on its citizens because the United States has urged them to fight for
freedom. Ultimately, Americans must recognize that democracy in China will
not emerge simply because we advocate or support it, but because Chinese
citizens are courageous enough to fight for it.
Slogging toward freedom
International peace and security in the twenty-first century will depend in no
small part on the future of China and its relations with the world.
Peaceful democratization in China will not serve as a guarantee for peace,
but it will offer much, much better prospects. Given the tremendous stakes
involved, the United States should reconsider the many misplaced
assumptions underpinning its China policy. It should recognize the tenacity
and resilience of Chinese authoritarianism and relinquish the hope that
such authoritarianism will simply and inevitably wilt in the face of U.S.
wishes. It should better understand how such authoritarianism adapts to,
co-opts, and compartmentalizes market forces and their various accompanying
liberal attributes and find better solutions for countering it.
Perhaps one day, freedom for 1.3 billion Chinese citizens will
arrive, but until then promoting liberation from the chains of Chinese
communist authoritarianism will remain a slog. The United States should
start slogging much more seriously today.
1 Matthew
Stephenson, “A Trojan Horse in China?” in Thomas Carothers,
ed., Promoting the Rule of Law Abroad: In
Search of Knowledge (Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, 2006), 203.
2“China’s
Economy on Fire,”Marketplace (November 1, 2006).
3 Gordon Chang,
The Coming Collapse of China (Random House, 2001).
.
4
“China’s Economy on Fire,” Marketplace, November 1, 2006;
Loren Brandt, Thomas G. Rawski, and Gang Lin, eds., “China’s
Economy: Retrospect and Prospect,” Asia
Program Special Report 129 (July 2005); Xu Dashan, “China’s Economy to Grow 8% Annually from 2006 to 2010,” China Daily (March 21, 2005).
5 Bruce Bueno
de Mesquita and George W. Downs, “Development and Democracy,” Foreign Affairs 84:5 (September/October 2005).
6 President Hu
Jintao, Address at the Fortune Global Forum (May 16, 2005).
7 Andrew J.
Nathan, “Authoritarian Resilience,” Journal of Democracy 14:1 (January 2003).
8 Minxin Pei,
Remarks at Panel Discussion on “Economic Development Without
Political Liberalization,” American Enterprise Institute (December 14, 2005).
9 Pei, Remarks.
10 Bueno de
Mesquita and Downs, “Development and Democracy.”
.
11
Congressional-Executive Commission on China, Annual
Report 2006 (U.S. Government Printing Office, 2006), 120
12 “NGOs to Gain Greater
Influence,” Xinhua News Agency (March 10,
2005).
13 Jennifer
Chou, Remarks at Panel Discussion on “Looking for the Next Tiananmen
Generation,” American Enterprise Institute (March 24, 2006).
14 See, e.g.,
Joseph Fewsmith, "Feedback Without Pushback? Innovations in Local
Governance", Statement to Congressional-Executive Commission on China
Roundtable on "Political Change in China? Public Participation and
Local Governance Reforms" (Washington, May 15, 2006).
15 Cheng Gang,
“Majority of Chinese Optimistic About Sino-American Relations,”
Global Times (March
17, 2006). The
study surveyed Chinese citizens in the cities of Beijing, Shanghai,
Guangzhou, Wuhan, and Chongqing.
16
“Exclusive Survey: How Chinese View Sino-American Relations,” Global Times (March 2, 2005). .
17Adrian
Karatnycky and Peter Ackerman, How Freedom Is
Won: From Civic Resistance to Durable Democracy
(Freedom House, 2005), 6–9.
18 Jim
Hoagland, “A Chinese Dissident’s Faith,” Washington Post (May 28, 2006).
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