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The enormous military parade marking China's 60th anniversary isn't about impressing the world -- it's about impressing the Chinese themselves.

Melinda Liu , Newsweek Web Exclusive,  09/30/09

China watchers worldwide have been studying the preparations for China's 60th-anniversary celebration this week, and they have come to something like a consensus analysis: the massive military parade Thursday is meant to showcase a robust military deterrence while simultaneously calming fears about China's rise. And that's the take Chinese authorities themselves are pushing. "A country's military ability is not a threat to anyone, what's important is its military policy," says Gen. Gao Jianguo, executive deputy director of the office of the Orwellian-sounding National Day Military Parade Joint Command. Fifty-six military formations, with 8,000 participants, are slated to be followed by a kinder, gentler civilians' parade of another 180,000 people traveling on floats and by foot.

But the primary audience for this spectacle is not the international press. The real reason for all the pomp and circumstance is to speak directly to the Chinese. And it doesn't require a semiologist to interpret. Beijing's leadership is trying to say something surprisingly simple: "You are safe, because China is strong." The parade's goose-stepping soldiers and unprecedented display of military hardware will undoubtedly look like muscle-flexing triumphalism to many Western observers. Yet the regime's underlying mood is not aggression; it's insecurity.

China's leaders are not determined by direct elections, or even by any institutionalized succession mechanism. As a result, they're constantly trying to shore up their legitimacy at home. That also means they're more likely to worry (at least for now) about winning the confidence of their own citizens -- and, more specifically, avoiding accusations from increasingly nationalistic Chinese that they're too weak -- than to launch military adventures on foreign soil. There is some truth to the statements by General Gao, who insisted that the display of military might is "not about intimidating China's neighbors."

One of Beijing's biggest and growing concerns is how to adequately protect the interests and assets of Chinese abroad. Beijing's mushrooming role as a global economic player means that more and more Chinese citizens are finding themselves held hostage, caught in the crossfire of conflict zones, or targeted by anti-Chinese unrest in countries where Beijing's mercantilist policies have bred local resentment. For example, last year more than 3,400 Chinese tourists were trapped in Thailand during November's political unrest there; the government had to charter flights to evacuate them. And Chinese cargo vessels have been attacked by Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden -- one reason why Beijing took the unusual step of sending a convoy of warships to help conduct antipiracy patrols near Somalia.

Ever since the 1999 NATO bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, in which three Chinese citizens died, the politically charged question posed by hot-headed mainland youth is whether their government can protect Chinese abroad from harm. (The incident triggered destructive anti-Western protests in mainland cities.) "With millions of Chinese overseas, who will provide security for them?" says global-affairs analyst Yan Xuetong at Tsinghua University, asked why China has increased its military budgets in recent years. "When there was a tsunami in Indonesia, we had no way to rescue our people there. We had to ask for help from Australia [to evacuate Chinese citizens]."

These concerns were echoed in recent statements by Vice Foreign Minister Song Tao. He revealed that the annual number of overseas trips by Chinese last year reached more than 45 million -- compared to just 280,000 in the three decades between 1949 and 1979. "We are facing a more and more complicated overseas security situation … Deteriorating regional conflicts and turbulence in some countries have directly affected the safety of our citizens and companies abroad," he was quoted as saying by the party mouthpiece People's Daily on Tuesday. "In many non-traditional security accidents, such as terrorist activist, kidnapping and pirate attacks, Chinese citizens are now not only innocent victims but direct targets."

Chinese engineers have been kidnapped in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Yemen. And, in late May, anti-Chinese riots involving tens of thousands of people in Papua New Guinea left four Chinese dead and many Chinese-owned stores looted. The violence was triggered by a brawl between Chinese and Papua New Guinean workers at a nickel refinery being built by China's state-run Metallurgical Construction Corp. Such incidents are likely to intensify as Beijing's relentless hunt for energy and other natural resources deepens its economic involvement in developing countries -- especially some African nations where Beijing is developing a rep as a new colonial power.

The question isn't confined to ethnic Chinese in foreign countries, either. Over the past year and a half, ugly race riots have erupted in China's two most restive ethnic-minority areas, Xinjiang and Tibet. Some of the most recent antigovernment protests have been by angry Chinese youth criticizing Beijing for being too "soft" on the Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang and for failing to protect Han Chinese victims of racial violence. Recent problems in Xinjiang have proved so vexing that the government's security campaign for National Day exceeds even measures put in place for the 2008 Olympics. In the past month, Beijing police have arrested more than 6,500 criminal suspects in a stringent crackdown before Oct. 1, a rate that eclipses even the 4,144 perps arrested nationwide during three weeks' worth of security preparations for the August 2008 Beijing Games.

All this explains why Beijing's big show will feature not only the standard phalanxes of soldiers dressed in the standard People's Liberation Army green but also armored vehicles painted in startling shades of deep-water blue (signifying Marines, Navy, and Air Force components). Among the 52 types of indigenous weapons systems slated to go on show are more than 150 aircraft flying in low formation above Changan Boulevard, apparently including AWAC aircraft (with sophisticated radar) and planes capable of midair refueling. (To preempt aerial accidents during the parade, authorities barred citizens form flying kites and model airplanes, and they grounded the city's homing pigeons.)

The parade will also feature Chinese armored personnel carriers and riot trucks painted black or white -- colors identified with SWAT units and the People's Armed Police, a paramilitary force used to quell domestic unrest. For the past few days, Beijing's had a sneak preview of rifle-toting SWAT teams -- wearing flak jackets and sunglasses -- who have parked themselves at key intersections along the main drag leading to Tiananmen Square. After all, the real audience here is the Chinese themselves.

轉貼自:

http://www.newsweek.com/id/216485



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China: 60th Year Stirs Pride and Unease

AP, CHARLES HUTZLER, 10/01/09

(BEIJING) -- China celebrated its rise to a world power over 60 years of Communist rule Thursday, staging its biggest-ever parade of military hardware with over 100,000 marching masses in a display that stirred patriotism -- and some unease.

Police blocked off a wide area around central Beijing's Tiananmen Square for the 60th anniversary of the People's Republic. People were told to stay away and watch the events on television, though that did not dampen a festive air as residents gathered in homes and alleys. (See pictures of the making of modern China.)

President Hu Jintao, dressed in a gray Mao tunic instead of the business suit he usually wears, reviewed the thousands of troops and hundreds of tanks and other weaponry, shouting "Hello, comrades" while riding in an open-top, domestically made Red Flag limousine.

During the two-hour-plus festivities, more than 100 helicopters, communication airships and Chinese-made fighter jets flew over the city in formation.

After the armaments, 60 floats celebrating last year's Beijing Olympics, China's manned space program and other symbols of progress rolled by as tens of thousands of students flipped colored cards in unison to make pictures of lucky symbols and spell out political slogans.

The events were meant to underscore what Hu called the "great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation."

We "have triumphed over all sorts of difficulties and setbacks and risks to gain the great achievements evident to the world," Hu later said standing atop Tiananmen gate in a speech that referred to his Communist Party predecessors and China's success. "Today, a socialist China geared toward modernization, the world and the future towers majestically in the East."

The feel-good, if heavily scripted moment tapped into Chinese pride surrounding the country's turnaround from the war-battered, impoverished state the communists took over on Oct. 1, 1949 to the dynamic, third-largest world economy of today.

"This shows the world that we are now strong, not only in living standards but that our military power has also improved," said Peng Jinzhi, a 79-year-old retired hairdresser who was listening to the parade on the radio in an alley north of Tiananmen.

The buoyant mood glossed over the country's gut-wrenching twists -- the ruinous campaigns of revolutionary leader Mao Zedong that left tens of millions dead -- as well as its current challenges: a widening gap between rich and poor, rampant corruption, severe pollution and ethnic uprisings in the western areas of Tibet and Xinjiang.

Security in Beijing has been intensifying for weeks over worries that protests, which are common in China, or an overexuberant crowd might mar the ceremonies. Parts of central Beijing were sealed off and businesses were told to shut down beginning Tuesday. Flights in and out of Beijing's international airport were suspended Thursday morning. An intensive cloud-seeding operation helped clear away the smog that had shrouded Beijing for two days.

"How many hundreds of millions are being spent on the National Day troop review? Can you tell the taxpayers?" prolific blogger Li Huizhi, a small businessman in southern Guangzhou city, wrote on his popular blog Sunday. "Aren't the possibly tens of billions in money spent perhaps a bit of a disservice to the people? Because in today's China, there are countless places more in need of this money."

Explanations vary for why such elaborate festivities are being staged. Sixty is an auspicious number that plays well with Chinese who say it traditionally represents the full life of a person. The country's leadership has avoided mention of anything to do with superstition, though.

The government has customarily held military parades on 10th anniversaries. With China riding high in the world and feeling good about itself after the Beijing Olympics, the 60th was the Hu leadership's chance to score popularity points.

Early this year, before China's economy rebounded from the global downturn, authorities promised only a modest celebration in keeping with the gloomy times.

The parade is now billed by state media as China's largest-ever display of weaponry, reminiscent of the Soviet Union, and came with the mass synchronized performances usually associated with North Korea. Alongside the 80,000 card-flippers, another 100,000 civilians accompanied the floats, many of them with kitschy displays of computers and signs of industry. Floats carried huge portraits of the communist pantheon: Mao, reform architect Deng Xiaoping and even Hu -- an unexpected appearance for a normally reserved leadership.

Some 5,000 goose-stepping troops who rehearsed for as long as a year accompanied the armaments -- new unmanned aerial drones, amphibious fighting vehicles and new DH-10 land-based anti-ship cruise missiles.

"I wonder what Chinese leaders are thinking? For more than 15 years they have been denouncing those who call China's rise a threat. Now they put on this display of military hardware, with goose-stepping soldiers to match. Aren't they confirming the China Threat?" said Minxin Pei, a professor of government at Claremont McKenna College in California.

The People's Liberation Army in its newspaper early this year said the event's meaning was clear: "This military parade is a comprehensive display of the Party's ability to rule and of the overall might of the nation."

Geremie Barme, a China scholar at Australian National University who has studied past National Day parades, said the displays are typically aimed at the domestic audience -- Communist Party officials and ordinary Chinese. "It is meant to educate, excite, unite and entertain. If a tad of 'shock and awe' is delivered around the world, all well and good," he said.

轉貼自:

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1927182,00.html



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