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  • Recommended: US-Chinese summit aimed at building a 'new type of great power relationship'
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In Behind the Wall, NBC News correspondents and producers examine events and trends in China, both big and small.

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  • 16
    Feb
    2012
    12:57am, EST

    China's president-in-waiting Xi Jinping returns to Iowa

    Kevin E. Schmidt / Pool via AFP - Getty Images

    Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping talks with local people in the home of Roger and Sarah Lande in Muscatine, Iowa.

    By NBC's Jo Ling Kent

    MUSCATINE, Iowa – A young, blue-eyed Sarah Lande never thought the polite young man from China, Xi Jinping, sitting at her dining room table in 1985 would go on to become the next president of China. She simply thought of him as a gentle soul with genuine interest in her family’s Iowa roots, sharing a home-cooked meal of pork, beef and locally grown corn.

    Wednesday afternoon 27 years later – he returned to the same three-story home on Muscatine’s 2nd Street and walked through the same door, but this time as China’s next president.

    “Coming here is really like coming back to home,” Xi told a packed living room of familiar faces he met on his 1985 visit. “You can’t even imagine what a deep impression I had from my visit 27 years ago … because you were the first group of Americans that I came into contact with.”

    “Everything was very new and fresh,” he added.

    Xi’s visit is a rare glimpse at an ascending leader in China’s typically opaque and rigid Communist Party. No high-ranking official has had such direct and personal ties to the United States.


    'Old friends'
    Xi first visited Muscatine as a provincial official from Iowa’s sister state of Hebei almost three decades ago. Leading a delegation of four other local officials on an educational trip primarily focused on agriculture, Xi and his colleagues toured local farms and businesses as part of an exchange that began with Iowans going to Hebei in 1984. He met then- and current Iowa governor Terry Branstad and more than a dozen other Iowans in Muscatine he now calls his “old friends.”

    The cover of the Muscatine Journal showing the young Xi Jinping on his visit to Iowa in 1985. The headline on the story says, "Chinese visitors receive warm welcome" and there is photo of the town mayor handing Xi the keys to the city.

    Lande, who was one of the organizers of his trip, was constrained by a limited budget so she resorted to old-fashioned hospitality of home-stays and meals at home. Xi spent two nights with the Dvorchaks a few blocks away from the Landes. There, Xi slept in their son’s bedroom, decorated with Star Trek figurines and wall paper.

    “I wish I had updated the room,” Eleanor Dvorchak, 72, recalled. “But he was so congenial, anything would have been fine.”

    One thing was for certain, no one ever expected the quiet Xi to become China’s next leader.

    “Sometimes we are just in awe, that he is going to be the next leader,” Lande told NBC News in an interview ahead of the reunion.

    “Nobody knew,” Dvorchak added afterward. “At the time, I was impressed what a hard worker he was.”

    Clearly, Muscatine also left an indelible impression on Xi. Upon invitation back to Iowa by Governor Branstad, he requested to reunite with each person he met in Muscatine.

    Small-town charm
    Muscatine is the perfect, if coincidental, background to counterbalance Xi’s highly-scripted meetings in Washington. Aesthetically frozen in the 1950s, the town oozes both old-fashioned small-town charm and the harsh reality of post-industrial American economy. Many storefronts and warehouses stand empty in a place that once called itself the "pearl button capital of the world." Meanwhile, China has opened and expanded exponentially since 1985, into a roaring economy.

    Kevin E. Schmidt / The Quad City Times via AP

    Six-year-old Lucy Lande waits for the arrival of Xi Jinping at the home of her grandparents, Roger and Sarah Lande.

    But it was friendship, not jobs, that was the complete focus of today’s reunion. Fond memories about American movies and a tour of the Mississippi river took up most of the conversation.

    When Lande recalled Xi seeing puppies play in a Muscatine backyard in 1985, Xi replied, “We love puppies. We have two puppies as pets now.”

    However, Xi has not always been entirely friendly to foreigners. According to a diplomatic cable leaked by Wikileaks last year, the soon-to-be-president lashed out against countries who have criticized China's human rights and trade record.

    "There are some well-fed foreigners who have nothing better to do than point fingers at our affairs," Xi said at a lunch meeting in Mexico in February of 2009.

    Ultimately, Muscatine citizens and leaders alike had high hopes of leaving another positive memory with Xi that would, yet again, last far beyond his time in Iowa.

    “I hope we can really express the warmth and you know we’re proud of him and we look forward to really enhanced relations between China and America,” Lande told NBC News. “Let it start in the heartland.”

    “So many Iowans are pleased that a man we befriended those many years ago, has risen to such a position of prominence and respect in the great nation of China,” Gov.  Branstad said in a toast to Xi tonight at an official dinner in Des Moines.

    Others hope Vice President Xi’s two visits here will help push US-China relations in a more positive direction, as diplomatic tensions have escalated over trade and currency valuation.

    Hope for improved relations
    During the tea at her home, Lande told Xi that she hopes the US and China will “have a surge in the amount of visas that they issue, so we can have more international exchange and more trade, as we’re having here between Iowa and China.”

    Others in Muscatine are hoping to contribute to leaving a warmer legacy between the two countries.

    “If you meet people and treat them the way you would want them to treat you, then good things can come from that,” said Steinbach of the Muscatine Journal.

    “I hope that's the case for Muscatine and that Mr. Xi would take that back to China with him and remember that in any dealings he has in the years to come with the United States,” Steinbach added. “There are people here who are honest and hardworking that you'd I'm sure find in parts in China and anywhere else.”

    Xi’s stop through the Midwest also put Muscatine on the map like never before. The anticipation of Xi’s visit took the town by storm. The local paper welcomed Xi on its front page and reproduced the articles and photos that appeared in a 1985 edition, hailing his visit as a young official.

    At the local high school, a classroom of students dutifully practiced their "ni hao’s” and "xiexie's" ahead of Xi’s arrival.

    Jenny Juehring has been learning Mandarin for three years and today was selected to stand on the front porch of Lande’s to greet Xi and show off her language skills.

    “I think he's very cool, that'd he come back here, to a place that's so small and pretty insignificant, for such a small town,” Juehring told NBC News.

    Ho Xuefeng, a waiter at a Thai restaurant downtown, took the day off of work to watch Xi’s motorcade whiz by.

    “I’m originally from Shenyang,” Ho told NBC News. “To see someone like him come to this little town is rare.”

    The town’s McDonald’s posted a message on their marquee for their Chinese visitor: “Welcome back, Vice President Xi Jinping,” perhaps lending a new local meaning to “billions and billions served.”

    Inside, line cooks and high school-aged cashiers peered out the drive-through windows hoping to catch a glimpse of Xi’s motorcade whizzing by.

    Some protests
    But the trip wasn’t without minor hiccups. Free Tibet supporters lined the block leading to the home where Xi was hosted for tea and waved Tibetan flags, often chanting opposite equally animated college students from mainland China responding with “We love China!” across the street.

    Just minutes before Xi’s arrival at the Lande home, security officials rerouted the vice president’s motorcade to arrive on the other side of the house, where the Tibetan flags were far from sight.

    Agile protestors questioning the Chinese government’s human rights record slipped past police barricades, waving signs that read “Stop Prosecuting the Falun Gong” in English and Mandarin. They were quickly ushered away by Iowa State Troopers and a Chinese government representative.

    But overall, the visit was exactly how many in Muscatine hoped it would be: friendly, smooth and memorable.

    As Xi departed the Lande home in the evening rain, he peered through the window of his bullet-proof limousine, waving and waving to his “old friends” until his motorcade turned the corner.

    Clad in a red silk jacket emblazoned with Chinese characters, Lande waved after the polite young man who came over for that pork and corn dinner 27 years ago.

    “Wow, I just can’t believe it!” she said.

    30 comments

    Visits like this, personal contact like this are what the world needs more of. It gives hope to the belief that as people we can all get along and share this planet. And there is no better place to do this than in Iowa!

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    Explore related topics: washington, china, iowa, international, diplomacy, muscatine, xi-jinping
  • 16
    Feb
    2012
    6:37am, EST

    To Chinese state media, Xi's US visit a success

    Associated Press

    U.S. President Barack Obama meets with Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping at the White House on Feb. 14, 2012.

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – Days into Vice President Xi Jinping’s visit to the United States, the Chinese press assessment was startlingly similar to American coverage: long on diplomatic niceties, short on any serious policy.

    In other words, a great success for the apparent heir to the Chinese presidency.

    On last night’s CCTV’s Evening News, which an estimated 135 million Chinese watch each night, Xi was showed being dutifully feted by Washington’s political elite with all the pomp expected for America’s most important trading partner. Full military honor guards, lunch with Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and, of course, a sit-down with President Barack Obama were all highlights in the official coverage.

    Similarly, Thursday’s People’s Daily and the English-language China Daily led with Xi’s meetings in Washington and his Valentine’s Day-appropriate message that the two countries don’t need to love each other, but nevertheless still need to learn to trust each other and work better together.


    Writing about Xi’s comments at a welcome lunch hosted by Biden and Clinton, the People’s Daily earnestly noted the key to working out differences over issues like trade, foreign policy and human rights is that they be “handled based on principles of mutual respect, candid communication and mutual non-interference in each other’s domestic affairs.”

    Associated Press

    Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping reviews troops outside the Pentagon during a full honors ceremony in his honor on Tuesday.

    The Beijing News also noted that Xi had expressed to Biden that, “China hopes the U.S. will see China with an objective view and take real action to enhance mutual trust.”

    Both comments are excellent examples of the rhetoric typical of Chinese state media coverage of these high-level visits. In some ways, they represent a status quo: an olive branch that is extended in advance of and during high-level visits to reflect the ruling Communist Party’s desire to focus on areas of agreement rather than disagreement.

    That these talking points continue to show up daily in local coverage here of Xi’s visit suggest that he has managed to accomplish his primary goals: reaffirming the importance of the Sino-U.S. relationship to the Chinese without rocking the boat.

    To be sure, there are issues of disagreement more plainly articulated in the press here but currently only on the periphery of the generally positive coverage of Xi’s visit.

    For example, the reliably nationalist newspaper, Global Times, in one article emphasized the positive steps that have come from Xi’s trip. But in a separate story on the Syria question – an issue that China has taken a hard stance on – noted that, “the West’s interference has been an important external factor that affects the developing direction of Arab political crises.”

    The article concluded by charging, “Foreign interference has played an important role for the Syrian situation evolving into a civil war.”

    In yesterday’s People’s Daily, an article entitled “China-U.S. trade to be more balanced,” noted that “only cooperation, rather than pressuring each other can effectively solve the current problems we are facing.”

    How Xi will reconcile those comments with his Thursday visit to California – a state that exports $14 billion dollar worth of products to China, but imports a whopping $120 billion – remains to be seen.

    However, if you see in the Chinese press tomorrow that such issues will be handled with “mutual respect and mutual non-interference,” you’ll know that Vice-President Xi has passed the test to become President Xi.

    4 comments

    Brainwashed comments!

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    Explore related topics: china, diplomacy, state-media, sino-us-relations, xi-jinping, ed-flanagan
  • 28
    Jun
    2011
    7:06am, EDT

    Oil-hungry China welcomes alleged war criminal al-Bashir

    By Adrienne Mong

    Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    BEIJING — If there’s one thing that gets discussed a lot regarding China’s relationship with Sudan, it’s the oil interest.

    As the world’s largest energy consumer and one of the fastest-growing economies, China needs oil.  Since 1995, it has invested heavily in Sudan’s oil infrastructure via the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC).

    “We cannot exaggerate the importance of Sudan oil to the whole of China’s oil input,” said Dr. He Wenping of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

    Sudan isn't China's leading supplier in Africa; that honor more recently has gone to Angola.  But Sudan does supply roughly seven per cent of the mainland's oil needs.

    In return, Beijing has provided military support — most visibly in the form of weaponry — to Khartoum.

    The oil-for-arms relationship provoked a huge international outcry in relation to the Darfur conflict.  Western governments and human rights groups called on China to stop supplying small arms to Sudan (although Russia was just as, if not more, culpable) and to use its leverage with Sudan to end the wholesale mass killings.

    But what's more interesting than simply China's oil interests in Sudan is the way in which those interests are affecting Beijing's foreign policy.

    Liu Jin / AP

    Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir, center, arrives at Beijing International Airport on Tuesday.

    Wither non-interference?
    Despite Beijing’s adherence to the non-interference principle (one of five which have guided diplomacy under the People’s Republic of China since 1954), the Chinese leadership has actually taken small steps away from its longstanding standard.

    “The global business activities of Chinese firms are heightening domestic and international pressures on the Chinese government to protect Chinese assets and citizens abroad and to help resolve international crises,” writes Erica Downs, a fellow at the Brookings Institution. 

    Sudan is a textbook case.  (Libya is another stark example — as our bureau chief, Eric Baculinao, wrote about last week.)

    Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir embarked on a four-day visit to China on Tuesday, despite global censure.  There are, after all, two international warrants for his arrest on charges of genocide and war crimes.

    But the Chinese argue that Bashir's arrest could further destabilize the region and that keeping diplomatic channels — and its doors to the Sudanese president — open is key.  “If you couldn’t even have any dialogue with the sitting president of this country, how can you guarantee peaceful transition, especially now the south Sudan is going to get its independence,” said He.

    Beijing has good reason to want a lasting peace between north and south following the latter’s secession on July 9.  Much of the oil lies in the impoverished, underdeveloped south.

    But transporting the oil out requires the use of what little infrastructure exits in the north, including a key pipeline.  Not to mention the fact that China has invested so much in the north and in its relations with Bashir, who's expected to brief Chinese President Hu Jintao Wednesday on the latest situation. 

    Although his arrival to Beijing was inexplicably delayed by a day, Bashir told the state-run Xinhua news agency that relations between the two sides would not be weakened by the south’s imminent independence.

    Perhaps another indication of “pragmatism” at play, the Chinese government is sanguine about its apparent reversal on the non-interference principle. 

    Last week, its special representative for African Affairs, Liu Guijin told reporters that China was using “a new form of diplomatic engagement” to work with north and south Sudan.

    98 comments

    Their war criminal, our war criminal, there is no difference. Doing business with war criminals is wrong.

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    Explore related topics: oil, china, sudan, diplomacy, al-bashir, adrienne-mong, noninterference-principle
  • 14
    Jun
    2011
    7:04am, EDT

    CIA film explores China-US Cold War past

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

     

    BEIJING – It’s got all the elements of a Hollywood summer blockbuster: secret agents, dangerous operations deep in enemy territory, ruthless interrogations and detentions.

    And it’s coming to a YouTube link near you by the producers of America’s most covert operations, the Central Intelligence Agency.

    The release of “Extraordinary Fidelity,” a documentary commissioned by the CIA's Center for the Study of Intelligence was originally not meant to be viewed by the general public. Rather, it was intended to be an instructional video for an agency that by one account, now comprises a force half of whom only joined after September 11, 2001, and is perhaps slowly losing its institutional history.

    The documentary tells the story of John T. Downey and Richard G. Fecteau, two CIA agents who were shot down over northern China on their first mission in 1952. The two were attempting to extract a Chinese agent as part of a larger CIA operation to raise an indigenous Chinese guerilla force whose mission it would be to destabilize the new Communist government under Mao Zedong.


    The operation was part of a greater strategy to shift Chinese soldiers and material away from the Korean peninsula, where the United States had already been at war since 1950.

    Crash landing in China, the two were immediately picked up by soldiers of the People’s Liberation Army and eventually taken to a jail in Beijing, where they remained in solitary confinement for four years. The two were then taken before a military tribunal, where Downey, the “Chief Culprit,” and Fecteau, the “Assistant Chief Culprit,” were convicted of espionage.

    Downey would receive a life sentence while Fecteau got 20 years.

    AP

    This image from video from the CIA titled "Extraordinary Fidelity" and released to The Associated Press after request under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, shows from left, Richard Fecteau, CIA Director George Tenet, and John T. Downey with. The documentary about two agency officers, Fecteau and John T. Downey, who were captured in China on a secret mission in 1952 and held for years before their release, blends documentary footage and re-enactments to tell the story of the officers trying to recover a spy working for the CIA in the Manchuria region of northeastern China. The film, the only one of its kind in the spy agency's history, was intended only for internal release, but according to the CIA will come to the web for its public debut. (AP Photo/CIA)

    The two would remain in jail for 20 years, learning about major events like the assassination of President Kennedy and the American entrance into the Vietnam War through heavily sanitized local Chinese news broadcasts.

    Perhaps a harbinger of the high-level diplomatic trips we see today to release prisoners in places like North Korea and Iran, Fecteau was eventually released in 1971, following Henry Kissinger's secret mission to Beijing. Downey was released two years later, following a public appeal by President Nixon at a White House press briefing.

    Besides the high production value of the documentary and the compelling personal stories of Downey and Fecteau, “Extraordinary Fidelity” gives an in-house look at the early days of the CIA as it underwent a transformation from paramilitary force to the modern intelligence gathering network it is today.

    In addition, though at times simplified for editorial purposes, the depiction of the constantly evolving Sino-American relationship through the tumultuous 1950s-70s seen through the eyes of CIA agents operating during that time is truly intriguing.

    Though the CIA’s release of the film came only after it was compelled by a petition under the Freedom of Information Act, the critical success the documentary has garnered has prompted the agency to consider releasing additional documentaries. Here’s hoping that this is one public prompting that the CIA acts upon.

    15 comments

    @stormy-7663 Likewise let's stop hostility and subversion against China. Bring military bases encircling China back to the United States and repay all money borrowed from China.

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    Explore related topics: china, cia, diplomacy, cold-war, ed-flanagan
  • 24
    Feb
    2011
    12:37am, EST

    Top U.S. envoy spotted at 'Jasmine Revolution'

    By Adrienne Mong

    He’s not well known in the U.S. yet, but the American ambassador to China is fast gaining notoriety here.

    Jon Huntsman, Jr., was spotted last Sunday outside McDonald’s in the heavily-trafficked shopping district of Wangfujing in the capital.

    His appearance wouldn’t have generated much interest (Huntsman is known here for his unorthodox style as America’s top representative in China) except for the little fact that a would-be revolution was under way exactly where the ambassador was standing.

    In fact, Huntsman’s presence – which the U.S. embassy in Beijing says was part of a “family outing” and “purely coincidental” – has generated controversy on a number of fronts.

    For one, the senior diplomat is due to leave his post in April after serving just eighteen months.  Although he has not publicly confirmed it, the Republican and ex-governor of Utah is widely believed to be exploring a run for the 2012 presidential race.  (This week saw the launch of a political action committee website for his campaign-in-waiting.)  That, obviously, would pit him against his current boss, President Barack Obama.

    If that weren’t awkward enough, a video capturing Huntsman walking by the designated protest location has been circulating on the Internet, propelled by a website set up by Chinese nationalists.  The site M4.cn is a retooled version of Anti-CNN.com, which critiqued but mostly criticized Western reporting of the 2008 Tibet unrest.

    (Thanks for the tip-off Danwei and Shanghaiist!)

    Whether or not Huntsman was there by design or by accident, Adam Minter, an American writer in Shanghai, argues his appearance does raise the curious question whether it was for the benefit of the Chinese audience or the U.S. audience.

    Update:

    It looks like Huntsman's name has gone the way of "jasmine."  Searches for his name on Chinese microblogs are now being blocked.

     

    110 comments

    "a would-be revolution" You people are so biased and stupid. A mere handful of people in a country of 1.3 billion isn't even news (even in the rather loose definition of that word you seem to use). I have spent years in China and sure there are people who complain about the government but just go o …

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    Explore related topics: us, china, diplomacy, huntsman, jasmine-revolution
  • 30
    Nov
    2010
    9:35am, EST

    Wiki-what?

    By Adrienne Mong/NBC News File

    China's keeping mum on the leaked US diplomatic cables.

    By Adrienne Mong and Bo Gu

    As fascinating as the leaked U.S. diplomatic cables may be to China-watchers, the latest batch of documents should be treated cautiously.

    The cables, mostly based on South Korean sources, suggest China is fed up with its northern neighbor.  Among the more startling revelations: that China “would be comfortable with a reunified Korea controlled by Seoul and anchored to the U.S. in a ‘benign alliance’ as long as Korea was not hostile towards China” and that North Korea “had little value to China as a buffer state.”

    “The majority of the cables which talk about China-North Korea relationship seem to emanate from Seoul as opposed to Beijing, so I think they say a lot of about what South Korean diplomats really would wishfully hope for a Chinese position,” said Stephanie Kleine-Ahlbrandt, North East Asia Project Director and China Adviser at the International Crisis Group.

    Only one side of the story 
    Moreover, the leaked documents might only capture one dimension of a complex policymaking process in China.

    “These are cables between diplomats, and foreign ministries have certainly a very important role in making foreign policies, but they are hardly the only actors,” said Kleine-Ahlbrandt.  “Particularly in the Chinese contexts, in addition to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, you have on North Korea other factors that are equally important, such as the Communist Party’s International Liaison Department, the People’s Liberation Army.”

    At a regularly scheduled press briefing, Beijing refused to comment on the substance or content of the WikiLeaks cables, only saying that it hoped the U.S. would “properly handle” the situation and that China “did not want to see any disturbance to China-U.S. relations.”

    As with many other governments implicated in the cables, the Chinese central government has gone into damage control. Which also means controlling the information.

    Controlling the content 
    The leaks have dominated headlines in some major Chinese news outlets, and two popular Web portals have published special reports. But for most Chinese citizens who do not speak English, what they see in domestic news is extremely limited.

    Netease.com, one of China’s biggest Web portals, translated a great deal of the newly released documents in its special report.  Readers can easily learn about Moammar Gadhafi’s fear of heights, Hillary Clinton’s order for spying on U.N. officials, Azerbaijan’s first lady’s frequent plastic surgeries, or even the Saudi king’s suggestion on planting microchips on criminal suspects.

    But there’s absolutely no information on the China-related cables -- on the Politburo’s hacking of Google or North Korea or Tibet issues.

    In fact, Netease’s special report posts a map that illustrates the amount of cables released from all over the world, clearly indicating 3,297 came out of Beijing -- a bigger number than most of the other cities sourced in the diplomatic cables. But in the thousands of comments left by the website’s readers, nobody raises the one obvious question: why is there nothing about China?

    WikiLeaks is already blocked in China. It’s a common strategy the government adopts whenever there is information they don’t want citizens to see -- although most of the time not everything is censored, and only official news coverage on the sensitive subject by Xinhua or CCTV is permitted.

    Instead, Chinese media coverage of the leaks concerning U.S. military strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan has created an anti-America forum for segments of the Chinese online community.

    “Assange should be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize because he’s a fighter protecting the spirit of freedom. He liberated the whole world from the American dictator’s rule on truth,” was a comment first left on another popular Web portal, Sina.com; it was soon reposted many times.

    “The Iraq war was illegal itself. What WikiLeaks has released on the war is righteous and enables more people to know the ordeal Iraqi people are suffering under this illegal war. This could end the Iraqi war sooner and bring another anti-terror war supported by the whole world,” reads another comment on QQ.com, a popular Website favored by Chinese youth.

    Ordinary Chinese perhaps unfazed 
    To some critics, the lack of enthusiasm in finding out what may have been leaked about China is unsurprising. “There are a couple of reasons behind this,” said Bei Feng, a Hong Kong based Internet observer in a phone interview with NBC. “First, the government probably has ordered a ban on the leaks on China. Secondly, there’s not too much information translated into Chinese.”

    Bei argues that altogether the leaks are probably “not a big shock for the Chinese people. What we have learned from WikiLeaks falls into our common knowledge of what we think of the government. People don’t think it’s strange that China would want to back the Korean peninsula’s reunification or abandon North Korea, and people think it’s completely normal for China to buy off a country like Kyrgyzstan. Google, yeah, we’ve all assumed like that before, so nothing is making any big impact on the people here at all.”

    But the coming release of new U.S. diplomatic cables on China has Bei on alert. “As more content is translated, we need to see whether there’ll be more impact. For example, if there’s any new information on the student protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989, or if there’s any corruption related to the second generation of Communist officials. This is the kind of content that touches on the most sensitive areas for Chinese, and people care about that more.” 

    23 comments

    I used to work in China as an expat and used to chat extensively with Chinese nationals about politics.. I think I can safely say that Chinese support for Korean reunification (and for getting rid of their "allies" in Pyongyang) would simply not be news. I'd say virtually every educated Chinese nat …

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    Explore related topics: china, diplomacy, north-korea, united-states, foreign-policy, wikileaks
  • 29
    Nov
    2010
    12:25pm, EST

    China's North Korea conundrum

    BEIJING - The international community was waiting for China to step up on North Korea, and on Sunday afternoon it finally did. Sort of.

    At a last-minute press briefing, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei – also the special representative for Korean Peninsula affairs – announced a proposal for an emergency session of delegation heads from the six-party talks to be held in Beijing early next month.

    Despite disappointment that China didn't do more and although many folks here expressed skepticism about the efficacy of such talks, the proposal does take the heat off Beijing – according to one security analyst.

    Our report has more:

    Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    In the meantime, if anyone was ever in doubt about just how bad things are in North Korea, watch this video obtained by the Daily Telegraph in the UK. The material was secretly shot by citizen journalists and smuggled out of the country; it contains some unexpected footage of an ordinary woman confronting a North Korean policeman.

    35 comments

    MSNBC should step up and represent the whole galaxy. Playing the part of "internal community" is just too low for you almighty.

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    Explore related topics: china, diplomacy, north-korea, united-states, world-news, northeast-asia

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Behind The Wall

Behind the Wall provides a dynamic look at China by examining news events and trends – both big and small – from NBC News correspondents and producers. Learn about China's developing economy, politics and the cultural trends that move its 1.3 billion people.

Ed Flanagan

is a Beijing-based producer for NBC News. In China since 2005, he has been a part of the team's China as well as regional news coverage.

Ed Flanagan Blogroll

  • Michael Pettis
  • James Fallows
  • China Law Blog
  • Silicon Hutong
  • Sinica Podcasts
  • China Digital Times
  • The China Beat
  • China Geeks
  • NBC World Blog
  • China Hush

Adrienne Mong

has covered China for NBC News since 2007.

Adrienne Mong Blogroll

  • WorldBlog
  • China Digital Times
  • WSJ China Real Time Report
  • Letter From China
  • Caixin
  • Danwei
  • Forbes Asia Gady Epstein
  • Shanghaiist
  • Shanghai Scrap

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