|  
  Bush in China   George Koonull  Updated: 2005-11-22 10:37  
 Coming off a new low in domestic approval ratings and battered by a decidedly 
hostile reception in Latin America, a mellower and gentler President George W. 
Bush brought a more conciliatory message to Asia. 
 
 Western media stressed the part of Bush's speech in Japan where he suggested 
that China should look upon Taiwan as its model for democracy and freedom. The 
reference to Taiwan occupied only two short paragraphs out of 34 of his prepared 
text. China chose to ignore the reference when Bush arrived in Beijing. 
 
 Bush began his speech in Beijing by praising China for its economic progress 
and for its role in the six-party talks with North Korea. He gave a subtle 
signal about the need for more religious freedom in China by attending a 
Protestant church service near the Tiananmen. 
 
 Alas, both the president and the media entourage showed dismaying flaws in 
their understanding of China. 
 
 When Thomas Murphy, then chairman of General Motors, visited Beijing in 1978, 
he too attended mass at a Catholic church near where Bush attended the 
protestant service. Giving subtle signals about religious freedom was far from 
Murphy's mind, however. His only intent was to be a good Irish Catholic. 
 
 What has changed during this interval is the degree to which Buddhist temples 
have flourished. Today, temples are full of worshippers and grounds covered by 
incense smoke and burnt currency printed for the dead. 
 
 China has even constructed a bronze-clad statue of Guanyin, a Buddha native 
to China, off Hainan Island, built by design to be taller than the Statue of 
Liberty. Buddhism has always been the dominant religion in China. Why has 
Western media not acknowledged the liberalization of worship in the country? 
 
 Surely no one is suggesting that only the practice of Christian religions 
count toward religious freedom. 
 
 About the time of Bush's trip to Asia, the Washington-based Pew Research 
Center released a remarkable survey as part of their global attitudes project. 
The survey revealed that 76 percent of the Chinese people living in urban areas 
expect their lives to improve over the next five years. For the United States, 
it was 48 percent, closer to Russia's 45 percent. 
 
 When asked if they were "satisfied with the way things are going at home," 72 
percent in China responded "satisfied," and only 19 percent "not satisfied." In 
the United States, the survey indicated only 39 percent satisfied and 57 percent 
not satisfied. 
 
 Even more remarkable than Pew's result is the near total absence of coverage 
about this survey in Western media. Only the International Herald Tribune, 
distributed outside of America, ran the story. None of the wire services and 
none of the major American dailies even mentioned this poll. 
 
 Why such a lack of interest? The global attitudes project was co-chaired by 
former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Senator John Danforth. 
Pew's many other surveys were always cited by the mainstream U.S media. Could it 
be because people allegedly deprived of freedom have no right to be optimistic? 
 
 President Bush, it seems, should have saved his lecture for his good buddy, 
Russia's president Vladimir Putin at the APEC meeting in South Korea. At least 
with Putin, Bush would have spoken from a relative position of strength. 
 
 Bush also misfired by holding Taiwan as a model to which China should aspire 
to. People in Asia have not forgotten that the last election of this so-called 
model of democracy saw a miraculous intervention of a supposed assassination 
attempt on the eve of the 2004 election. The sympathy from the superficial wound 
on Chen Shui Bian's belly was far more effective than any hanging chads or Swift 
Boat veterans that influenced the outcome in America. 
 
 Now that Beijing has offered to buy agriculture products from Taiwan 
tariff-free and dangled the prospect of sending millions of affluent mainland 
tourists to Taiwan, the economic pressure on Chen to revise his no-negotiation 
stance is mounting. The opposition leaders in Taiwan have already reached 
rapprochement with Beijing, further isolating Chen. 
 
 It will be interesting to see how long Chen can abide by rules in the books 
without new subterfuge. His predecessor, Lee Teng Hui, was known to make 
revision of the Taiwan's constitution an annual exercise. 
 
 More than 1 million Taiwanese have already voted with their feet by moving to 
live in the mainland. Even 100,000-plus Americans are now living in China. Such 
voluntary migration of people flies in the face of the image of a repressive 
China portrayed by the western media. 
 
 During his visit to Asia, President Bush has shifted to a perceptibly softer 
diplomatic approach from his previous hard rhetoric. It is a small but hopefully 
significant step toward collaboration instead of confrontation. Western media 
needs to take off their biased filters and see China for what it has become -- a 
progressive nation on the move. 
 
  
 | The above content represents the view of the author 
 only. | 
  
  
  | 
  
  
 |  
 
  | 
  
  
 |  
 
  | 
  
  
  |