May 14, 2001  

Of Planes, Trains, and Automobiles 
or Why The New York Times is in Tow 
by Angelo M. Codevilla, Director, Division for Research in Strategy

On May 9, The New York Times ran the story, "China says it won't let US spy plane fly home," by Elisabeth Rosenthal. It says :"Days after American officials expressed hope that the damaged surveillance plane stranded on Hainan island could be repaired and flown out of china, Chinese officials rejected the plan, saying today that they would not permit the plane to fly home....But China did not rule out...dismantling it and sending it home in pieces."  Two days later the Times explained why: Chinese public opinion would not allow the government to let America off so easily.
 
The actions of the Chinese government explain themselves. But The Times' analysis is understandable only in terms of the US establishment's reflexive fondness for totalitarianism. 
 
By allowing the return of the aircraft only in a way that humiliates America, the Chinese government is continuing to drive home to its own people and to the rest of Asia the point it has made several times since the midair collision of one of its fighters with the US surveillance plane, namely that it can slap America in the face at will, and that America will sell out not just its allies but its own interests to please China. Since it has profited from this course of action, it would be remarkable if it were not persevering in it.
 
The Times' acceptance at face value of official Chinese references to Chinese public opinion, however, is noteworthy.  Since when has the Chinese government bowed to public opinion? Public opinion favored the Democracy demonstrators in 1989. The politburo ran them over with tanks. Public opinion supports Falun Gong and other spiritualist movements.  The politburo persecutes them with dungeon, fire and sword. Public opinion is well nigh unanimous in hating the "one child policy." But the politburo enforces it with monitoring of menstrual periods, and all the sanctions at its command. Public opinion in totalitarian states is the object of the rulers' relentless attempts to manufacture it to its own specifications. The rulers conduct massive, violent even murderous campaigns to destroy those parts of which they disapprove and to create, ex nihilo if they must, whatever they want. This is not news.
 
Nor, unfortunately, is it news  that the New York Times and the Establishment for which it speaks unquestioningly accepts the claims of politburos that they represent public opinion. Thus it did for three generations with regard to the Soviet Union.  As for East Germany, Cuba, etc. every cleaning lady, every truck driver, knew that governments do not represent people whom they keep in their country by force. The Times also notes the absence of "moderate" Palestinian opinion. It never mentions that Arafat et al. murder to create the public opinion they want. But the New York Times chooses not to know any of this. What The Times writes about the relationship between the Chinese government and its people must be read in that light. 

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