-----Original Message-----
From: Sid Shniad [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, November 26, 2009 11:24 AM
Subject: China takes a new look at Marxism


http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/KK26Ad02.html

Asia Times
Nov. 26, 2009
       
SINOGRAPH

China takes a new look at Marxism

By Francesco Sisci

BEIJING - The week before the visit of United States President Barack Obama,
the Chinese media were full of hope and expectations: Obama's meeting with
China's leaders would lead to new and higher-level bilateral relations,
newspapers wrote. But it was already clear that, contrary to the ideas of
the foreign press, this would not mean that China was to become a second
America.

In fact, on November 14, less than 48 hours before Obama's arrival in
Beijing, the official news agency Xinhua released a long statement in
Chinese only explaining that Xi Jinping, vice president of the state and
president of the Central Party School, had held a conference about the
necessity to "actively encourage the building of a ruling party study model
of Marxism".

Xi, in his speech at the Party School, which was chaired by Li Jingtian, the
executive vice president of the same school, recommended studying socialist
theory with Chinese characteristics and applying the "core values of
socialism".

The school is the highest institution in the country to train officials of
the Chinese Communist Party.

It sounds like a trip back in time, light years away from the wave of
freshness and optimism that seems to blow in the West and in the US around
Obama, with his liberal, charismatic aura.

But it is not an isolated gesture. The strong emphasis on Marxism has been
echoed by headlines in recent months. The current economic crisis places in
question the faith, previously almost blind in China, in the capitalist
system.

On November 11, the Chinese edition of Global Times, China's best-selling
national newspaper, led the front page with a report that a BBC survey in 21
countries had found that a majority of people no longer had confidence in
capitalism. (More than 29,000 people in 27 countries were questioned. In
only two countries, the United States and Pakistan, did more than one in
five people feel that capitalism works well as it stands.)

In a sense, China is emerging from decades of reticence about its political
system. On November 13 and 14, immediately before Obama arrived in Beijing,
Zheng Bijian, credited as a political adviser to President Hu Jintao, flew
to Taiwan to take part for the first time in a seminar on political systems.
Zheng was executive vice president of the Party School in the 1990s when Hu
was its president.

It was the first time that a very senior Beijing official had agreed to
discuss the differences between the political systems in China and Taiwan,
which have been a major stumbling block in any potential process of
reunification of the island with the mainland. Taiwan is a parliamentary
democracy, and China isn't.

The message appears to be that with the current crisis - which is economic,
but to a certain extent systemic in the US - China is having renewed doubts
about the value of the US and Western system, and is growing cautious.

This does not mean that Beijing will turn back or stop, although it is
willing to explore different directions.

In his speech, Xi coined a new term in China's ultra-coded political
rhetoric: "The ruling party study model of Marxism." The definition is
cryptic for people in the West, but it is still clearly miles away from the
days when the party called itself "Communist Marxist-Leninist".

The indications are that the Chinese are no longer inclined to define their
party as "communist", although they acknowledge a real, not simply
rhetorical, value in the study of Marxism and the "core values of
socialism". China is becoming more convinced and self-confident in its trial
reforms of the political system.

This greater confidence was evidenced in Zheng Bijian's trip to Taiwan. In
essence, the message to the Taiwanese, who might still one day unite with
the mainland, was, "We will certainly change our political system, but your
parliamentary democracy also must reform; otherwise, it risks being derailed
and overwhelmed by demagoguery and populism."

Zheng's position is not without support on the island, where many
entrepreneurs and tycoons are beginning to admire the efficiency and
economic success in mainland China.

China's leaders stress they do not want to export their political model, and
they even ask others not to imitate them but to look for their own
development paths. Still, China's politicians are becoming unwilling to
endure lectures on politics or ethics, given the fact that their system is
working today, while others falter.

In the runup to Obama's visit, all this meant that the message to the
visitor was to keep domestic politics out of big-policy discussions. But it
was also a statement: China is reforming its political system, although it
might not be totally along the lines Washington or the West wants to see.

Francesco Sisci is the Asia Editor of La Stampa.
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