By Wang Dong
What has China thought of the bitter campaign between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump?
Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons/ BU Rob13 and Gage
With the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director James Comey having
announced that no criminal charges will be brought against Hillary Clinton over
her use of private email server, and with an “assassination scare” at one of
Donald Trump’s last campaign rallies in Reno, Nevada, the drama of the 2016
U.S. presidential election seems to be coming to an epilogue. Hours from the
election result, the world has been kept in suspense.
There is no doubt that Chinese policymakers, just like the leaders of
many other countries, are watching the U.S. presidential election closely. In
fact, the elites and the public alike in China are paying a great deal of
attention to the drama across the Pacific Ocean. Major media outlets are in
full steam for election coverage and pundits are ready to pour out comments.
Some of these analyses will garner enormous amount of attention. Take the
Pangoal Institution, a Beijing-based public policy think tank where I serve as
secretary general of its Academic Committee, for example. In the past a few
days the Pangoal Institution has published two reports authored by two of its
senior fellows, analyzing the prospects of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump
getting elected as well as the implications for U.S.-China relations
separately. Each of the two pieces has generated over two million hits online
in just about two days.
The spectacle of this year’s U.S. election has generated debate in China
regarding U.S. democracy, with many Chinese people dismayed at its ugly side.
This attitude is perhaps best manifested in a line of teasing among many
Chinese: “Even Hollywood script writers cannot compose plots as intriguing,
dramatic, and occasionally horrifying as the real U.S. presidential election.
Saying this is like ‘House of Cards’ belittles the reality.”
In my graduate seminar class on American foreign policy at Peking
University, students (from many different countries) quickly point to the
hypocrisy of American democracy. If the United States cannot govern
itself well, students would say, then they should stop lecturing other
countries about American democracy. One could argue that the next U.S.
president should humble herself or himself and respect diversity in values and
practices of democracy, though I highly doubt it is likely. Nevertheless, it
will be increasingly difficult for the next U.S. president to boast of U.S.
democracy. Whoever gets elected will be bound to be in a much weakened
political position and polarization in U.S. politics is unlikely to end anytime
soon.
Based on their statements and remarks, it is clear that Chinese
policymakers tend not to indicate their preference for any particular
candidate, at least publicly. They instead emphasize that the fundamentals of
U.S.-China relations are such that no future U.S. president, whoever gets
elected, can reverse the course or push for confrontation or serious
deterioration in bilateral relations.
If Hillary Clinton gets elected, many people in China believe that
Beijing will be dealing with someone who will be tougher toward China but
also more predictable in her way of thinking, including in U.S.-China
relations. In other words, she is more familiar. The Chinese leadership will
take a pragmatic approach when comes to dealing with a Hillary Clinton
presidency. The worry, if any, is that she might be more ideology-driven than
pragmatic. Strategic analysts, however, have warned about the prospects that a
Clinton administration may up the ante on the North Korea nuclear issue and
accelerate the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD)
system in South Korea; pursue a more confrontational policy in the South China
Sea; encourage Taiwan to pursue a policy that further decouples from the
Chinese mainland; and altogether reinforce her “pivot to Asia” strategy. In
short, Beijing has “buckled up” for potential turbulence in U.S.-China
relations should Hillary Clinton get elected.
Meanwhile, Chinese elites and public have been watching the rise of Donald
Trump with a sort of excitement and bewilderment. Rightly or wrongly,
many in China actually tend to believe that Trump would be easier to
deal with than Hillary Clinton, since he is a businessman. A pro-business
Republican president will tend to be pragmatic and China-friendly, if not
pro-China. This is a deeply-rooted belief shared by many policymakers and
analysts. Therefore, for instance, many in China tend to view Trump’s
stated policy position of imposing more than 30 percent tariffs on
China as rhetorical campaign language.
On the security front, Trump’s view of U.S. alliances has led many in China
to believe he would lessen pressure on China in East Asia, and thus help
alleviate the growing geostrategic rivalry between Beijing and Washington.
Trump’s proposal of pulling U.S. troops out of Japan and South Korea in
exchange for allowing the two U.S. allies to go nuclear has attracted a lot of
attention here in China. Many in China would view the withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Japan and South Korea favorably, while also being alarmed by the
possibility of Japan and South Korea (especially the former) going nuclear. One
may predict that the probability of Trump following through such a
proposal, even if he gets elected, is extremely low, though. That makes
it unlikely for China to have to eventually face such a dilemma.
Last night, I had a dinner with an American friend who is currently doing
business in a Latin American country. Our conversation naturally shifted to the
U.S. presidential election. “Now the world is looking at us and laughing,” he
sighed. “What is going on?”
Watching the U.S. presidential election from across the Pacific Ocean, our
observations and thinking about American politics and policy certainly will not
stop when the election result is out.
Wang Dong is an associate professor at School of
International Studies and deputy executive director of the Institute for
China-U.S. People to People Exchange at Peking University. He is concurrently
Secretary General of the Academic Committee of the Pangoal Institution, a
leading Beijing-based public policy think tank.
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