Chinese media slams Romney as GOP convention begins
thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2012/08/28/chinese_media_slams_romney_as_convention_beginsdrudge_report DRUDGE REPORT
CHINESE MEDIA SLAMS ROMNEY..Posted By Josh Rogin
Tuesday, August 28, 2012 - 1:08 PM
Share
TAMPA - China's state-controlled media lashed out at GOPpresidential candidate Mitt RomneyMonday, warning that his policies would poison U.S.-China relations.
"By any standard, the U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney'sChina policy, as outlined on his official campaign website, is an outdatedmanifestation of a Cold War mentality," read acommentary in Monday's China Daily."It endorses the ‘China threat' theory and focuses on containing China's risein the Asia-Pacific through bolstering the robust U.S. military presence in theregion."
The Chinese state-owned outlet said that Romney was "provoking" China bypromising to supply Taiwan with aircraft and other military platforms andcalled his China approach "pugnacious."
"[H]is China policy, if implemented, would cause a retrogression inbilateral ties and turn the region into a venue for open confrontation betweenChina and the U.S.," the commentary stated.
China Daily also compared Romney'sapproach with President Barack Obama's"pivot" toward Asia. The current administration is adding "fuel to the fire" inthe South China Sea by involving itself in regional disputes, the commentaryargued, but Romney's China policies would sour relations even further.
"It requires political vision as well as profound knowledge of Sino-U.S.relations as a whole, to make sensible policy recommendations about what arewidely recognized as the most important bilateral ties in the world," thecommentary states. "Romney apparently lacks both."
The China-EastAsia page of the Romney campaign website promises that a Romneyadministration would increase U.S. naval presence in the Pacific and increasemilitary assistance to regional allies "to discourage any aggressive orcoercive behavior by China against its neighbors."
The Romney campaign is also vowing to shine a brighter light on China'shuman rights abuses.
"Any serious U.S. policy toward China must confront the fact that China'sregime continues to deny its people basic political freedoms and human rights.A nation that represses its own people cannot be a trusted partner in aninternational system based on economic and political freedom," the websitereads.
But as the China Daily commentarynotes, campaign rhetoric and government policy aren't always the same thing. U.S.presidential candidates of both parties have long taken a more strident tonetoward China on the campaign trail, only to dial back their rhetoric while inoffice.
Nor is the Romney team's position on China clear, as top campaign advisors disagreeon how to deal with the Middle Kingdom's rise as a world power.
The two co-chairs of Romney's Asia-Pacific policy team, former StateDepartment official Evan Feigenbaum,a moderate realist, and Aaron Friedberg,a hawkish scholar, evince sharply different views on China.
At the top of the Romney advisory structure, generalists like former U.N.Ambassador John Boltonare much morewary of a rising China than realists such as former World Bank President Bob Zoellick, who as a top StateDepartment official urged China to become a "responsible stakeholder" in worldaffairs.
As for Romney, he has promised to brand China a currency manipulator on dayone of his presidency and the RNC draft platform posted by Politico calls on China to move toward democracy and condemns itsSouth China Sea claims.
"We will welcome the emergence of a peaceful and prosperous China, and wewill welcome even more the development of a democratic China," the draftplatform reads. "Its rulers have discovered that economic freedom leads tonational wealth. The next lesson is that political and religious freedom leadto national greatness. The exposure of the Chinese people to our way of lifecan be the greatest force for change in their country."