When China's Xinhua news agency published an adulatory report of
a conference at the seaside resort of Beidaihe on August 5, [1] I
was puzzled. Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Hu Jintao
had banned these meetings as a waste of money and time - they were
boondoggles. And China's media (at least the press that wasn't
totally in the control of the Central Propaganda Department)
praised President Hu's policy as a "populist measure in support of
good government" (qinmin qinglian).
Now, it is true that Hu is in a weak position. He is heavily
outnumbered in the Politburo of the party Central Committee by
disciples of China's strongman, Central Military Commission
chairman Jiang Zemin (who was also Hu's predecessor as president
and party boss). But certainly Hu should be given due deference. He
is, after all, the titular chief of the party and the
government.
Hu Jintao's 'populist measure for good government'
Which is why I was bemused that there was a report of any kind of
meeting at Beidaihe, a famous resort and annual leadership retreat
on the Bohai Gulf, 280 kilometers east of Beijing. I recalled that
as a result of Hu's proscription, most governmental and party
organizations, central and political, had shied away from Beidaihe.
Just to confirm my recollection, I went to the People's Daily Net
(www.peopledaily.com.cn) and pasted "Cancel Beidaihe to handle
affairs" (quxiao Beidaihe bangong) into the search engine.
Sure enough, a string of stories from the summer of 2003 popped
out. In September, for example, there was an entire issue of the
China Economic Review [2] devoted to the hard times at Beidaihe due
to the government vacation ban. The article's big question: "Would
China's 'Summer Capital' become history?"
But as I read, the history of the cancellation of the Beidaihe
meetings became a bit more complex than I remembered. In late June
2003, the first announcements of the cancellation of the meetings
"for this summer" were linked to the epidemic of severe acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS). By late July, news stories praising
the permanent cessation of the Beidaihe sessions appeared on a
number of websites - none of which was one directly responsible to
the Central Propaganda Department. Three articles in particular,
one in Procuratorial Daily [3], one in China Youth News [4] and
another in Southern Metropolitan News, [5] were lavish in their
praise of Hu's decision. Southern Metropolitan, for example, spoke
of "President Hu Jintao's commitment to the people", that "power is
to be used for the people, our passion is given to the people,
benefit is sought for the people", and it described Hu's political
ally, Premier Wen Jiabao, as "the premier of the common man" who
"deeply understands what the people expect".
In addition to this were interminable message posts from private
citizens on the People's Daily website extolling Messrs Hu and Wen.
One random example [6] said "everyone knows that the very first
official act that Hu Jintao, the new secretary general of the
Chinese Communist Center, did upon his promotion was not 'to hold a
meeting', it was not 'to research', but rather to go directly to
the old revolutionary base area of Xibopo for a discreet tour in an
effort to see for himself the hardships of 'his peasant brothers'".
This lengthy post went on to blast away at "privileges, corruption,
wealth, influence" of party officials at the local level, and
became uncomfortably unctuous and obsequious.
But there it was, and I have no doubt that the writer genuinely
felt these things about China's two moderate leaders. Both
President Hu and Premier Wen had become heroes of Beijing's
anti-SARS campaign in 2003, while Jiang and his coterie decamped to
the relative safety of Shanghai.
One of the most recent Beidaihe posts on People's Daily site was
one dated July 30, 2004, under the title "Hu Jintao Stresses:
Deeply Understand the Special Points and Discipline of Economic
Development". Almost like an imperial memorial, the anonymous post
addressed Hu, saying, "from Xibopo to fighting SARS, from reforming
the official junket system to canceling the Beidaihe vacation
meetings, we see that self-same work style of the older generation
of proletarian revolutionaries ... General Secretary, the people
support you!"
Zeng Qinghong goes to Beidaihe anyway
The people may support General Secretary Hu's work style, but his
main rival apparently doesn't. And for those of you who don't
regularly divine the cracks in bovine scapulae or tortoise
plastrons gently toasted over a Beijing hearth, let me add that
Hu's main rival is his nominal deputy, Vice President Zeng
Qinghong. Zeng is capo de capo of military commission
chairman Jiang's "Shanghai Gang", aka "Shanghai bang" - the
irreverent name for the battalion of top functionaries in the
Chinese Communist Party, army and government structure who worked
with Ziang Zemin in the 1980s when he was Shanghai's mayor and
party boss.
Seemingly in defiance of President Hu's instructions, Vice
President Zeng cheerfully presided over a conference of his
Shanghai co-factionalists at Beidaihe resort on August 5. The
conference was billed as a "symposium" to express support for
"highly talented personnel" from the western and northeastern
provinces "who were vacationing in Beidaihe" (this despite Chinese
media reports that government-funded vacation boondoggles in
Beidaihe would be cut back drastically last year).
For a "Who's Who" of the so-called "Shanghai Faction" in China's
leadership, one only need gaze at the list of attendees at a
conference convened in Beidaihe on August 5 by Vice President Zeng,
who is also the fifth-ranking member of the Communist Party
Politburo's Standing Committee. The only Shanghai people missing
were Politburo members who outranked Zeng - no doubt they deferred
to the vice president as it was to be Zeng's show. But most of
other the top factionalists were there. Minister of Personnel He
Guoqiang convened the meeting, and apparently restricted the
invitation list to political allies of Jiang and Zeng. In order of
rank, they included former Shanghai party chieftain Huang Ju, who
is now the senior vice premier of the State Council, as well as
Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan; State Councilor Madame Chen Zhili and
State Council secretary general Hua Jianmin; and General Xu Caihou,
chief political commissar of the People's Liberation Army (PLA)
represented the military. Wang Gang, director of the party's
Central Office, was a featured guest because of his key role in
party personnel decisions. (Minister of Public Security Zhou
Yongkang, although he wasn't listed, was probably in attendance as
well.)
The fact that Jiang-Zeng factionalists dominate the day-to-day
work of the party, the State Council and the military was never so
clear as it was when Hua, Wang and General Xu appeared at Beidaihe
on August 5 at Vice President Zeng's instruction.
Shanghai dominates leadership politics. At least five of the nine
Politburo Standing Committee members are tattooed blood-brother
Shanghai clique-ists. These five can count on the nominal "Politics
and Law" chieftain Luo Gan for a vote if they really need it.
President Hu, meanwhile, is left with Premier Wen and possibly
discipline-inspection czar Wu Guanzheng in his intramural battles.
In the Politburo, the influence of the Shanghai faction is even
more pronounced, especially in the military and the Foreign
Affairs, State and Public Security ministries. In the State
Council, the vast majority of ministers are identifiable Jiang
loyalists.
How high are the stakes?
The outcome of the power struggle in Beijing does make a difference
in the rest of Asia, and indeed the world. President Hu and Premier
Wen clearly are moderates on national-security policy if their
apparent equanimity in the face of Hong Kong's "Article 23"
anti-sedition fiasco last summer is any indication. Hong Kong press
reports indicated that Hu-Wen faction people tried to convey to
visiting Hong Kong politicians that the center in Beijing did not
have any opinion on the timing or content of the legislation, while
the Jiang-dominated Propaganda Ministry and the directly controlled
state media demanded that the legislation be passed "one time and
as written". The signals were so mixed that Vice President Zeng was
forced out of the shadows to appear as the eminence grise of
the hardline Hong Kong policy.
No doubt these factional differences resonate in the way Beijing
handles the disputes with Japan over its East China Sea claims,
with Korea over whether the ancient kingdom of Koguryo was Chinese
or Korean - and hence whether its ancient territories are
historically one or the other. And, of course, how the two factions
would deal with Taiwan is a function of the priority their relative
leaders' place on "economic development" or "territorial integrity
and sovereignty".
Jiang and Zeng see control and influence over the PLA as essential
to holding power. Consequently, it is essential for Jiang, chairman
of the Central Military Commission, to shower the PLA with lavish
rewards - this means the army must be given top priority in China's
economic structure for investment, recruitment and pay. And this is
exactly what Jiang has done. Chairman Jiang has given the PLA's
General Logistics Department orders to draft a research report
emphasizing the priority status on military pay and benefits in an
effort to attract young, talented recruits to the defense
establishment.
Jiang expects to maintain his iron grip on the military by
presenting these new national-security requirements at the Fourth
Plenum of the 16th Central Committee next month. (The date has not
yet been announced.) Ingratiating himself with the military
leadership with general officer promotions to his loyalists and
planning for a major increase in troop salaries to ensure the
allegiance of the ranks are his obvious tactics.
Identifying "the defense of China's territorial integrity" - and
not economic development - as the overriding mission of the party
is a dangerous policy choice that Jiang and his Shanghai faction
have adopted solely to bolster their grip on power. If they were in
charge, President Hu and Premier Wen could not possibly be any more
hardline, and more likely would pursue more moderate policies
toward Taiwan and China's other neighbors.
But as long as the rest of the world's leaders show fear, anxiety
and alarm at the hardline Jiang-Zeng policies, and as long as the
Jiang-Zeng hard line draws no backlash, the hard line will prevail.
It is ironic, then, that if the US administration of President
George W Bush wants to moderate China's bellicose rhetoric, it
should announce the approval of Aegis destroyers for Taiwan and
explicitly link the approval to China's inexorable five-year
military buildup against the island. And ironically, moderation
from Beijing would have far greater chances of success with
Beijing's increasingly suspicious and alarmed Taiwan compatriots
than unbending hostility.
Footnotes
1) Xinhua, August 5, 2004.
2) China Economic Review, September 2003.
3) Procuratorial Daily; see also here.
4) China Youth News.
5) Southern Metropolitan News.
6) People's Daily post example.
7) People's Daily post, July 30, Hu Jintao Stresses: Deeply Understand the Special
Points and Discipline of Economic Development.
John J. Tkacik is a research fellow in Asian Studies at the
Heritage Foundation in Washington, DC. He is a retired officer in
the US Foreign Service who served in Taipei, Beijing, Hong Kong and
Guangzhou and was chief of the China Division in the State
Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research.
First appeared in The Asian Wall Street Journal