From the Los Angeles Times
China's snub of U.S. vessel sends
murky message
The
aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk's Thanksgiving visit to Hong Kong is
scuttled, leaving sailors at sea and their visiting families on land.
But Beijing's point is unclear.
By Mark Magnier
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 23, 2007
BEIJING —
China's decision to block the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk
from a long-planned Thanksgiving visit to Hong Kong, before relenting
24 hours later "on humanitarian grounds," had all the markings of a
diplomatic slap in the face, analysts say. It just wasn't terribly
clear whose face it was aimed at.
Word
spread Wednesday afternoon that China's Foreign Ministry had suddenly
and inexplicably blocked a five-day visit by the giant vessel and its
strike group, despite prior approval and weeks of planning.
A
day later, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told
journalists that Beijing would relent, saying its change of heart was
"a decision out of humanitarian consideration only." Repeated efforts
by foreign reporters to get him to explain the reversal failed.
"It's
a little odd," said Eric Hagt, editor of China Security journal, a
defense publication based in Washington. "It all seems rather
unforeseen and unknowable."
China's Defense Ministry offered no
public statement. Nor, said U.S. military officials, did it provide any
back-channel explanation.
The Chinese turnaround came too late,
said Lt. Cmdr. John Filostrat, a spokesman with the U.S. Pacific Fleet
in Hawaii. The Kitty Hawk waited as long as it could, but logistics and
bad weather forced it to leave.
The decision was not intended as some sort of U.S. counter-snub, he
added. "It's now en route to its base in Yokosuka, Japan."
Pundits near and far sought to explain what appeared to be behind the
Chinese government's blunt yet hazy message.
Theories
included anger over President Bush's recent meeting with the Dalai
Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of Chinese-held Tibet; displeasure
over an announced $940-million U.S. upgrade to Taiwan's Patriot II
antimissile shield; a desire to send a message before an imminent Hong
Kong election; and pique over a U.S. report that criticized Chinese
espionage activities.
One reason China may have reversed
itself was the prospect of a public relations calamity in the making,
although in the end the damage was done. About 8,000 American sailors
face several glum days at sea, after hundreds of their family members
traveled to Hong Kong from Japan and the United States to meet them.
"Wives,
newborn babies, are all sitting at Fenwick Pier," said Paul Buxton,
manager of Hong Kong's Quarterdeck Club restaurant, which has a
contract to feed and entertain the hungry hordes.
This is not
the only time recently that China has made a military move without
apparently considering its public relations implications. In January,
the Foreign Ministry was caught flat-footed when the People's
Liberation Army destroyed an aging satellite, spewing debris in space
and sparking questions about the PLA's intentions, why there was no
warning and even whether China's senior leadership had been fully
informed in advance.
The snafu calls into question whether a
proposed military hotline between the U.S. and China would be worth the
effort, said Larry M. Wortzel, a former U.S. military attache in
Beijing.
Amid the head-scratching, some praised this week's moves, even if they
too were uncertain about the intent.
"My
guess is the U.S. did something that wasn't so friendly toward us,"
said Ni Lexiong, a military expert with the Shanghai Institute of
Political Science and Law. "It's good to let them know in a rather
abrupt way, otherwise they might not notice."
Whatever the
reason for this week's flip-flop, a few things stand out, analysts
said. Beijing is clearly not happy with U.S.-Chinese military
relations, for whatever reason.
"It's become routine to have the
Kitty Hawk visit Hong Kong," said Andrew Yang, secretary-general of the
Taiwanese-based Chinese Council of Advanced Policy Studies. "So this
sends a strong message to the U.S."
The incident also suggests
both that China doesn't always speak with one voice and that it is
increasingly willing to play the nationalism card, some said.
"Sometimes
the Chinese government gives us an example of how it is not a
monolithic organization," said David Wolf, head of a strategic public
relations firm in Beijing. "And nationalism is an excellent way to
unify everyone behind one guy."
For Buxton, whose restaurant now
faces the prospect of disposing of 1,000 pounds of turkey, 1,200 pounds
of coleslaw, 100,000 hamburger buns and 3,000 pizzas, the experience
has been something of a financial disaster.
"This whole thing is unbelievable," he said. "And everyone says it's
not their fault. What can I do, send a chit to the PLA?"
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times