Carnegie Council Logo
 
SEARCH:  
   PEOPLE    ADVANCED
THEMES PROGRAMS CALENDAR RESOURCES SUPPORT US ABOUT US
Print Page Mail Page
 
Resources
  Transcripts
  Audio
  Video
  Ethics & International Affairs Journal
  Carnegie Ethics Online
  Articles, Papers, and Reports
  An American Detainee "Strategy"
  Property Rights and the Resource Curse
  Other Publications
  For Educators and Students
  Global Ethics Corner Videos
  Resource Picks
  "To Be Read" Book Review Column
  RSS
 
 
Carnegie Council Podcast
Carnegie Council RSS


eNewsletter Signup
Please enter your email address to subscribe to the Carnegie Council email newsletter.
 
 
 
Most Emailed Pages
1. Business and Human Rights: Achievements and Prospects
2. Business and Human Rights in Conflict [Excerpt]
3. U.S.-Russia Relations: Under Stress, and in Need of Care
4. James Traub
5. Iran and the United States: David Speedie Interviews Gary Sick
 
   
     
 

Hu's on First?
Excerpt and link to "The National Interest" article, November 1, 2007
Joshua Kurlantzick, Devin T. Stewart

 
     
 

November 27, 2007

Hu Jintao visits Hanoi, Vietnam
Hu Jintao visits Hanoi, Vietnam

(Posted with permission from The National Interest )


IN RECENT issues of The National Interest, there have been a series of articles that take China’s rise to both regional and global pre-eminence as a given. But it is worth stepping back to take a sober look at some of the very real challenges China faces—and in particular, how China’s neighbors assess these developments. Sometimes the view from Washington and New York can be a bit overly optimistic.

Of course, over the past six months, that confidence about China’s continued progress was shaken as governments across the world witnessed an explosion of terrifying stories about Chinese exports. News reports detailed toothpaste tainted with poisons, fake baby formula and pet food packed with illegal substances. Though China vowed better safety standards—and executed the head of its own food and drug administration—it also stonewalled in many cases, blaming complaints on overaggressive foreign news reporters and claiming that American exports also can be dangerous.

For leaders in Southeast Asia, the problems of China, its giant neighbor, can have a more immediate impact—as they found out when the SARS crisis, initially covered up by China, quickly spread across Asia and decimated the region’s economies. Over the summer, Southeast Asian reporters learned of another terrifying outbreak of disease in China. A mysterious illness in Guangdong province was causing pigs to bleed to death. Gruesome foreign TV and newspaper reports described bloody pigs staggering around, panicked Chinese farmers trying to sell their hogs en masse and rivers filled with pig carcasses. Southeast Asian officials worried about whether the pig disease would spread into their nations. Yet once again, the Chinese government did almost nothing. In fact, in China itself, few people even seemed to know about the pig illness. Chinese state media had not reported on the Guangdong disaster, and even well-informed businesspeople in Shanghai had heard little about it.

To read the entire article, go to: http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=16026



 
 

Please Note

YouTubeHighlights from Carnegie Council events are now available on our YouTube channel.

Related

Biographies
Joshua Kurlantzick
Devin T. Stewart
 
 
 

Resource Highlights

Global Ethics Corner--Barack Obama: Hope and Change, but for Whom?
Global Ethics Corner
  How will President Obama deal with the hopes and fears of people abroad?
> More
Iran and the United States
Iranian Flag
  David Speedie Interviews Gary Sick on the future of this troubled relationship.
> More
> All Videos
New from Policy Innovations Online Magazine
Policy Innovations Online Magazine
  "Don't Super Size the IMF," by Kenneth Rogoff: Now is not the time to ramp up IMF lending on a long-term basis.
> More
Ethics & International Affairs
Ethics & International Affairs
  Go to the Journal for articles on ethics and foreign policy.
> More