|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
Orgy of nationalist propaganda follows Chinese manned space
flight
By John Chan
24 October 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The Beijing leadership has exploited the return of Chinas
second manned spacecraft Shenzhou VI to earth last Monday to saturate
the media with hymns of praise to the glories of Chinas
technical and economic achievements.
For over a week, the state-controlled media bombarded the public
with extensive coverage of the five-day mission. Comments, greetings
and photos from the orbiting astronauts were splashed throughout
newspapers, television and the Internet to mark this historic
moment in Chinas national rejuvenation.
The landing in the northern grasslands of Inner Mongolia was
broadcast live on television. As soon as the space vehicle touched
down, the two astronautsFei Junlong and Nie Haishengwere
greeted with flowers and cheers. In carefully scripted comments,
Nie declared: Were grateful for the deep love and
concern by all Chinese people, [including] the Hong Kong, Macao
and Taiwan compatriots.
The two astronauts will no doubt be transformed into political
vehicles for nationalist propaganda. The first Chinese in space,
Yang Liwei, was made a national hero after his flight in October
2003. He was dispatched to Hong Kong later that month in an effort
to boost the discredited Beijing-backed administration headed
by Tung Chee-hwa following a huge protest against planned anti-subversion
laws.
Commenting on the latest space venture, official Xinhua news
agency declared: At this moment history is returning dignity
and sanctity to the Chinese nation. In memories of the not-too-distant
past, we were poor, in darkness and endured the bullying of imperialist
powers. Sons of China, with their thousands of years of civilisation,
were called the sick man of Asia.... Today an independent, self-sufficient,
constantly strengthening China has, like a miracle, become one
of a handful of countries able to make the dream of spaceflight
a reality.
In its efforts to promote Chinas achievement, Beijing
declared that the mission had been made in China from
start to finish. In fact, the Shenzhou capsule is a modified version
of Russian Soyuz space vehicle developed in the late 1960s as
part of an agreement to purchase Russian space technologies. The
Chinese astronauts received their initial training in Russia in
the 1990s.
Similarly, the claim that China is independent, self-sufficient
is an illusion. Like the Shenzhou, Chinese economic and technical
development is largely derivative. China functions as a huge cheap
labour platform for the global economy and is completely dependent
on foreign capital and its associated imported technologies. Exports
and imports now account for 75 percent of Chinas GDP and
it is the third largest trading nation in the world.
For millions of Chinese workers, made in China
means subsistence wages, atrocious conditions and political repression.
On October 7, armed police attacked thousands of laid-off workers
in Chongqing protesting against the corrupt sale of a state-owned
plant. Two workers were killed.
The spacecraft was launched on October 12, a day after a major
Communist Party conference in Beijing discussed its next five-year
plan. The meeting was preoccupied with the deepening gap between
rich and poor, rural poverty, mass unemployment, resentment of
the lack of healthcare, investment bubbles, the inefficient use
of energy and large-scale pollution.
The campaign surrounding the $US2.3 billion manned spaceflight
is clearly aimed at boosting the Beijing bureaucracy and diverting
attention from the countrys deepening political and social
tensions. The patriotic appeals are directly aimed at layers of
the middle class, whose interests are bound up with the expansion
of Chinese capitalism.
In a speech at the space control centre, Wu Bangguo, No 2 in
the party hierarchy, stressed the political importance of the
space mission, saying: This will further improve the countrys
international status and national strength, and will help to mobilise
its people to rally around the Communist Party and work harder
for the future of the country.
The propaganda represents a shift. It is worth recalling that
in 1970, amid boiling political and social tensions created by
the so-called Cultural Revolution, Mao Zedong used Chinas
limited resources to launch its first satelliteDongfanghong
or The East is Redatop a Long March
rocket. The very names were designed to support Maos false
claim to be building socialism in Red China.
Today, 35 years later, the Stalinist regime has dumped its
socialist pretensions and openly embraced the capitalist market.
The name of the latest spacecraftShenzhou or Divine
Vesselindicates the ideological shift. It is an appeal
to the mystical and mediaeval philosophies that underpinned Chinas
past claim to be the Celestial Empire. Chinas space programs
are no longer hailed as a contribution by socialism to mankinds
progress, but the means for achieving national prestige, commercial
interests and military power.
The manned spaceflights are an advertisement for the Chinese
space industry, which is seeking to gain a significant slice of
the lucrative international market for commercial satellite launches
by offering cut rate prices. Beijing is also looking for other
economic and technological benefits.
Hu Wenrui, a scholar from the Chinese Academy of Sciences,
told Xinhua: For example, China needs 2 billion tonnes of
coal each year. If we could raise the fuel efficiency of coal
by only 0.1 percent based on space experiments, we would make
profits of 800 million yuan annually at the price of 400 yuan
each tonne.
Beijing has had proposals for manned space flight since the
1970s, but it only formulated its plans after the collapse of
the Soviet Union in 1991. Faced with threats from the US, Beijing
could not afford to be left out of the space race with all of
its potential military applications. As the European Union and
even India and Brazil embarked on ambitious programs, China followed
suit. Following the latest flight, Beijing announced plans for
a moon landing and the establishment of a Chinese space station
within the next decade.
Beijing insists that its space endeavours are purely for peaceful
purposes. But like every other country, Chinas program is
closely linked to military purposes. China established its own
satellite-based system for precise navigation in 2003 to provide
its military with the geo-positioning capabilities long available
to the American armed forces.
It is quite possible that Shenzhou VI engaged in research related
to military activities. Voicing Washingtons fears, Philip
Saunders, from the Pentagon-linked Institute for National Strategic
Studies, told CNSNews.com that Chinas improved space
technology could significantly improve Chinese military capabilities.
China may also seek to offset US military superiority by targeting
US space assets.
The Bush administration has made clear that it intends to maintain
its clear advantage in every military arena, particularly in space.
The US already uses satellites for reconnaissance and precision
positioning. It is planning to develop an anti-ballistic missile
system and is conducting extensive research into warfare from
space and in space. Like other countries, China is responding.
See Also:
Anti-Japanese protests and
the reactionary nature of Chinese nationalism
[29 April 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |