The Emperor’s Tutor

The Emperor’s Tutor
Wang Huning greets the media at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, on Oct. 25, 2017. (Lintao Zhang/Getty Images)
7/11/2023
Updated:
7/11/2023
0:00
Commentary
The following is a condensed version of “The Emperor’s Tutor” by Ralph L. DeFalco III, published at Law & Liberty.

In 1988, Wang Huning was a well-known political scientist and professor of international affairs at China’s Fudan University. That same year, Wang embarked on a trip that took him to the United States as a visiting scholar and across the country to more than thirty cities and more than twenty colleges and universities. His account of that journey, “America Against America,” is an assessment of the “historical–social–cultural conditions” that created and still shape the American political landscape and its system of governance and economics.

Wang’s observations and judgments have also influenced generations of Chinese leaders and bureaucrats; thirty years after its first publication in 1991, the book is still widely read. In that time, Wang has risen to prominence as a close confident to the succession of China’s paramount leaders—the “Emperor’s Tutor” to General Secretaries Jiang Zemin, Hu Jintao, and now to Xi Jinping. Wang is today the fourth ranking member of the Politburo Standing Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and likely the principal architect of China’s political ideologies and domestic and foreign policies. Those ideologies and policies are influenced by Wang’s experiences in the United States.

America as Allegory

On one level, “America Against America” reads like a travel diary composed of recollections and first impressions. Wang makes superficial assessments and snap judgements that echo long-standing critiques of the social ills of the United States. This is a broader reflection of what Chinese scholars and politicians thought of the United States in the 1980s. That jaundiced view of the country is reinforced by Wang’s narrative. Then too, in the later 1980s and early 1990s, there was no room in Chinese political discourse for outright criticism of China’s policies or political order. Often-times, critics of Beijing’s policies, or advocates of changes to policy made subtle, even allegorical arguments in their writing.

“America Against America,” then, reflects a great degree of political circumspection. Wang’s book was never intended for a U.S. audience but written instead for Chinese political science scholars and students and even more directly for China’s political leaders. Wang wanted his book to burnish his reputation as a Communist thinker, Party loyalist, and neo-conservative. By this time in his career Wang is also likely to have begun to aspire to power and to higher offices in the Party. Wang avoided any criticism of Chinese policies that would either provoke ire or jeopardize his growing political ambitions.

In “America Against America,” Wang argues he is fulfilling his obligation as a Chinese scholar with “a dual responsibility to study both the ‘Chinese phenomenon’ and the ‘American phenomenon,’” so that he “can better understand himself and the world, and better explore the path to China’s strength.” His claim then “to use the case study of the United States to promote our understanding of capitalism and, indirectly, socialism as well,” should be taken at face value. “America Against America” is Wang’s view of the growing schisms in the American polity, the inequities of democracy, “the contradictions inherent in the capitalist mode,” and a warning to the liberalizing elements in the CCP of what China could become.

Values, Order, and Stability

Throughout “America Against America,” Wang repeatedly argues Americans will continue to lose faith with many of the core values of their society and culture. He cites as evidence for this the dissolution of the extended family, new expressions of sexual freedom, an increasingly secular society, a sense of alienation engendered by the rise of technology, and a nihilism that has replaced a broader and explicit morality. The freedom of choice exercised by each individual, Wang argues, makes it impossible for American society to perpetuate its core values in a value-unified nation.

For Wang, and for his audience of CCP leadership, this leads to a troubling question of how to maintain order and stability. “How can there be true harmony when everyone wants to have individualism and private spheres,” Wang writes. “Individualism and private domains are important values in American society, but are they beneficial and harmless within any limits?”

Wang, with the publication of “America Against America,” was cautioning against the loss of core values. Wang understood that social and economic development “cannot be achieved without the spirit of innovation ... in a society that encourages and accepts new and innovative ideas. At the same time, the continuity of values is essential for any society, otherwise social stability is unsustainable.” But the volatile free market of new ideas is filled with the potential for discord and disagreement and always threatens to push aside old values. “The question,” Wang decided, “is how to separate value continuity from technological and material innovation so that value continuity ensures the development of the latter, and the development of the latter strengthens value continuity and transmission?”

In the pages of “America Against America,” that question is left unanswered. Perhaps, it will only be answered by a historical–social–cultural work not yet written: “China Against China.”

The views expressed here are only those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Government.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Dr. Ralph L. DeFalco III is a 25-year veteran of the U.S. Navy and retired in the rank of Captain. His assignments included tours at the Office of Naval Intelligence, Defense Intelligence Agency, on the staff of the Director of Naval Intelligence, and as Deputy Director of Intelligence, National Joint Operations and Intelligence Center. He is a graduate and former member of the faculty of the National Intelligence University and served previously as Fleet Professor, United States Naval War College. His articles, essays, and reviews have appeared in the pages of publications including the Naval Institute Proceedings, International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, International Journal of Intelligence Ethics, and The National Strategy Forum Review, and H-net.
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