Colby Cosh

Colby Cosh

Colby Cosh

Maclean’s man in Edmonton writes about everything. Follow Colby on Twitter: @colbycosh

Scolding or welcome?

by Colby Cosh on Thursday, December 3, 2009 4:38pm - 55 Comments

Before anybody melts down completely about the stinging “rebuke” our Prime Minister received from the Chinese Premier, can I ask exactly how sure we are that the insult was intended as an insult? I am looking around for an assurance, from somebody actually in a position to know, that this was indeed the unprecedented savaging/borderline casus belli that everyone but the PM himself is making it out to be. This position would, at a minimum, seem to involve having heard and understood the Premier’s words in the original Mandarin.

Taken literally, all Premier Wen said was that Canadian prime ministers should visit China more often. That’s assuming the translation was at all accurate. (Chinese doesn’t map real well onto English; it is full of ambiguity and embedded wordplay.) But even granting that assumption, Wen’s statement was like most semantic gestures in diplomacy; how one ought to react depends on how one chooses to read the words. Wen might have meant “Be more conscientious about your grovelling, insect!” He might have meant, or intended to say, “We value your company and our relationship with Canada; do drop by more often.”

Reporters like John Ibbitson and Bill Schiller are urging the first interpretation upon us, but only, as far as I can tell, on their own authority; I worry that we are missing the key quote from some Mandarin-speaking senior diplomat saying, in effect, “Damn, I’ve never seen a dressing-down like that, yo.” Is there one somewhere?

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  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Raging_Ranter Raging_Ranter

    I eagerly await the thoughtful 12-page essay that is sure to appear in the Walrus in just a couple of months about how China is ready to nuke us and it's Harper's fault.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/SisyphusThis SisyphusThis

    I believe Canada is 135th on the exclusive list.

  • Lee

    I have not listened to any video or audio in Mandarin and would love the opportunity to listen to it first hand from the horse's mouth.
    It is often common thing to say that it is far too long between visits by friends and family in Asia or friends in Kentucky used to say, be sure to come back and visit us soon in an admonishing manner.. I am wondering if the media hasn't blown it out of proportion and opted to view that as a rebuke. Being Chinese who speak and have good understanding of Mandarin, I have noticed on many business trips to China where the diplomatic translators often did not translate precisely what had been said, even worse not what had been said and more often than not the subtle nuances of the sentiment is often missing.
    The Chinese have a saying " respect is accorded to you by others but shame is something only you can bestow upon yourself"
    Some of us Canadians take gleeful pleasure and be the first to take a negative view to shame one of our own. We never seem to rise above partisanship or pettiness, no matter what the appropriateness of the situation that called upon one to do the right and appropriate thing beyond political bickering or point scoring.

    All things being equal in life, one have the option to take it as a positive or negative.

  • Nicola

    I thought P.M. Harper's comment was very diplomatic and reflected quick thinking. Anyway so now we know our enemies read our media – same thing with the Taliban.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

    Based on several decades of living in Asia, I see this as wildly overblown by the Canadian media. This was more likely a pro forma opportunity by the Chinese PM to express disappointment at the gap in time between visits. There were many reasons for the delay (Harper is not responsible for all five years) and the Chinese were no doubt happy to get it on the record that they were displeased at events such as Parliament's unanimous gesture to offer citizenship the Dali Lama. Nevertheless, now that the visit gap has been noted, it is very clear that both China and Canada are keen to focus on the future not the past.

    Bottom line. Not a big deal. Certainly not the sign of a bad relationship.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Crit_Reasoning Crit_Reasoning

    I'm rarely embarrassed by the Canadian media in general, but this is one of those times. Frantic navel-gazing wankery.

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