lørdag 19. oktober 2024

In Retrospect: Deng Xiaoping's Great Leap Outward (Time, 1979)

Shortly after the U.S. announced its rapprochement with the People’s Republic of China last December after nearly 30 years of bone-deep hostility, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance declared: “A new era is upon us.” But the idea of “a new era” is a hard one to grasp, and despite acres of newsprint, miles of film footage and endless commentaries, nothing is likely to drive home the reality of it all more effectively than the tableau that is to unfold this week: a diminutive (barely 5 ft.), elderly (74 years) Chinese gentleman alighting from a white Boeing 707 at an airport near Washington and plunging into a hectic, week-long visit to the U.S.

The visit of China’s spry, shrewd Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-p’ing is the stunning climax of the Great Leap Outward that he conceived, planned and executed for China after decades of xenophobic isolation. It marks the first official visit to the U.S. by a top-level Chinese leader since the Communist takeover in 1949. Nearly five years ago, when he was China’s Deputy Premier, Teng flew to New York to address the U.N. General Assembly, but he was not an official visitor; Washington and Peking did not have full diplomatic relations. 

This time Teng rates the complete ceremonial treatment. He is to spend at least five hours with President Carter during three sessions at the White House. He meets tout Washington in a dizzying three-day whirl of breakfasts and banquets, sightseeing tours and working lunches. He then embarks on a four-day cross-country fiesta that offers him additional fetes, factory tours, press conferences and even barbecue and wild West shows—plus an unequaled public forum for airing China’s views.