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Chinese Officers Meet The Press


Valin

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November 16, 2010

Over the last few years, the Chinese armed forces have become a lot more adept at handling the media. Now officers headed for overseas assignments (peacekeeping or anti-piracy patrols) are being instructed on how best to handle encounters with the media. This is accomplished with a short course on how to deal with interviews and such. Last year, the Chinese armed forces produced their first professional Public Affairs Officers (PAOs). This occurred when the first class of 51 Chinese PAOs graduated from a two week course. Western forces have had such media professionals for decades, but in China, propaganda/media specialists from the Chinese Communist Party have long handled the media needs of the military. But now the military will increasingly handle its PR itself, largely because military affairs involve a lot of highly technical matters that are best handled by specialists (military officers who know what they are talking about).

In the United States, the Defense Information School was established right after World War II, and many other major nations followed suit in subsequent decades. These schools educated officers and NCOs to handle the media effectively. The communist nations, following the lead of the Soviet Union, tightly controlled their own domestic media (which was all state owned). All of these police states maintained large propaganda organizations, which had media specialists trained to deal with foreign media. But since these media specialists spent most of the time in a police state, where there was no free, and aggressive, media, they had problems dealing with reporters who could ask embarrassing questions.

China is still a police state, but it has a growing media industry that is partly free. These privately owned publishers and broadcasters are expected to self-censor, or know when to call a government media specialist for the correct "guidance." But China is now a major importer and exporter, and host to millions of foreign visitors each year. There are a lot more opportunities for people in China to ask government officials, including those from the military, tricky questions. China is also sending more troops on peacekeeping or disaster relief missions. So now the military is training officers to handle a free press, or at least have a fighting chance.

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