Author: David Bandurski

Now Executive Director of the China Media Project, leading the project’s research and partnerships, David originally joined the project in Hong Kong in 2004. He is the author of Dragons in Diamond Village (Penguin), a book of reportage about urbanization and social activism in China, and co-editor of Investigative Journalism in China (HKU Press).

China’s Communication Centers Stumble

Since 2018, China’s leadership under Xi Jinping has pushed a radical reinvention of the country’s international communication — what the Chinese Communist Party still refers to as “external propaganda” (对外宣传) — by thinking beyond central-level media giants like Xinhua News Agency and CGTN and leveraging local and regional networks. The model builds on integrated media centers (融媒体中心) established nationwide to consolidate local propaganda resources, with content then repurposed for international audiences and distributed through international communication centers (国际传播中心), or ICCs. These centers have expanded rapidly to more than 200 nationwide, spanning provincial, municipal, and county levels in a multi-tiered system designed to tell “China’s story” through localized cultural and regional narratives.

Soul-searching about the progress of China’s ICC strategy is the cover story in the most recent edition of International Communications.

But just two years into the rapid expansion of ICCs, the rough edges of the policy are showing. In a cover story for the most recent edition of the journal International Communications (对外传播), published by the China International Communications Group (CICG) under the Central Propaganda Department, scholars Huang Dianlin (黄典林) and Cheng Bingshun (程柄舜) identify deep structural problems threatening how well these centers actually work despite their numerical growth — the authors count more than 150 — across more than 30 provincial-level regions by early 2025.

The article focuses on three key challenges facing ICCs as they attempt to boost China’s international discourse power (国际话语权).

Resource imbalances and poor coordination plague the ICC system from top to bottom, according to the authors. Centers depend overwhelmingly on government budgets rather than market revenue, which could leave them vulnerable when regional finances tighten. (This point is an interesting hint, mirrored in a report last month from the Central Propaganda Department’s Media Regulation Bureau, that policymakers have actually imagined — foolishly, one might say — that ICCs will be commercially viable). Geography makes things worse. Eastern coastal regions monopolize professional talent, mature content production chains, and industry resources, while central and western areas face severe shortages.

The provincial-municipal-county hierarchy suffers from blurred roles, with county-level centers burdened beyond their capacity while provincial centers handle overly detailed work. Regions with similar cultural and tourism resources produce nearly identical content, creating serious homogenization (同质化严重) that wastes resources through redundant competition rather than creating distinctive appeal.

Centralization+
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Over the past 8 years, the CCP has pushed to re-invent “external propaganda” by leveraging local and regional media capacity along with central resources and coordination.
Aug
2018
Xi Jinping’s ICC Directive
Xi calls on authorities to “improve the international communication work structure” and “pool more resources and strength” for telling China’s story abroad.
2018
First ICC Launched
China inaugurates its first International Communication Center in Chongqing, a pilot effort responding to Xi’s call to “innovate” foreign-directed propaganda.
Nov
2019
Institute for Shared Future
Communication University of China establishes the Institute for a Community with a Shared Future (ICSF) to promote Xi’s foreign policy vision through global academic partnerships.
May
2021
Politburo Study Session
Xi leads Politburo session on external propaganda, announces China has “initially constructed a comprehensive external propaganda framework” involving multiple levels and sectors.
May
2022
Yunnan Regional ICC
Yunnan establishes South and Southeast Asia Regional International Communication Center, targeting audiences across Vietnam, Myanmar, Laos and the broader region.
Jul
2023
Legal Enshrinement
China enshrines “the state’s advancement of international communication capacity building” as legal safeguard in Foreign Relations Law.
2023
Malanshan Declaration
15 ICCs sign the “Malanshan Declaration” with central media brands, formalizing coordination between local and central-level external propaganda efforts.
Jan
2024
Hebei Great Wall ICC
Great Wall ICC established under Hebei Provincial Party Committee, appointing overseas communication officers from UK, US, Russia, Brazil, Bulgaria and Bangladesh.
Feb
2024
Heilongjiang Northeast Asia ICC
Heilongjiang establishes Northeast Asia International Communication Center targeting Russian and Korean audiences through bilingual media channels.
May
2024
Zhejiang Provincial ICC
Zhejiang ICC launches with “central kitchen” model for integrated multimedia production. Twelve foreign nationals appointed as Global Ambassadors of Chinese Culture.
Sep
2024
Guangxi ICC Established
Guangxi ICC inaugurated to serve as China’s principal gateway for external communication toward Southeast Asia and ASEAN countries.
Jul
2025
China-Africa Media Alliance
Changsha Municipal Propaganda Office launches China-Africa International Media Alliance. ICSF’s African Media Research Center becomes founding member, marking first documented ICC-ICSF overlap.
Aug
2025
System Reaches 212 Centers
By August 2025, 212 ICCs officially established across China with nine more under construction, spanning provincial, municipal, and county levels nationwide.

Platform mismatches hurt content performance on international social media. The authors write that ICC operators, typically drawn from traditional broadcast and print media backgrounds, produce content following conventional media logic that fails to adapt to different platforms and audiences. In a critique that will be familiar to media organizations everywhere, they note that distribution strategies at ICCs mirror traditional one-way publishing and generally fail to take advantage of the interactive social features of platforms.

The tension between propaganda goals and viral content leaves many centers with little motivation for creative innovation, making it difficult for them to truly stand out on crowded overseas platforms. Account matrices (账号矩阵) — a term Chinese thinkers on international communication often use to refer to overseas accounts on channels generally banned from inside China — across platforms like X (formerly Twitter) and Facebook suffer from weak differentiation, with most adopting formulaic “Discover + place name” naming patterns with muddled branding and overlapping content styles that hurt their chances of algorithmic promotion and weaken user loyalty.

The “Discover Changsha” account on YouTube, one of scores of such social media accounts operated by provincial and city-level ICCs and propaganda offices across China.

Weak evaluation systems are a basic constraint on improving effectiveness. Current assessment metrics, the authors write, stop at superficial indicators like follower counts, views, and likes, failing to capture deeper measures of content reach rates, user emotional identification, attitude change, or behavioral guidance. This shallow evaluation system prevents centers from accurately understanding what overseas audiences actually need and prefer, making it impossible to adjust content strategies in a meaningful way.

The result is that ICC international communication easily falls into the trap of “talking to oneself” (自说自话), unable to move from quantitative expansion to real quality improvement. What the authors fall short of saying here, in their focus on better metrics, is that ICCs (like central state media before them) have made no real attempt to understand foreign audiences at all. This is a fundamental underlying tension in “external propaganda,” which assumes at its core one-way communication.

The CCP Elephant in the Room

How can ICCs become more effective? This is the question the authors pose — because of course it goes beyond their rights to suggest that the entire push for ICC development might be ill-conceived and wasteful. The authors offer solutions centered on “coordination” (协同) across three dimensions. Cross-regional collaboration should pool resources through “mega-region” models grouping provinces with similar cultural backgrounds and development levels, establishing shared funding mechanisms and talent exchange programs. Beyond this, multi-tier operations should clarify roles, they say. Provincial centers should focus on strategy, technology development, and training while municipal and county centers concentrate on producing localized, distinctive content. They add that professional content production chains should bring in commercial content companies and adopt product-oriented thinking with sophisticated data-driven performance evaluation, moving beyond simple engagement metrics.

This all sounds reasonable. But behind this assessment and its concrete recommendations lies an unspoken bind. The authors are essentially calling for ICCs and the media involved to act like credible and relevant media in order to attract and serve audiences. This is, of course, exactly what they cannot do. The point is to “tell China’s story well,” and so many of these limitations and complications stem from this top-down demand, which more often than not makes Party superiors (if we are honest) the true audience.

Provincial-Level International Communication Centers in China
Cumulative Growth, 2018–2025
Click to View ICC Development

The study concludes by emphasizing that local ICCs stand at a critical turning point from "quantitative expansion" to "effectiveness enhancement" (效能提升). Achieving high-quality development, the authors say, requires "jumping out of the thinking limitations of single-point breakthroughs" to build an efficient, flexible, integrated system. Only through better coordination of resources, precise alignment across administrative levels, and market-oriented content production can these centers activate their "endogenous momentum" and truly improve their international communication effectiveness.

All of this will be a tall order for local and regional ICCs, which are operated generally by propaganda officials rather than media professionals. A deep problem glossed over by the International Communications report is a serious deficit of the latter. Real media talent, particularly from the standpoint of international understanding, is in woefully short supply in China, where the renewed emphasis — even as Xi Jinping has pushed to remake the media — has been on Party control. But the ambition behind China's vision of international communication, and the industrial scale at which the project is being pursued, mean that this is a trend observers globally must take seriously. Even if China's ICCs fall short of genuine engagement with foreign audiences, the flooding of the global information space with shoddy and insipid propaganda could impact information integrity, particularly on China-related news, in ways that are unforeseeable.

Global Dreams in Small-Town China

This week, the city of Yichun in China’s southern Jiangxi province announced the opening of its third international communication center — a special office dedicated to promoting the local image to the world and responding to Xi Jinping’s call to “tell China’s story well.” The office, which promises to showcase “Yichun’s charm,” is the latest manifestation of a far-reaching nationwide effort to build China’s “discourse power.” But it might also be a symptom that begs a serious question: Has Xi Jinping’s sprawling domestic campaign for global influence spread itself too thin?

International communication centers, or ICCs, are sprouting across China like mushrooms after the rain. According to some estimates, more than 200 such centers now operate nationwide, including 29 at the provincial level and, increasingly, at the city and county levels. Jing’an County’s new center — Yichun’s third — boasts somewhat unaccountably that its overseas social media platforms have attracted followers from over 70 countries and regions, with a reach exceeding 30 million people. This sounds more like bluster for the sake of political point-taking close to home than a realistic assessment of impact.

The center says it will “deepen local characteristics, shape communication brands,” and push content bearing “Chinese temperament, Jiangxi style, Yichun charm, and Jing’an characteristics” to the world. But is anyone in Yichun thinking about, well, the audience?

Provincial-Level ICCs in China
Provincial-Level International Communication Centers in China
Cumulative Growth, 2018–2025

Whatever the case, this push locally to amplify China’s voice internationally has intensified dramatically during the past five years. Since the Chinese Communist Party first conceived a soft power push nearly two decades ago under Hu Jintao, China’s leadership has obsessed over achieving greater global influence. Central to this effort has been developing “discourse power” — huayuquan (话语权) — commensurate with China’s comprehensive national power.

Under Xi, external propaganda has since August 2013 been combined with the softer-sounding notion of “telling China’s story well,” while framed toward Party officials in language redolent of the Cultural Revolution as a global “public opinion struggle.” By May 2021, speaking at a Politburo study session, Xi stated clearly that international discourse power was essential to creating “a favorable external public opinion environment for our country’s reform, development, and stability.”

Xi frames this as addressing what he calls the “third affliction” — the “suffering of criticism” from Western discourse hegemony, following Mao’s defeat of foreign aggression and Deng’s victory over poverty. In this worldview, the CCP’s legitimacy cannot be secured at home without dominance in the global information space.

Since 2018 Xi’s approach to this goal of greater “discourse power” has been a strategy that we have called at CMP “Centralization+” — essentially the idea that central-level propaganda resources like China Media Group, China Daily and Xinhua must be augmented by leveraging the strength of local and regional media groups and other actors. The strategy employs centralized messaging control while distributing operational capacity across provincial, city, and county-level actors — the most prominent of these being so-called international communication centers (国际传播中心). These local centers launch branded online platforms as well as social media accounts on Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, and X, generally with zero visibility about their state-run identity, flooding information spaces with content tailored to specific regions and languages.

The launch on December 11, 2025, of the Jing’an International Communication Center, a solemn affair.

In some cases, these centers can be well-resourced and effective. Clear examples can be found particularly along China’s southern border, where a handful of provincial-level ICCs are focusing their energy on Southeast Asia. These include the Guangxi International Communication Center, which aims to “tell the story of China and Guangxi to the outside world, and serve to build a closer China-ASEAN community with a shared future,” and the Yunnan South Asia and Southeast Asia ICC, which held at least eight international events between July and November this year (one drawing more than 500 participants from 110 countries).

But Yichun’s third ICC demonstrates how, when centralized ambition meets local implementation, the results can seem comically out of proportion. The Jing’an International Communication Center (靖安国际传播中心), which according to the official release will be “led by the Jing’an County Propaganda Office and operated by the Jing’an County Convergence Media Center,” promises to amplify “Jing’an’s positive energy.” But the tiny office, with its shiny new signboard, seems a caricature of the grandiose goals set out by Xi Jinping during a Politburo study session in late 2013, when he spoke of “strengthening the capacity for international communication and carefully constructing an external discourse system.”

When hundreds upon hundreds of counties across China each have their own international communication center taking to Facebook and Instagram and boasting millions of global fans from “England, France, Italy, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan,” who are they really communicating to? And who are they kidding?

AI Cop Signals VPN Crackdown

Agent 012339 is back on duty. China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS) has deployed its AI anchor once again, this time to warn citizens about the perils of “scaling the wall,” or fanqiang (翻墙) — Chinese internet slang for using VPNs to access blocked foreign websites. The uniformed digital spokesman delivers his message with characteristic earnestness: digital freedom, he says, is actually a trap that threatens both your bank account and the nation.

In late October, CMP reported on the launch of Agent 012339 by the MSS as a new form of messaging to the public.

The MSS WeChat post frames VPN use as a series of escalating dangers. First come the personal risks: stolen credit card information, compromised passwords, and identity theft. The ministry illustrates this with the tale of one user whose credit card was fraudulently charged “thousands of dollars” six months after using a VPN to pay for materials from a foreign institution.

Then comes the espionage angle: VPNs secretly controlled by “foreign forces,” or jingwai shili (境外势力), or even developed directly by foreign intelligence agencies, are designed to plant trojans and steal sensitive data. One employee at an unspecified “classified unit” who downloaded a VPN to access foreign academic forums, Agent 012339 explains, ended up having their phone and computer remotely controlled, leading to the theft of classified research materials and criminal prosecution.

But the ministry’s most revealing concern is ideological contamination. The post warns that citizens browsing foreign websites “without any precaution” are vulnerable to “fraudulent information, extremist ideology, and political rumors” — a cascade of consequences that can transform “curious browsing” into “active participation” in illegal activities. To illustrate, the MSS describes a state-owned enterprise employee who was arrested after regularly visiting “anti-China websites” overseas, watching videos containing “political rumors about us,” and downloading and spreading such content.

What to do instead? Reject VPNs entirely. Individuals and organizations with legitimate academic or business needs should use “legal and proper channels approved by the state” — though the post does not specify what those might be. Everyone else should stick to official media and authorized platforms, avoid downloading apps from unknown sources, and cultivate “healthy internet habits.”

And if you spot someone scaling the wall? Agent 012339 reminds you that the 12339 hotline is always open for tips. The Great Firewall isn’t just about keeping information out — it’s about keeping tabs on who’s trying to peek over.

Beyond Blue and White

Former Global Times editor-in-chief Hu Xijin (胡锡进) marked China’s Journalists Day on Saturday with an unusually pointed critique of local authorities’ handling of news coverage, warning that official “blue background” statements are marginalizing journalists and weakening society’s resilience.

In a Weibo post on November 8, Hu — who served as the Communist Party tabloid’s editor for more than a decade — urged local governments to grant reporters greater access to breaking news events. “Currently, in some places where incidents occur, local governments completely prevent media involvement, allowing only official agencies to investigate and then issue a brief statement in white on a blue background, effectively marginalizing journalists,” Hu wrote. “This is highly unacceptable.”

A blue background notice issued by police in Chongqing regarding Taiwanese lawyer and legislator Shen Bo-yang (沈伯洋).

Hu’s reference to “blue background” statements points to the tongbao (通报), official notices increasingly used by local police and government agencies to announce incidents without allowing the most basic reporting, to say nothing of more in-depth journalistic investigation. These terse, formulaic “white on blue” (蓝底白字) announcements have proliferated across Chinese social media in recent years, often serving as the sole official word on accidents, deaths, and other sensitive local news events.

They are often picked up by prominent news outlets such as Shanghai’s The Paper (澎湃) and The Beijing News (新京报). While they may be attractive sources of free and politically safe content, they have no independent verification and are often worthless as information.

Hu Xijin argued that such rigid controls “sacrifice the comprehensiveness and effectiveness of communication, and more importantly, undermine society’s long-term resilience and capacity to withstand pressure.” He called on authorities to show greater confidence and reduce restrictions on journalists.

In a perfect illustration of the exclusive, lazy use of the blue background notice that now typifies much reporting in China today, Hu’s old newspaper, the Global Times, reported late last week on an investigation by the Chongqing Public Security Bureau into Taiwanese lawyer and legislator Shen Bo-yang (沈伯洋), who is also known as Puma Shen. The Global Times story began with the blue notice, after which a summary repeated the same information, without any additional reporting or context.

True to form, the veteran Global Times editor took a bow to the Party and its press control principles even as he decried the damage done to journalism by the rising tide of blue notices — making clear that he was not talking on China’s Journalists Day about the type of journalism practiced in free societies. He emphasized that journalists must be able to play their proper role under CCP guidance. “The community of journalists is a supporting force for orderly social governance under Party leadership, an organic and important part of it,” Hu wrote. “Once this force is weakened, the harm to society’s long-term harmonious operation will definitely outweigh the benefits.”

A Media Tour in Hangzhou

When Liu Fei (刘非), the Communist Party secretary of Hangzhou, visited the city’s main newspaper group last week ahead of its 70th anniversary, he had no words of wisdom, only perfectly echoed directives from the very top of the political hierarchy. And though this was not news in the general sense of the word, Liu’s speech was splashed across local news media over the weekend, illustrating how CCP control over the media is hammered down through layers of bureaucracy through constant, insistent repetition.

Liu’s October 31 visit to the Hangzhou Daily Press Group (杭州日报报业集团), a Party-run media conglomerate that operates the flagship Hangzhou Daily (杭州日报) and the popular metro daily City Express (都市快报), demonstrated the ritualistic nature of Party control. Speaking to editors and reporters, Liu emphasized that “media run by the Party and government are the propaganda positions of the Party and government, and must be surnamed Party” — language that Xi Jinping placed at the center of press controls with his February 2016 speech on media policy.

Even the imagery emerging from the Liu Fei’s visit to the group bore unmistakable echoes of Xi’s visit to the People’s Daily newspaper more than a decade ago — the top leader staring at new media products and historical displays while accompanied by a troupe of fellow (male) officials.

Liu instructed journalists to “firmly uphold the principle of the Party managing media” (坚持党管媒体) and “establish a Marxist view of journalism” (牢固树立马克思主义新闻观), all boilerplate language reinforcing the subordination of news organizations to the CCP.

The only point of semi-freshness in Liu’s anniversary activities came as he toured the newspaper group’s “AI Media Innovation Center” (新质AI媒创新应用中心), where he emphasized another point of overlap with central policy: The need for constant innovation. Liu stressed that “media convergence” (媒体融合), or the integration of the latest technologies with the media, is “the direction of the times and the general trend” — once again, verbatim Xi Jinping. Liu called on the press group to harness artificial intelligence to “empower and increase efficiency” (赋能增效) in news production.

Whatever efficiencies AI might bring to the city’s newsrooms, the core message in Hangzhou was the same as everywhere else across the country. The media must embrace technological innovation and modernize their operations, but the fundamental mission of amplifying the Party’s voice — and staying within its carefully policed boundaries — remains immutable.

Beijing Frames the Trump Visit

“Openness brings prosperity, closure brings decline.” This declaration opened a commentary in yesterday’s People’s Daily emphasizing China’s commitment to trade openness in the midst of President Trump’s visit to Asia this week, which is expected to culminate in a much-anticipated sideline meeting with Xi Jinping in Seoul, where a “framework” trade deal is on the agenda.

The commentary appeared under the pseudonymous byline Huanyu Ping (寰宇平), which translates something like “universal peace” — and in which the last character ping (平) is a homophone for “commentary,” or pinglun (评论), marking it as a specialized voice for key issues in global affairs. Like other pen names in the People’s Daily, this is not an individual author but rather a writing group (写作组) representing the consensus of the central leadership.

Addressing the upcoming APEC summit in South Korea, the commentary, “Gathering Asia-Pacific Strength to Continue Leading the Tide,” cited survey data from the People’s Daily showing that over 80 percent of respondents believe their countries benefit from APEC cooperation, and that 75 percent support deeper participation.

People’s Daily Pen Names
People’s Daily Pen Names: A Guide to Party Voices
Click to view table
Pen Name Romanization What It Represents
钟才文 Zhong Caiwen Central Financial and Economic Affairs Commission commentary
任仲平 Ren Zhongping People’s Daily Important Commentary (homophone: 人民日报重要评论)
国纪平 Guo Jiping Important Commentary on International Affairs
钟声 Zhong Sheng China’s Voice on international affairs (homophone: 中国之声)
仲祖文 Zhong Zuwen Central Organization Department article
钟轩理 Zhong Xuanli Central Propaganda Department Theory Bureau commentary
钟华论 Zhong Hualun Xinhua News Agency leadership commentary
钟纪轩 Zhong Jixuan Central Commission for Discipline Inspection propaganda
钟政轩 Zhong Zhengxuan Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission commentary
何振华 He Zhenhua “How to Revitalize China” commentaries (homophone: 如何振兴中华)
王兴平 Wang Xingping Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) commentary
皇甫平 Huangfu Ping Liberation Daily (Shanghai) collective pen name, used for reform commentaries in 1991-92
郑青原 Zheng Qingyuan “Getting to the Source” – commentaries on political reform (homophone: 正本清源)
宣言 Xuan Yuan Central Propaganda Department (homophone: 宣传 “propaganda”)
本报评论员 Commentator from this Newspaper Important staff-written piece representing senior leadership views

Interestingly, this same survey, conducted by the International News Department of the CCP’s flagship newspaper — under the direction of the Party’s Central Propaganda Department — was ceremoniously released earlier this month during the China-South Korea Media Cooperation Forum (中韩媒体合作论坛) in Seoul. That event, logged in our Lingua Sinica database, was a representative case in how China exploits ostensible media diplomacy to advance foreign policy objectives, often ahead of key diplomatic events.

Participants in a media cooperation forum in Seoul earlier this month read a survey produced by China, purportedly on social views in the region on deepening APEC cooperation.

In a written response to CMP following the event, Kim Jin-ho (金珍镐), a professor at South Korea’s Dankook University who was quoted in the People’s Daily, said his remarks at the Seoul forum were “carefully coordinated in advance with reporters from both the Maeil Business Newspaper and the People’s Daily.” Kim was quoted in the People’s Daily as remarking that media should “channel public opinion toward positive interaction” (引导舆论正向互动), language that echoes official CCP framing on media control, suggesting the primary role of media is to support bilateral relations.

Yesterday’s Huanyu Ping commentary emphasized that “open cooperation” has driven regional success over the past 30 years while warning that “protectionism has become one of the most severe challenges to regional development.” It quoted Chilean President Gabriel Boric as saying, in a clear but veiled reference to US President Donald Trump, that “launching trade wars leads nowhere.” These remarks were first reported in China’s state media back in May this year, when Boric made a visit to Beijing.

A second commentary yesterday appeared under the byline Zhong Sheng (钟声), or “Voice of China,” a homophone representing central leadership opinions on foreign affairs. This piece reported on US-China trade talks held October 25-26 in Kuala Lumpur, stating the two sides “reached basic consensus on arrangements to address respective concerns” on maritime logistics, shipbuilding tariffs, fentanyl enforcement, and agricultural trade. The commentary stressed the principle that “cooperation benefits both, while confrontation harms both,” a line that China has tread consistently, portraying itself as the voice of global responsibility in a time of turmoil.

The Zhong Sheng piece also referenced the recently concluded Fourth Plenum, which approved proposals for the 15th Five-Year Plan and called for “steadily expanding institutional opening, [and] maintaining the multilateral trade system.”

The deployment of both commentaries on the same day, using distinct pseudonymous voices standing in for the consensus view of the central leadership, exemplifies China’s messaging approach around major diplomatic events. The Seoul media engagement, survey release, and now these twin commentaries represent a coordinated narrative strategy — with the hope of preparing elite opinion ahead of the high-stakes diplomacy in Seoul.

Foreign Voices for Xi’s Global Vision

Yesterday the front page of the CCP’s official People’s Daily pushed strongly on Xi Jinping’s global quartet of signature policy initiatives ahead of next week’s Fourth Plenum and the anniversary of the founding of the United Nations. Today, the paper followed with a common propaganda tactic — quoting foreigners to rubber stamp the party’s wisdom and genius.

The piece, titled “The Four Great Global Initiatives: A Clear Roadmap to a Multipolar World” (四大全球倡议,迈向多极世界的清晰路线图), appears on page three under the “International Forum” (国际论坛) column — a typical and oft-used feature showcasing foreign voices that validate Beijing’s narratives. The byline belongs to Abdelkader Berrich, identified as an Algerian member of parliament and economist. His commentary faithfully echoes the framing from Xi’s Qiushi article, praising China’s “responsible major power role” (负责任的大国担当) in reshaping the international order. Berrich argues that each initiative “precisely responds to global challenges in specific domains,” together forming “a complete vision for pushing the world toward balanced development.”

This deployment of foreign voices is standard propaganda practice. By featuring ostensibly independent international commentators — particularly from the Global South — Chinese state media seek to demonstrate that Xi’s vision enjoys legitimacy beyond China’s borders. The timing of the “Four Great Initiatives” push is deliberate — coming ahead of next week’s plenum and the UN anniversary, as China tries to emphasize its role as a responsible, global power, and signal legitimacy internally within the party.

Echoing the language of yesterday’s promotional read-out on Xi Jinping’s featured article in the Party journal Qiushi (求是), the text of today’s article describes the “decline of the unipolar order” (单极秩序的式微) — a reference to the United States — as “an irreversible historical trend.” It positions China’s initiatives as the inevitable alternative.

The track record of the People’s Daily on foreign voices — in bylines as well as in direct quotes and paraphrases — urges caution around such examples of validation. Last month, the paper published a commentary under the byline of NBA star LeBron James, praising Chinese “enthusiasm and friendliness” and framing basketball as “a bridge that connects us.” Representatives for James quickly disavowed the piece, saying he had only ever conducted interviews with Chinese media. The People’s Daily issued no correction. When politics trump professionalism at the Party’s flagship newspaper, foreign endorsements — whether fabricated or faithfully rendered — serve the same propaganda purpose.

提法
Explicit CCP Terminology Used in the People’s Daily
Commentary by Algeria’s Abdelkader Berrich
October 17, 2025
Community of Shared Future for Mankind
人类命运共同体 rénlèi mìngyùn gòngtóngtǐ
Xi Jinping’s signature concept positioning China as architect of a new global order. Unlike universalist frameworks based on individual rights, this concept emphasizes state sovereignty and “common interests” defined by the CCP. It appears throughout party discourse as the overarching vision for the Four Great Global Initiatives.
Responsible Major Power Role
负责任的大国担当 fùzérèn de dàguó dāndāng
Self-congratulatory phrase used to portray China as a benevolent global leader. The term “担当” (dāndāng) implies shouldering responsibility — suggesting China is stepping up where others (implicitly the US) have failed. Standard in CCP discourse about China’s international role.
China Solution / China Plan
中国方案 Zhōngguó fāng’àn
Implies uniquely Chinese (CCP-designed) answers to global problems, positioned as alternatives to Western approaches. Part of propaganda framing that presents the CCP’s authoritarian governance model as exportable wisdom rather than simply China’s domestic political system.
Decline of the Unipolar Order
单极秩序的式微 dānjí zhìxù de shìwēi
Anti-US framing presenting American-led international order as inevitably collapsing. The term “declining” (式微), or shìwēi, suggests historical inevitability, drawing on Marxist historical materialism. Used to position China’s “multipolar world” vision as the natural successor.
International Discourse Power
国际话语权 guójì huàyǔquán
A uniquely CCP concept viewing global narrative control as a form of power to be seized and wielded. Not about free exchange of ideas, but about the authority to define terms and frame debates in international forums. Reflects the party’s view that whoever controls the discourse controls legitimacy — a key concern as Beijing seeks to reshape global norms.

Xi Jinping’s Global Quartet

The front page of today’s People’s Daily announces the publication of a major policy article by Chinese leader Xi Jinping (习近平) in the party’s flagship theoretical journal Qiushi (求是), bundling together what the party now characterizes as “Four Great Global Initiatives” (四大全球倡议) — a quartet of related solutions for international challenges. The article, titled “Promoting Implementation of the Global Development Initiative, Global Security Initiative, Global Civilization Initiative, and Global Governance Initiative,” collects Xi’s statements from September 2021 to September 2025, organizing them around his concept of a “community of shared future for mankind” (人类命运共同体).

The piece is meant to synthesize China’s response to what the party characterizes as four critical “deficits” (赤字) facing the world. These are: the “peace deficit” (和平赤字); the “development deficit” (发展赤字); the “security deficit” (安全赤字); and the “governance deficit” (治理赤字).

Xi’s Four Great Global Initiatives
四大全球倡议
Global Development Initiative Development Deficit
全球发展倡议发展赤字
Emphasizes “inclusive” economic globalization with six core principles, including development prioritization, people-centered approaches, and harmony between humanity and nature. Positions the Belt and Road Initiative as a practical vehicle for achieving these goals.
Global Security Initiative Security Deficit
全球安全倡议安全赤字
Promotes “common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security” while rejecting countries “pursuing their own so-called absolute security”—a clear reference to U.S. security policy. Advocates for a security framework based on cooperation rather than zero-sum competition.
Global Civilization Initiative Peace Deficit
全球文明倡议和平赤字
Emphasizes respecting “diversity of world civilizations”—an implicit challenge to universal values that promotes China’s concept of “common values for all humanity.” This formula emphasizes the power of the nation state over citizens, with the “rights” of countries and their systems taking precedence over individual rights.
Global Governance Initiative Governance Deficit
全球治理倡议治理赤字
Confronts what Beijing portrays as threats from “Cold War mentality, hegemonism, and protectionism” — coded language for U.S. policies. Argues that global governance has reached a crossroads, with the implication that the world must turn in China’s direction.

This suite of global initiatives, the People’s Daily read-out today says, is China’s effort “to resolve the above deficits and promote the building of a better world” (破解上述赤字, 推动建设一个更加美好的世界). This framing positions Xi as a responsible and responsive global leader offering comprehensive solutions to international challenges. In this equation, the Belt and Road Initiative (一带一路), lionized during Xi’s first and second terms, is subordinated as a practical vehicle for these loftier aspirations.

The bundling of Xi’s “Four Great” initiatives has gathered pace particularly since late August and early September, taking the stage during the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). The push to promote the concepts has redoubled this month with a crucial CCP plenum next week and the upcoming 80th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations. The quartet signals Xi’s effort to consolidate his standing with both domestic party elites and the international community.

The People’s Daily read-out hailing the Qiushi article referred to this year “an important moment to remember history and create the future together” (铭记历史、共创未来的重要时刻). And the central idea here is that Xi Jinping is claiming this crossroads for China under the rule of the CCP.

Page 6 of the overseas edition of the CCP’s People’s Daily on October 13, a huge feature on China’s role in founding the UN (erasing the ROC from the story).

In recent weeks, before and through the grand military parade held in Beijing on September 3, state media have promoted a revisionist view of history in which China — meaning the current People’s Republic of China under the leadership of the party — played the most decisive role in the founding of the United Nations. Among these efforts, a large feature story in the overseas edition of the People’s Daily on Monday focused on China’s “immense contributions” to the founding of the UN, with framing that completely erased the role of the Republic of China (ROC) — the current name for Taiwan. The feature story showcased materials from the first session of the UN General Assembly now kept in Chongqing, the wartime capital of the ROC.

When it comes to China’s gaze on the future as glimpsed in Xi’s Qiushi article, there is an implicit but unmistakable message about the values of the West as failing to be “inclusive” (包容). Language about the Global Civilization Initiative (GCI) speaks of respecting “diversity of world civilizations” (世界文明多样性), an implicit challenge to the notion of universal values that promotes China’s own concept of “common values for all humanity” (全人类共同价值). While those may sound superficially similar, China’s formula emphasizes the power of the nation state over citizens and communities — the “rights” of countries and their systems taking precedence over individual rights.

Another clear message between the lines is about the United States as an irresponsible force. The Global Governance Initiative (GGI) directly confronts what the party portrays as threats from “Cold War mentality, hegemonism, and protectionism” (冷战思维、霸权主义、保护主义) — barely coded language that is a clear reference US policies. The article argues that while the UN emerged from the “painful lessons” (痛定思痛) of two world wars 80 years ago, “the world has entered a new period of turbulence and transformation, and global governance has reached a new crossroads” (世界进入新的动荡变革期,全球治理走到新的十字路口).

The underlying message is unmistakable: Standing at this crossroads, the world must turn in the direction of China.

The Repetition Complex

When it comes to China’s economy, the future has never been brighter. That is the point forcefully made this month by a series of eight commentaries published in the official People’s Daily, which repeatedly stress that “to believe in China is to believe in tomorrow.” The articles were written by Zhong Caiwen (钟才文), a very prominent economic expert that no one on earth has ever heard of — because, of course, he does not exist.

Zhong Caiwen is a pen-name for a collaboration between writing groups at both the Central Propaganda Department (中宣部) and the Central Financial and Economic Affairs Commission (中央财经委员会), the bodies within the Chinese Communist Party that are responsible for political messaging and supervision of the financial system respectively. Such homophonous pen names are common in Party-state media, allowing powerful departments to voice official positions while signaling their authority to other Party insiders.

People’s Daily Pen Names
People’s Daily Pen Names: A Guide to Party Voices
Click to view table
Pen Name Romanization What It Represents
钟才文 Zhong Caiwen Central Financial and Economic Affairs Commission commentary
任仲平 Ren Zhongping People’s Daily Important Commentary (homophone: 人民日报重要评论)
国纪平 Guo Jiping Important Commentary on International Affairs
钟声 Zhong Sheng China’s Voice on international affairs (homophone: 中国之声)
仲祖文 Zhong Zuwen Central Organization Department article
钟轩理 Zhong Xuanli Central Propaganda Department Theory Bureau commentary
钟华论 Zhong Hualun Xinhua News Agency leadership commentary
钟纪轩 Zhong Jixuan Central Commission for Discipline Inspection propaganda
钟政轩 Zhong Zhengxuan Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission commentary
何振华 He Zhenhua “How to Revitalize China” commentaries (homophone: 如何振兴中华)
王兴平 Wang Xingping Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) commentary
皇甫平 Huangfu Ping Liberation Daily (Shanghai) collective pen name, used for reform commentaries in 1991-92
郑青原 Zheng Qingyuan “Getting to the Source” – commentaries on political reform (homophone: 正本清源)
宣言 Xuan Yuan Central Propaganda Department (homophone: 宣传 “propaganda”)
本报评论员 Commentator from this Newspaper Important staff-written piece representing senior leadership views

Roughly summarized, the series says that thanks to “Xi Jinping Economic Thought” (习近平经济思想) — this being the buzzword under Xi’s self-aggrandizing signature “banner term” dealing with economic policy — China’s economy is seeing steady development and resilience in the face of global turmoil and US tariffs. Through prioritizing innovation, social security and international openness, the two departments say the Party has improved livelihoods, consumption, graduate opportunities, and foreign investment opportunities. The eight-article prelude reads as an extended lecture on keeping faith with “Xi Jinping Economic Thought,” which has been something of a laggard among Xi’s banner term-related formulas as the economy has experienced difficult headwinds internationally.

Clearly, one key point of the series is to gainsay international economic detractors. “Recently,” one article in the series said on October 3, “some voices, both internationally and domestically, have argued that investment and development in China have passed their golden age and that opportunities are dwindling.” But there are hints of grudging admission too. On October 2, another article confessed that “prices remain sluggish,” businesses were seeing difficulties, and that domestic demand was “weak.”

An October 2 commentary by “Zhong Caiwen” on page 2 of the People’s Daily.

The timing of the series also matters. It arrives just weeks ahead of the Fourth Plenum of the CCP’s Central Committee, scheduled for October 20-23, which will set the groundwork for China’s 15th Five-Year Plan covering 2026-2030. These plenary sessions are pivotal moments in Chinese policymaking and political positioning. Let’s remember: It was the Third Plenum in 1978 that launched “reform and opening up,” and the 2018 Second Plenum that eliminated presidential term limits for Xi. This year’s plenum faces the uncomfortable task of addressing mounting economic pressures, including a 29 percent drop in foreign direct investment and the ongoing impact of tariffs from the United States and the EU.

At base, the series is an attempt to set the tone for the Fourth Plenum before the harder conversations begin.

To this end, the series deploys a familiar tactic of redirection — looking aside from present and persisting problems to make a bigger sell on the future. The October 4 installment of the series says at one point that “China’s future is entirely predictable.” And repeated five times throughout the series is the phrase, borrowed from Xi Jinping’s March remarks to international businesspeople, that “to believe in China is to believe in tomorrow, and to invest in China is to invest in the future” (相信中国就是相信明天,投资中国就是投资未来).

But this bold declaration of confidence, republished by multiple media outlets within China, suffers from a fatal flaw hardwired into how China’s ruling Party continues to communicate even well into the 21st century — a kind of repetition complex. If someone reassures you that everything is just fine, you relax: Good, that’s good to hear. If they say it again, there is a frisson of doubt. And when the reassurance comes a third time, it begins to sound like something other than confidence. You are sure there is much more they are not saying.

Eight definitive declarations of confidence is enough to sow doubt in all but the firmest of believers.

The Malice Police

In China’s digital landscape, even feelings can be subject to government regulation. On September 22, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) announced its latest “Clear and Clean” (清朗) campaign—this time targeting the “malicious incitement of negative emotions” (恶意挑动负面情绪) across social media, short video, and livestreaming platforms. The two-month campaign promises to crack down on everything from “group antagonism” to “excessive rendering of pessimistic emotions.”

How will run-of-the-mill negativity be distinguished from the incitement of negativity? Is feeling and speaking with positivity now the law of the land? The next enforcement step, naturally, will have to be vigilant policing of the use of extravagant positivity to maliciously poke fun at the leadership. Sound ridiculous? It is already policy elsewhere, in the Chinese Communist Party’s active posture toward “low-level red” and “high-level black” — more in this paper on the topic.

Just the latest absurdly overweening action by the CAC, the notice is a prime example of how political and legal enforcement operate under the CCP. Rather than relying on consistent, transparent rules applied uniformly across platforms, China’s officials and regulators turn to sweeping “special actions” (专项行动) announced throughout the year, granting officials across the country’s vast bureaucracy broad discretionary power to pursue vaguely defined violations and make examples of bad actors — all with the goal of instilling fear and reshaping online discourse.

And fear is the point — whether we are speaking about the ethos of the regulators themselves, or about their tactics. Fear is the fundamental tool applied by agencies like the CAC and offices like the Central Propaganda Department to enforce political controls. A fearful journalist or editor, unable to see the red lines, will think twice. A fearful platform, like RedNote or Bilibili, will turn up the pace on deletions and account suspensions to ensure they “comply.”

A lingering sense of anxiety forms the foundation of China’s media and information policy today — going back to the political upheaval of 1989 that fundamentally transformed the Party’s approach to press control.

The “special action” approach to governance also lays bare its own ineffectiveness. The most recent action from the CAC is to extend over two months. What then? An end to negativity? Surely not. But one thing you can be sure of: the necessity of the next, and then the next, “special action.”

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CAC “Clear and Clean” Special Actions Timeline – China Media Project

CAC “Clear and Clean” Special Actions Timeline

A selection of crackdowns since 2024

February 2024 (Duration: Seasonal)

Spring Festival Environment Cleanup

CAC launches comprehensive campaign targeting misleading travel content, viral drama videos, and year-end commentary during Chinese New Year period. Sets template for seasonal content control.
March 2024 (Duration: Ongoing)

Corporate Defamation Crackdown

“Optimizing Business Environment” campaign targets accounts spreading false information about companies and entrepreneurs, including alleged “extortion” through negative coverage.
August 2024 (Duration: 1 month)

Livestream Chaos Cleanup

Month-long campaign targets fake charity streams, pseudo-expertise, and “soft pornography” in live broadcasts. Requires professional certification for medical, legal, and financial advice.
June 2025 (Duration: 3 months)

AI Technology Abuse Campaign

Three-month intensive targeting AI deepfakes, unauthorized voice cloning, and algorithmic manipulation. Requires content labeling and platform detection capabilities for synthetic media.
July 2025 (Duration: 2 months)

“Self-Media” Misinformation Targeting

Two-month action requires independent creators to cite sources, obtain professional certification, and face platform liability for unverified content.
September 2025 (Duration: 2 months)

Negative Emotions Policing

Current two-month campaign targets “malicious incitement of negative emotions” including pessimistic content, conspiracy theories, and excessive self-deprecation across all major platforms.