BEIJING, Feb. 23 -- Despite a grueling schedule
that involved traveling to four countries in just seven days, Hillary Clinton
looked as sprightly as ever when she addressed Chinese students in Beijing at
the weekend.
Dressed in a smart black suit,
the United States secretary of state raised her index finger and said: "I'm
pleased I have a chance to see some of the young people who are going to make a
difference in the future."
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U.S. Secretray of State Hillary Clinton
speaks during her visit to the Beijing Taiyanggong Gas-fueled Thermal
Power Co., Ltd. (Taiyanggong Power Plant) of the Beijing Energy Investment
Co., Ltd. in Beijing, capital of China, Feb. 21, 2009. (Xinhua/Xing
Guangli) Photo
Gallery>>> |
But the 10-minute speech at China's biggest
thermo-energy plant on Saturday was not Clinton's first chance to meet the
public on her week-long maiden overseas trip.
Apart from singing on a television show in Indonesia,
she also chatted with Japanese students during a visit to Tokyo University last
Tuesday, with topics ranging from her conversation with the Japanese empress to
baseball and robots.
"This is what diplomacy is about," Clinton said. "It
doesn't just operate government to government. It operates people to people."
Furthering public diplomacy and meeting ordinary
people was a "key part" of Clinton's tour, explained Professor Pang Zhongying,
of Renmin University of China.
Pang, who described Clinton's
approach as post-modern, added: "Diplomacy has extended far beyond state level.
Today, statesmen need to go public."
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U.S. Secretray of State Hillary Clinton
speaks during her visit to the Beijing Taiyanggong Gas-fueled Thermal
Power Co., Ltd. (Taiyanggong Power Plant) of the Beijing Energy Investment
Co., Ltd. in Beijing, capital of China, Feb. 21, 2009. (Xinhua/Xing
Guangli) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Clinton was indeed going public in Beijing.
After getting her audience's full attention with
Chinese proverbs and a warning for China not to repeat the mistakes made by the
US industrialization, she left the podium to shake hands with the students from
Tsinghua University, some of whom clutched her autobiography Living History in
the hope to have it signed.
"She's very attractive. Her eyes were deep and
sincere as they looked straight at me," said Yao Yao, a journalism researcher
who was in the US last year when Barack Obama romped to victory in the race to
the White House.
"She asked me whether I am optimistic about China-US
relations. I replied, I am," added an undergraduate in international relations
who chatted with Clinton at the event.
Clinton attended a service at Haidian Christian
Church in Beijing yesterday morning before wrapping up her 40-hour visit to the
capital by talking with readers in an exclusive live webchat broadcast on the
China Daily website.
"By exercising public diplomacy she is attempting to
restore an American image tarnished by the war on terror," added Pang, who
referred to Clinton's visit to Indonesia, which has the largest Muslim
population in the world, as an example.
While there, the former First Lady walked through a
poverty-stricken neighborhood in the capital Jakarta to visit development
projects funded by Washington. They include water purification and recycling
schemes, as well as health projects for mothers and children. "I want to listen
to the voices of the people as well," she said.
(Source: China Daily)
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U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
(4th L) visits the Beijing Taiyanggong Gas-fueled Thermal Power Co., Ltd.
(Taiyanggong Power Plant) of the Beijing Energy Investment Co., Ltd. in
Beijing, capital of China, Feb. 21, 2009.(Xinhua/Xing
Guangli) Photo
Gallery>>> |