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Panda slugger: the dubious scholarship of Michael Pillsbury, the China hawk with Rumsfeld's ear.


In May 2002, ten months before he became president of China, Hu Jintao Hu Jintao (h` jĭn`tou`), 1942–, Chinese political leader, b. Jixi, Anhui prov. A hydroelectric engineering graduate (1965) of Qinghua Univ.  visited Donald Rumsfeld at the Pentagon. The meeting, as then-Vice President Hu saw it, had gone well. Routine U.S.-Chinese military-to-military contacts, which had been suspended since 2001 after a tense standoff over a damaged U.S. spy plane, were to be renewed. China's Xinhua news agency “Xinhua” redirects here. For other uses, see Xinhua (disambiguation).

The Xinhua News Agency (Simplified Chinese: 新华社; Traditional Chinese:
 quickly put out a headline announcing the thaw: "Chinese vice-president, U.S. defense secretary agree to resume military exchanges."

But there was a problem. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Pentagon, no such consensus had been reached. Instead, the two sides had merely agreed that the possibility of such exchanges would be "revisited."

The mix-up, as it mined out, had a likely explanation. According to The Far Eastern Economic Review, Rumsfeld, in a characteristic interdepartmental in·ter·de·part·men·tal  
adj.
Involving or representing different departments, as of a business, an academic institution, or a government: "the petty interdepartmental squabbling that surrounds the making of . . .
 snub, had barred the State Department's interpreter from the meeting. The man on whose language skills Rumsfeld had instead relied was not a professional interpreter but a Pentagon advisor and longtime Washington operator named Michael Pillsbury. With a proficiency (up to a point) in Mandarin, a doctorate in political science from Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions. , and three decades of experience in dealing with the Chinese military The Chinese Military could refer to two things:
  • Military of the People's Republic of China
  • Military of the Republic of China
, Pillsbury has emerged as a Defense Department favorite. That he may inadvertently have caused Hu to leave Washington with an overly conciliatory con·cil·i·ate  
v. con·cil·i·at·ed, con·cil·i·at·ing, con·cil·i·ates

v.tr.
1. To overcome the distrust or animosity of; appease.

2.
 picture was also ironic: Pillsbury is one of Washington's foremost China hawks, consistently warning that Beijing represents a more serious and rapidly growing military threat than other China experts believe.

The Wall Street Journal took notice of Pillsbury last year in a front-page story that described him as "one of the Pentagon's most influential advisers on China, with a direct line to many of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's top aides." The story observed that China, too, has been "keeping tabs on Mr. Pillsbury." For good reason: Thanks in part to Pillsbury's influence, the Pentagon's 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review
"QDR" redirects here. For the computer technology called QDR, see Quad Data Rate SRAM.


The Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) is a report by the United States Department of Defense that analyzes strategic objectives and potential military
, or QDR--the blueprint for future defense strategy and spending--identifies China as the nation with "the greatest potential to compete militarily with the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. ." And the Pentagon's most recent annual report to Congress on China's military contains passages that appear to be lifted directly out of Pillsbury's writings, including warnings of "asymmetric programs" in the works. This can get expensive. The Wall Street Journal recently reported the "the Pentagon now cites China as justification for a range of proposed procurements, most notably a new, multibillion-dollar long-range bomber program."

While Pillsbury has achieved prominence within the Defense Secretary's office, many defense experts within the military, government agencies, and universities reject his scholarship as tendentious ten·den·tious also ten·den·cious  
adj.
Marked by a strong implicit point of view; partisan: a tendentious account of the recent elections.
 at best, and their professional distaste is heightened by personal dislike. "Brilliant" and "charming" are words frequently used by acquaintances to describe Pillsbury, but so are "combative," "conspiratorial con·spir·a·to·ri·al  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of conspirators or a conspiracy: a conspiratorial act; a conspiratorial smile.
," and "ruthless." His career has been one of numerous short-lived jobs, at least three dismissals, and a revoked security clearance.

For hardliners in the Bush administration, however, having a combative, conspiratorial, or ruthless personality isn't exactly a drawback. Rather, it is seen as a desirable quality in an administration that has been in an almost constant state of war with expert consensus, which it sees as a fortress of liberal bias and as a hindrance to bold action. Still, even if the White House might prefer to operate solely on instinct, administration officials need experts inside and outside of government to help them set strategy, to lace their speeches with supportive factoids, to win arguments in inner-agency battles with opponents, to produce studies purportedly showing that all the other experts are wrong ("Carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure. : They call it pollution. We call it life."), and to speak to journalists looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 "both sides" of a debate.

Prior to the invasion of Iraq, eccentric experts on the Middle East dominated administration thinking, but most are now back on the outside of policy. "The Middle East is just a blip," explained a 2005 Atlantic Monthly article headlined "How We Would Fight China" by Robert D. Kaplan Robert D. Kaplan (born 1952) is an American journalist, currently an editor for the Atlantic Monthly. His writings have also been featured in The Washington Post, The New York Times, The New Republic, The National Interest, and . China is the new long-term game, and Pillsbury is the neocons' successor, the latest Cassandra with Rumsfeld's ear. Unfortunately, this is a White House with an unenviable record of picking its Cassandras. The right ones (Eric Shinseki Eric Ken Shinseki (born November 28, 1942) is a retired General in the United States Army and served as the 34th Chief of Staff of the United States Army (1999 - 2003). He is the first Asian American in U.S. ) have often been ignored in favor of the wrong ones (Ahmed Chalabi Ahmed Abdel Hadi Chalabi1 (Arabic: أحمد الجلبي 'Ahmad al-Jalabī) (born October 30, 1944) was interim oil minister in Iraq[1] in April-May 2005 and December-January 2006 and deputy prime minister ). And the consequences have been serious. But which Cassandra is Michael Pillsbury?

Out-hawking the hawks

In person, Pillsbury, a blue-eyed, consciously polished figure in his early sixties, is a combination of charm and caginess. At a recent meeting at a Corner Bakery in downtown Washington, D.C., he sipped lowfat milk and genially fended off questions about his work. He attributes negative press such as the story about his mistranslation mis·trans·late  
tr.v. mis·trans·lat·ed, mis·trans·lat·ing, mis·trans·lates
To translate incorrectly.



mis
 between Rumsfeld and Hu to rumors spread by "panda huggers" (a pejorative pejorative Medtalk Bad…real bad  term for those who take a more benign view of Beijing). "I try to focus on a topic that no one focuses on," he says, contrasting himself to his peers. "It's mainly the future, more than five years ahead, sometimes 10 years ahead."

Actually, scores of China experts within the military, the intelligence community, and the academy devote their lives precisely to assessing the Chinese military and its possible impact on U.S. interests over the next five or 10 years. Nearly all have arrived at the same conclusion: that China's military is nowhere close to being a credible threat to the United States or its interests.

China's military technology is widely considered to be about 20 years behind that of the United States, and its defense expenditures (even if its official numbers are tripled, which some say must be done to capture China's full investment) are less than a fifth of those of the United States, which spends nearly half a trillion dollars per year. The defense budgets of South Korea and Japan are each bigger than that of China, too. To be sure, China, thanks to its growing economic might, has been modernizing its armed forces rapidly. But so has the United States, which currently spends $70 billion per year on defense R&D alone (higher than the defense R&D budgets of the rest of the world combined). As Admiral William Fallon, head of the U.S. Pacific Command, recently told The Wall Street Journal, "Technologically, we are far and away more sophisticated than they [the Chinese] a e, and they know it."

If China were to have any serious capacity to project power beyond its shores, it would need what any great power has: aircraft carriers. As Fred Kaplan Fred Kaplan is a journalist and contributor to Slate magazine. His "War Stories" column covers international relations and US foreign policy, with a particular focus on criticism of the Bush Administration, and major related geopolitical issues.  points out in Slate, though, China has only two (used ones purchased from the U.S.S.R.), which are being used not as weapons platforms but, in the Pentagon's own words, as "floating military theme pares PARES. A man's equals; his peers. (q.v.) 3 Bl. Com. 349. ." Some experts think that China might have one combat-ready carrier by 2015.

When assessing threats, security experts look not only at capacity but also at intent. (Great Britain Great Britain, officially United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, constitutional monarchy (2005 est. pop. 60,441,000), 94,226 sq mi (244,044 sq km), on the British Isles, off W Europe. The country is often referred to simply as Britain.  could incinerate in·cin·er·ate  
v. in·cin·er·at·ed, in·cin·er·at·ing, in·cin·er·ates

v.tr.
To cause to burn to ashes.

v.intr.
To burn completely.
 U.S. cities with nuclear weapons, for example, but this has cost us little sleep.) Here, the debate becomes more heated. All agree that China harbors considerable nationalist sentiment, has its eyes on Taiwan, and has shown a willingness to behave mercilessly towards its dissidents, but they disagree over whether this translates into plans to challenge or outdo the United States militarily. Some, such as Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is by law the highest ranking overall military officer of the United States military, and the principal military adviser to the President of the United States. , take a sanguine view widely shared within the uniformed military. "There are lots of countries in the world that have the capacity to wage war," Pace said in a 2005 press conference. "Very few have the intent to do so. And, clearly, we have a complex but good relationship with China. So there's absolutely no reason for us to believe there's any intent on their part." Some take a darker view. And many simply say there's no telling what China hopes to do and, for now, little point in trying. Many things can happen in twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
. China may become the next Soviet Union. Or its economy might collapse. Or it might become a democracy. Convenient as it may be to lock in one's enemies in advance, the world doesn't work that way.

The debate over intent has led to different policymaking pol·i·cy·mak·ing or pol·i·cy-mak·ing  
n.
High-level development of policy, especially official government policy.

adj.
Of, relating to, or involving the making of high-level policy:
 recommendations. Experts advocating a tougher stance argue that China is more likely to restrain itself in the decades ahead in response to overwhelming displays of force today. To that end, they support increased deployments of forces to the Pacific and more spending on weapons. They also press for a "hedging strategy" of building alliances with China's neighbors, such as Japan and India, should relations with the Middle Kingdom go sour. This, for the most part, has been the approach of the Bush administration.

Those counseling restraint argue that China already has a keen sense of U.S. military superiority. An overtly aggressive posture against a potential long-term threat, they say, will only convince China to become hostile and make it less likely to cooperate on the real, immediate threats posed by Iran and North Korea. Many also warn against using China as an excuse to spend precious defense dollars on weapons we may not need, especially since the United States is, at least indirectly, borrowing money to build them from the Chinese.

On this spectrum of opinion, Pillsbury dwells on the far-hawkish end. Where others view China's intentions as complicated, Pillsbury says that Beijing views the United States as an "inevitable foe." ("He makes simple what is not simple," says Mark Pratt, a former State Department official who has known Pillsbury for over 30 years.) Where others debate the merits of hedging, Pillsbury feels that things haven't gone far enough. "The U.S. can do much more to hedge in Verb 1. hedge in - enclose or bound in with or as it with a hedge or hedges; "hedge the property"
hedge

inclose, shut in, close in, enclose - surround completely; "Darkness enclosed him"; "They closed in the porch with a fence"
 the next few years if the Chinese do not end their excessive military secrecy and begin to reassure their neighbors," he recently told The V/all Street Journal. And where nearly everyone agrees that China is far behind the United States in military capacity, Pillsbury has been among the first, and the few, to argue that Beijing is preparing for an asymmetric military conflict with the United States in which it would draw on secret "assassin's mace" weapons. The term "assassin's mace," more commonly translated as "trump card" (sbasboujian) is, according to Pillsbury, integral to a Chinese notion of "inferior defeats superior." (The Pentagon's most recent annual report to Congress on China's military from May 2006 includes the term, mentioning Chinese efforts to exploit "perceived vulnerabilities of potential opponents--so-called Assassin's Mace [sha shou jian] programs.") An "assassin's mace" might take the form of a computer application, for instance, that would take over an enemy information system, rendering a foe the victim of his own dependence on technology. In Pillsbury's telling, China intends to leapfrog ahead in battle readiness by using assassin's-mace weapons to find breaches in U.S. armor. Moreover, he implies, they could be ready at any time.

Broken China

Pillsbury wasn't always a hardliner Noun 1. hardliner - a conservative who is uncompromising
conservative, conservativist - a person who is reluctant to accept changes and new ideas

hardliner npartidario/a de la línea dura 
 on China. As an undergraduate at Stanford in the 1960s, he was so taken with Chinese culture that he decided to make a career of it. In the 1970s, he enrolled as a graduate student at Columbia University and took a job at the Rand Corporation Rand Corporation, research institution in Santa Monica, Calif.; founded 1948 and supported by federal, state, and local governments, as well as by foundations and corporations. Its principal fields of research are national security and public welfare. . His first moment of fame would come in 1975, when he published an article in Foreign Policy suggesting that China and the U.S. establish military-to-military relations as a counter to the Soviet Union. Many old-school anti-communists objected, but then-Governor Ronald Reagan was among those who were impressed. The Gipper even sent Pillsbury a handwritten hand·write  
tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes
To write by hand.



[Back-formation from handwritten.]

Adj. 1.
 letter of praise.

In 1978, Pillsbury went into government, taking a job as a Republican staff assistant to the Senate Budget Committee. He soon found allies among the Senate's more conservative members, such as Jesse Helms Jesse Alexander Helms, Jr. (born October 18, 1921) is a former five-term Republican U.S. Senator from North Carolina, and a former chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He was considered one of the leading figures of the modern "Christian right".  and Orrin Hatch Orrin Grant Hatch (born March 22, 1934) is a Republican United States Senator from Utah, serving since 1977.

Hatch is a member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, where he serves on the subcommittees on Energy, Natural Resources, and Infrastructure and Taxation and IRS
, but he also made enemies. Prior to his death this year, John Carbaugh, a former Senate staffer, told The Washington Monthly that he had been investigated for a leak in 1980 that had actually come from Pillsbury. "He went after me," said Carbaugh. "I was just blind-sided." (Pillsbury denies the story.)

Holding on to employment was something else. His first job ended after only five months, when Pillsbury traveled to Japan and told his hosts that the U.S. ambassador was "not in touch" with Congress. ("Not only did I not say it, but I took written notes at every meeting," Pillsbury complained to AP after his firing.) By 1981, Pillsbury had managed to secure a spot as acting director of the Arms Control and Disarmament One of the major efforts to preserve international peace and security in the twenty-first century has been to control or limit the number of weapons and the ways in which weapons can be used. Two different means to achieve this goal have been disarmament and arms control.  Agency (ACDA ACDA American Choral Directors Association
ACDA Arms Control & Disarmament Agency
ACDA American Commodity Distribution Association
ACDA American Celiac Disease Alliance
ACDA Azienda Cuneese Dell'Acqua (Italy) 
), but this post, too, lasted only a few months. (A Reagan official told the trade journal Aviation Week & Space Technology that Pillsbury had been a "loose cannon loose cannon
n. Slang
One that is uncontrolled and therefore poses danger: "[His] bloopers in the White House seem to make him . . .
" who'd acted "contrary to Administration policy.") In 1986, Pillsbury achieved his most prominent dismissal yet, when he was let go as assistant undersecretary of defense for leaking to reporters that the administration had begun to supply the resistance in Afghanistan and Angola with Stinger missiles. (Pillsbury denied the allegations.)

But Pillsbury kept coming back, amassing a record for recovery that would exhaust even the most diligent phoenix. Weeks after his 1986 firing, he was back working for four senators--Orrin Hatch, Jesse Helms, Gordon J. Humphrey Gordon John Humphrey (born October 9, 1940) is a New Hampshire politician who served two terms in the Senate as a Republican from 1979 to 1990, and twice ran for Governor of New Hampshire, though both bids were unsuccessful. , and Chic Hecht--as an advisor on foreign-policy issues.

The meltdown of the Bank of Credit and Commerce International The Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) was a major international bank founded in Pakistan in 1972. At its peak, it operated in 78 countries, had over 400 branches, and claimed assets of $25 billion.  in 1991 should probably have ended Pillsbury's career. According to a report released by the Senate Foreign Relations Foreign relations may refer to:
  • Diplomacy, the art and practice of conducting negotiations between representatives of groups or nations
  • Foreign policy, a set of political goals that seeks to outline how a particular country will interact with other countries of the
 Committee in 1992, he had developed close ties to BCCI BCCI Board of Control for Cricket in India
BCCI Bank of Credit and Commerce International
BCCI Bulgarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry
BCCI Bank of Crooks & Criminals International
BCCI Barnsley Chamber of Commerce & Industry
 frontman front·man  
n.
1. also front man A man who serves as a nominal leader but who lacks real authority.

2. Music A leading singer with a group.
 Mohammed Hammoud, a Lebanese Shi'ite millionaire, meeting with him "ten to twenty times" in cities around the world and accepting money from him. The report explained:
      According to Pillsbury, Hammoud paid him an
   advance to coauthor a scholarly text about the
   Shi'ites ... However, Pillsbury refused to disclose the
   amount he had been paid by Hammoud, and when the
   payment was made. Pillsbury argued that these facts
   were irrelevant since he ultimately returned the money,
   although he refused to specify when that occurred.
   Pillsbury stated that his expenses had never been paid
   by either Hammoud or BCCI. However, these statements
   are contradicted by notes taken by BCCI's
   lawyer ...


The report also found that Pillsbury, when BCCI began to totter, had written to the public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most  firm of Hill and Knowlton "offering to be of assistance to BCCI in its public relations efforts."

By the late 1990s, though, BCCI was a dim memory, and Pillsbury a changed man--at least as far as China was concerned. A Sinophile no more, Pillsbury spoke of having been shocked by the Tiananmen killings in 1989 and appalled by anti-American sentiment among Chinese officials. His timing was good. Anti-China sentiment was running high in Washington, with Republican lawmakers depicting the White House as soft on Beijing and Regnery Publishing This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims.

Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details.
This article has been tagged since September 2007.

Regnery Publishing in Washington, D.C.
 releasing books like Year of the Rat: How Bill Clinton Compromised American Security for Chinese Money. For Pillsbury, who'd spent the Clinton years bouncing in relative obscurity as a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council of the United States and as an associate fellow at the National Defense University, knowing something about China represented a way to get back in the game.

Soon, he had emerged as part of an unofficial but powerful Washington group called the Blue Team. Composed of leading anti-China conservatives, the Blue Team (the name comes from a common code designation, red versus blue, for the sides in war games) was dedicated to persuading lawmakers on the Hill to take a harder line against China. And, meanwhile, Pillsbury, with the backing of long-time mentor Andrew Marshall Andrew Marshall can refer to:
  • Andrew Marshall (TKE Legend)
  • Andrew Marshall (writer) of fiction
  • Andrew Marshall (foreign policy strategist)
  • Andrew Marshall (journalist)
  • Andrew Marshall (Asia journalist)
  • Andy Marshall (English football (soccer))
, head of the Pentagon's Office of Net Assessment, released two books: Chinese Views of Future Warfare, in 1997, and China Debates the Future Security Environment, in 2000. They painted a picture of a self-confident China eagerly anticipating the decline of U.S.

"To make incorrect judgments by sending disinformation dis·in·for·ma·tion  
n.
1. Deliberately misleading information announced publicly or leaked by a government or especially by an intelligence agency in order to influence public opinion or the government in another nation:
"

In Pillsbury's view, the crucial attribute that separates him from his peers is an ability to think farther ahead. "What you find with my colleagues is they say they don't need to worry about the future," he says.

Some of Pillsbury's supporters agree. "In Washington, at times, people are risk-averse and have groupthink group·think  
n.
The act or practice of reasoning or decision-making by a group, especially when characterized by uncritical acceptance or conformity to prevailing points of view.

Noun 1.
," says Randall Schriver, an East Asia East Asia

A region of Asia coextensive with the Far East.



East Asian adj. & n.
 specialist at the State Department until 2005. "But Pillsbury feels unbounded by conventional thinking. He thinks long-term, strategically." Derek Leebaert, professor in the government department at Georgetown University Georgetown University, in the Georgetown section of Washington, D.C.; Jesuit; coeducational; founded 1789 by John Carroll, chartered 1815, inc. 1844. Its law and medical schools are noteworthy, and its archives are especially rich in letters and manuscripts by and , calls Pillsbury "one of the few serious scholars in national security," adding that many others "at the top are barely qualified."

But the true difference between most experts and Michael Pillsbury appears to lie somewhere else: namely, in the scholarship. With the exception of Chinese Views of Future Warfare, which is a straightforward compilation of translated essays, Pillsbury's work over the past decade has become increasingly speculative and dubious. In particular, a close examination of his writings reveals a troubling approach to evidence and primary sources.

A case in point is Pillsbury's paper "China's Military Strategy Toward the U.S.: A View from Open Sources" from November of 2001. The piece names numerous Chinese military writings, including an article entitled "Twenty-first Century Naval Warfare naval warfare

Military operations conducted on, under, or over the sea and waged against other seagoing vessels or targets on land or in the air. The earliest naval attacks were raids by the armed men of a tribe or town using fishing boats or merchant ships.
" by Naval Captain Shen Shen, in the Bible, place, perhaps close to Bethel, near which Samuel set up the stone Ebenezer.  Zhongchang, Naval Lieutenant Commander Zhang Haiying, and Naval Lieutenant Zhou Xinsheng of the Chinese Navy Two modern navies have been known in English as the Chinese Navy:
  • People's Liberation Army Navy
  • Republic of China Navy
For Chinese navies before 1912, see:
  • Imperial Chinese Navy
  • Naval history of China
 Research Institute. According to Pillsbury, the article is written to show "how China could adopt several asymmetrical approaches to defeating a larger and more powerful navy," and one of them "will be for China to attack American naval command and information systems." (Underlined boldface Pillsbury's.)

But Pillsbury's footnotes lead to an essay that never discusses how China fits into future naval warfare, much less any sort of hypothetical attack on the United States. (The essay even appears in Pillsbury's 1997 book, translated into English.)

Later in his report, Pillsbury takes on another essay by the same authors and does something similar:
      In an article entitled "The Military Revolution in
   Naval Warfare," Captain Shen Zhongchang and his
   co-authors list new technologies that will contribute
   to the defeat of the United States.... The American
   system may not be so safe from attack.


But the original essay makes no reference to how China might defeat the United States. China, in fact, is never mentioned once in the essay, nor is the concept of defeating the United States.

Asked about these characterizations, Pillsbury said that, in China, "There seems to be a taboo from directly saying the United States. And these people use euphemism eu·phe·mism  
n.
The act or an example of substituting a mild, indirect, or vague term for one considered harsh, blunt, or offensive: "Euphemisms such as 'slumber room' . . .
." If that's the inference, then why doesn't the paper explain this? "Because sometimes when I turn in my first draft, somebody will say, 'Be specific. Say what you mean.'"

Pillsbury also takes dramatic liberties with his translations. At one point in China Debates the future Security Environment, for example, Pillsbury refers to an essay by one General Pan Junfeng that discusses the significance of the IT revolution for future warfare. He cites three sentences, placing them in direct quotation Noun 1. direct quotation - a report of the exact words used in a discourse (e.g., "he said `I am a fool'")
direct discourse

report, account - the act of informing by verbal report; "he heard reports that they were causing trouble"; "by all accounts they were
 marks: "We can make the enemy's command centers not work by changing their data system. We can cause the enemy's headquarters to make incorrect judgments by sending disinformation. We can dominate the enemy's banking system and even its entire social order."

But Pan's piece is worded quite differently. The original sentences--there are actually four, not three--appear in a section discussing the limitations of technological superiority, and they're introduced by a topic sentence discussing how using computers to wage war might allow one side to cause the opposing side (no nationalities are named) "to sink into an information disaster." Two Chinese speakers translating directly from a summer 1996 issue of China Military Science came up with nearly identical translations that read as follows:
      For example, altering relevant data in the
   enemy's computer system can cause his command
   centers and weapons systems to be flooded with
   mistaken information and thereby unable to function
   normally. Pouring false intelligence into the
   enemy's computer network can cause his command
   office to make mistaken decisions, thereby bringing
   about faults in strategic policy. Issuing false orders
   to the enemy's army through the enemy's computer
   system can cause the enemy army to take orders
   from oneself and military movements to sink into
   confusion. Using the computer system to destroy
   the enemy country's bank accounts can sow confusion
   in the enemy country's financial and economic
   order, causing social unrest, and so forth.


Looking back at Pillsbury's version of the above passage, then, it's apparent that he's taken Pan's original sentences and added a non-existent "we," thereby ascribing implicit nationalities to the parties where none is named, and has truncated the original sentences beyond normal conventions of translation.

Shown the different translations, Pillsbury, responding in an email, said, "I do not ascribe as·cribe  
tr.v. as·cribed, as·crib·ing, as·cribes
1. To attribute to a specified cause, source, or origin: "Other people ascribe his exclusion from the canon to an unsubtle form of racism" 
 nationalities to the parties. [A]nd I remind you that it is a photo caption. I had no editorial control over the photo captions." But the photo caption is taken directly from a passage in the body of the book. Pillsbury also claimed to have met personally with General Pan and to have been told "how to interpret his article." But Pillsbury did not explain why he chose to write his interpretation directly into passages that appear in quotation marks quotation marks
Noun, pl

the punctuation marks used to begin and end a quotation, either `` and '' or ` and '

quotation marks nplcomillas fpl

.

The "photo caption" of General Pan, meanwhile, did not go unnoticed by the press. It was quoted, for instance, in a Washington Times article, "Pentagon Study Finds China Preparing for War with U.S.," which used it to show that "China also plans electronic attacks on computer networks."

And what about the "Assassin's Mace," one of Pillsbury's major preoccupations? Here, Pillsbury appears to have taken a common Chinese term, shashoujian, and decided, based on his own unfamiliarity with it ("I first saw this unusual term in ... 1995," he writes in a 2003 article) that it indicates what he calls a "secret project." In fact, though, the term has been around for centuries and has been revived in contemporary Chinese pop culture, a slangy phrase that appears in articles about everything from soccer to romance. Pillsbury cites public speeches by Chinese leaders and articles in Chinese newspapers that speak of developing "shashoujian" weapons, but he never explains how this adds up to evidence of a secret program. It's as if a Chinese researcher, hearing a U.S. official speaking of a need for "kick-ass weapons," were to become confused by the term "kick-ass" and conclude that there must be a secret "kick-ass weapons" program. In short, Pillsbury has identified a secret program that, by all indications, is literally no more than a figure of speech.

"Poetic license poetic license
n.
The liberty taken by an artist or a writer in deviating from conventional form or fact to achieve a desired effect.

Noun 1.
"

Pillsbury's techniques of scholarship carry into his approach to self-promotion. Again, claims and evidence dash. The Wall Street Journal profile, for instance, wrote that "Mr. Pillsbury has never had to worry about steady employment. He's a member of the Pillsbury flour family," and a 1987 Washington Post article describes him as "related to the merchant-millionaire Pillsburys of Minneapolis." In Washington, this is helpful: It brings access to powerful people, attracts invitations to the right parties, and conveys the impression of immunity from the conflicts of interest that might bedevil needier men. Pillsbury's defenders often point to his wealth as an indication of his detachment from career urgencies.

A close examination of the Pillsbury flour fortune, however, shows no links to Michael Pillsbury. Asked about his ties to the family, Pillsbury is at first tentative: "It's a matter of degree. I am in the Pillsbury family tree in America." What about the flour fortune? "I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 where that phrase came from. It didn't come from me." Pillsbury speculates that journalists might indulge in "poetic license."

Similarly, desirable professional affiliations attach themselves to him, but they're often obsolete. Pillsbury continues to figure as a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council in articles, websites, and public appearances, even though he hasn't been with the Council since 1996. He claims to correct such errors "constantly" and says that his rivals are trying to undermine him. "There is this bastard down at the Atlantic Council who is a policy opponent of mine," Pillsbury explains. "He is the one that goes around accusing me of claiming to be a senior fellow when I am not. So, I called him directly. Stop doing this. He got really plucky pluck·y  
adj. pluck·i·er, pluck·i·est
Having or showing courage and spirit in trying circumstances. See Synonyms at brave.



pluck
." And who is he? "I seem to have forgotten his name."

Part of Pillsbury's authority derives from steady appearances in the media, to which he appears to be drawn. (Back in the 1980s, The Washington Post described Pillsbury as "an acknowledged master of political machination MACHINATION. The act by which some plot or conspiracy is set on foot. ," and Time singled him out as one of "Washington's Master Leakers.") Today, Pillsbury makes frequent on-the-record appearances in a variety of sources, from The Wall Street Journal to Defense News, from The Washington Times to "Lou Dobbs Tonight Lou Dobbs Tonight is an editorial and discussion program on CNN, anchored by journalist Lou Dobbs, who is also its managing editor. The hour-long show is aired live on evenings every weekday, and repeated later at night. " on CNN CNN
 or Cable News Network

Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world.
. Still, he says, "I don't return most reporters' phone calls," adding, "I am not, generally speaking, allowed to talk to the press."

Lately, a reliable ally has been Washington Times columnist Bill Gertz, with whom, according to an August 2002 article in the Oriental Economist, Pillsbury has regularly teamed up to derail de·rail  
intr. & tr.v. de·railed, de·rail·ing, de·rails
1. To run or cause to run off the rails.

2.
 nominations to key Asia-related jobs. This, too, Pillsbury denies: "I have occasionally, about five times, given Gertz on-the-record quotes for his stories." Actually, Pillsbury's name has appeared in 32 stories by Gertz since the late 1990s, of which at least 15 have contained on-the-record quotes.

Pillsbury's maneuverings and string-pulling often resemble scenes out of a spy novel, so it's no surprise that he's written his own. Pillsbury says the book still awaits clearance. "There are certain security review authorities," he explains. And he makes an offer: "I think I will put you in it. May have to have you killed off early in chapter one."

In Washington, not many experts with such a record of self-sabotage would retain their influence at the top. But there's a market for Pillsbury: There may be no other China expert with such hawkish views and a Ph.D. who has also served extensively in both the executive and legislative branches of government. More important, he gives his sponsors the research they want. China may turn into a serious enemy, or it may not. For now, we have chosen to assume the former, along with the costs. If the Bush administration has taught us anything, however, it's that overestimating a threat can be as dangerous as underestimating one. Rumsfeld and Pillsbury, it appears, take a different view. But what those of us on the outside must decide, once again, is whether the experts the White House hawks are choosing for their particular insight are really experts at all--whether their specialty lies in facts or speculation, in scholarship or in advertising, in conclusions based on evidence or in evidence based on conclusions.

Soyoung Ho is a Washington Monthly assistant editor.
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Author:Ho, Soyoung
Publication:Washington Monthly
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Jul 1, 2006
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