China Daily’s Soft Power Flex: The Roof, the Rain, and the Leverage Beneath

Nov 6, 2025

Highlights

  • Tom Watkins' China Daily essay frames the latest China-US tariff and rare earth truce as Chinese restraint rather than compromise, signaling Beijing's quiet confidence in its strategic leverage.
  • The piece uses diplomatic language to cast China's rise as inevitable while portraying America as weakened by debt and division, revealing a tone of self-assured triumphalism beneath calls for cooperation.
  • Beijing's controlled release of rare earth elements is presented as magnanimity rather than negotiation, demonstrating China's comfort in signaling dominance through 'win-win' rhetoric backed by monopoly power.

In China Daily Global, Tom Watkinsโ€™ essay (opens in a new tab) โ€œFixing a Hole in Our Collective Roofโ€ presents itself as a call for Sino-American coexistenceโ€”but beneath the diplomatic varnish lies something else: quiet confidence. The piece celebrates the latest Chinaโ€“U.S. โ€œtruceโ€ over tariffs and rare earth restrictions, framing it as an act of global stewardship. Yet, the subtext reads like a victory lap: Chinaโ€™s restraint, not capitulation, saved the world from โ€œshooting itself in the foot.โ€

Watkinsโ€™ metaphor of โ€œfixing the roofโ€ is telling.

The essay casts the United States as a house in disrepairโ€”its beams weakened by debt, division, and neglected infrastructureโ€”while portraying Chinaโ€™s โ€œshipbuilding capacityโ€ and โ€œadvances in military technologyโ€ as the natural arc of progress. The tone carries a faint paternalism, urging Washington to โ€œinvest in its peopleโ€ and accept Chinaโ€™s rise as both inevitable and rational.

There is truth in the critiqueโ€”America does need to rebuild its foundations, both physical and social

But beneath the call for cooperation lingers something more self-assured. The essay radiates a quiet triumphalism, the confidence of a power that knows its leverage and no longer feels the need to hide it. A telling temperature check, indeed.

Rare earths flicker through the op-ed like a quiet subtextโ€”barely named, yet weighted with power. Beijingโ€™s decision to โ€œloosen the withholdingโ€ of REEs is cast not as trade policy but as magnanimity, the benevolence of a nation that can afford to be generous. It is the soft smile of control, not the handshake of equals. That, of course, is the tell: China now understands the poetry of scarcityโ€”and expects the world to read it aloud.

And back in Washington, the president declares the deal done, the crisis over, the house dry. But roofs patched in haste seldom survive the next storm. If this is what โ€œpeaceโ€ looks like, we are already standing in the rain.

The essayโ€™s cadence is less conciliatory than self-assured.

Phrases like โ€œthe US cannot contain Chinaโ€™s riseโ€ and โ€œa fence cannot hold back a tsunamiโ€ echo official talking points that blend inevitability with moral high ground. Watkinsโ€™ โ€œ7 Csโ€ (communication, cooperation, competition, etc.) are classic Chinese diplomatic rhetoricโ€”a silk glove sheathing a steel fist of strategic dominance.

For investors and policymakers, the tone matters.

Beijing no longer feels defensive about its rare earth monopoly. It feels ascendantโ€”and comfortable signaling that dominance in the language of โ€œwin-win.โ€

Disclaimer: China Daily is owned and operated by the Publicity Department of the Chinese Communist Party. While this is an opinion column, it provides insight into official mood music emanating from Beijing.

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