Discretion is the better part of White House valor on China demonstrations

First, if the U.S. is going to make any notable comment at all on foreign demonstrations, it should come from the president or at least the secretary of state, not from John Kirby (no disrespect). Second, it is better to be restrained in these things. China may accuse us of somehow orchestrating these protests, but there is no reason to give them evidence we might have done so. More importantly, it is vital that we do not send the wrong signal to the protesters themselves: that some kind of material support from us may be on the way, if there is no such support.

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A friend and interlocutor asked me if that amounts to callously saying, “You’re on your own.” No, but it means recognizing the chilly reality — and the inspiring one — that these protesters are on their own and taking immense risks with their lives.

Ronald Reagan did not voice public support for the Solidarity Movement in Poland until the Kremlin and its puppet government in Poland began cracking down on it in the winter of 1981. A year later, Reagan used his radio address to announce a “Solidarity Day.”

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