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Opinion | Forget Texas, China came out when Deng tipped his hat to Japan

  • The West remembers Deng Xiaoping’s trip to the US in 1979, but it was his historic visit to Japan months earlier that really opened China’s eyes to modernisation

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Deng tries on a cowboy hat in Texas, 1979. Photo: AP

For Western historians, the signal moment for China’s coming out in the modern age was Deng Xiaoping’s trip to America in early 1979, a visit memorable for a single image – of the diminutive, Mao-suited vice-premier donning an oversized cowboy hat at a Texas rodeo.

For historians with a wider lens, especially in Asia, Deng’s trip to Japan months earlier was an equally transformative event.

Deng visits Japan in 1978. Photo: AP
Deng visits Japan in 1978. Photo: AP
Deng went to Japan in late 1978 when the country was on the crest of an industrial wave that was threatening to upend the US-led global order, a phenomenon that echoes in today’s US-China rivalry.

Japanese cars were popular, and its televisions and electronics were flooding foreign stores. The country’s steel mills were putting overseas rivals out of business, leaving the beginnings of a rust belt across the American Midwest, a process China’s factories would accentuate two decades later.

Deng arrived in Japan a hardened figure, the survivor of multiple wars, revolutionary conflict and Maoist purges. But he seemed to sense – as he trekked through Japan’s state-of-the-art factories, and rode its famous trains – that he was witnessing a new industrial revolution.

In a film that captured a moment on the trip, Deng can be seen sitting in the window seat of the shinkansen (bullet train) as the countryside races by. The Chinese leader looks like a giddy child on an adventure. “It feels really fast,” he remarks.
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