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Letter from Beijing: Behind China’s warm welcome of two US vets

Capt. Harry Moyer and Tech. Sgt. Melvin “Mel” McMullen arrived in Beijing this week to much fanfare.

Authorities and regular Chinese embraced the veterans, who served in the “Flying Tigers,” the popular name for American pilots who helped defend China from Japanese invasion in World War II. In a widely published letter, Chinese leader Xi Jinping called for “a new generation of Flying Tigers” to advance U.S.-China relations.

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In Beijing, the honoring of two American veterans who fought for China during World War II – and their stories of courage and compassion – underscores the importance of people-to-people ties, especially as the U.S. and China aim to stabilize relations.

Highlighting such bonds is part of a recent ramping up of people-to-people ties by China and the United States. Both sides hope the exchanges will add ballast as they work to stabilize relations and prepare for a highly anticipated meeting between Mr. Xi and President Joe Biden in November.

For the veterans, it was a chance to remind both Americans and Chinese of a powerful chapter in the countries’ shared history – one of extraordinary compassion and sacrifice. More than 2,000 members of the Flying Tigers gave their lives to defend China, while thousands of Chinese died protecting American pilots in distress, according to official Chinese figures.

“People are the same,” said Sergeant McMullen at a U.S. Embassy gathering on Monday. “Governments may be different, but the people actually always have one desire, and that is to live and to raise their families in peace.”

Two American veterans who fought to defend China from Japan during World War II – retired Capt. Harry Moyer and retired Tech. Sgt. Melvin “Mel” McMullen – are flying high on a new mission. 

In the 1940s, the young aviators joined the “Flying Tigers,” the popular name for Americans serving with the 14th Air Force in China, commanded by Maj. Gen. Claire Chennault. With the benefit of that long lens, the 103-year-old Captain Moyer and 98-year-old Sergeant McMullen arrived in Beijing this week hoping to remind both Americans and Chinese of a powerful chapter in the countries’ shared history – one of extraordinary compassion and sacrifice – and encourage grassroots contacts despite tensions between Washington and Beijing.

During dire combat moments in China, “we knew that the best way – maybe the only way – we could survive was to fly our plane … far away from the target area so that we might be picked up by a brave villager,” Sergeant McMullen said Monday at a ceremony honoring the visiting Flying Tigers delegation at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

In Beijing, the honoring of two American veterans who fought for China during World War II – and their stories of courage and compassion – underscores the importance of people-to-people ties, especially as the U.S. and China aim to stabilize relations.

Highlighting such bonds is part of a recent ramping up of people-to-people ties by China and the United States. Both sides hope the exchanges will add ballast as they work to stabilize relations and prepare for a widely anticipated meeting – confirmed by the White House on Tuesday – between President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in San Francisco in November.  

Beyond possible agreements in areas such as counternarcotics, climate, travel, and technology, the U.S. and China have broad objectives for the meeting, experts say.

Washington hopes that a successful Biden-Xi meeting will “unlock, especially in the Chinese system … [a] clear signal by Xi Jinping that it’s safe to engage with the Americans,” says Jude Blanchette, Freeman Chair in China Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

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