I just read an interesting post by Eric about how serious countries take diplomacy seriously and how they usually send people who are well versed in the art of international relations. He says that they don’t do like in Nigeria where people are appointed as ambassadors because they helped them turn off the IREV or rig elections.
These guys are selected for their skills in espionage and foreign affairs. Calder Walton hinted at this in his book “Spies: The Epic Intelligence War Between East and West”
Unlike in the American patronage system and the Nigerian political-reward model, in China, you cannot buy an ambassadorship with campaign donations, nor can you be handed one as a consolation prize for political favors.
China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) operates a closed-loop ecosystem. The journey usually begins at the China Foreign Affairs University (CFAU) in Beijing, an institution explicitly designed to breed diplomats. They recruit top students straight out of high school or early university.
Once you enter the MFA, you are in it for life. Every single Chinese ambassador is a career diplomat who has spent 20 to 30 years climbing the ranks of the ministry. There are zero political appointees. A successful Chinese tech billionaire or a retired provincial governor cannot suddenly become the Ambassador to France.
Linking back to Eric’s point about Putin speaking fluent German, the Chinese prioritize extreme linguistic and regional specialization.
When a young diplomat joins the MFA, they are often assigned to a specific geographic directorate, say, Latin America or Sub-Saharan Africa. They are sent to master the local languages, often studying indigenous dialects rather than just relying on English or French.
A Chinese diplomat assigned to the Middle East will spend their entire career rotating through Arab nations, mastering the culture. By the time that person is promoted to ambassador 25 years later, they possess a terrifyingly deep institutional memory of that specific region. Have you seen those Chinese speaking fluent Hausa? It’s intentional.
Just like the US and Russia, China seamlessly integrates its intelligence apparatus with its diplomatic corps. The Ministry of State Security (MSS), China’s primary civilian intelligence agency, works hand-in-glove with the embassies.
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Many Chinese embassies act as hubs for state-backed intelligence gathering. Because the MFA acts as a unified front, it is often indistinguishable where the traditional diplomat ends and the intelligence operative begins. They are all trained to advance the exact same centralized agenda set by the Chinese Communist Party.
I saw that ECOWAS recently unveiled its headquarters in Nigeria. The $56.5 million state-of-the-art complex was entirely funded as a grant by the Chinese government. LOL Remember they also built the OAU headquarters and the spying discovery made after? Yeah!
Unlike American or European diplomats, who might occasionally express personal flair or leak dissenting memos to the press, Chinese diplomats operate under absolute, iron-clad discipline. In recent years, this birthed the “Wolf Warrior” style of diplomacy, an aggressively confrontational posture where Chinese diplomats fiercely defend Beijing’s policies on social media and in press conferences.
They do this because their primary audience is not the host country; their primary audience is the leadership back in Beijing. Their career advancement depends entirely on how fiercely they execute the central committee’s directives.
China treats diplomacy like a military operation. It is staffed exclusively by lifelong professionals trained from youth to speak the language, understand the local terrain, and execute Beijing’s will with absolute precision. When they send an ambassador to a foreign capital, they are sending a highly calibrated instrument of the state, not a political crony on a retirement vacation like Reno or FFK.
Tosin Adeoti
