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2026年3月25日 星期三

From Iron and Bamboo to Today’s Digital and Hybrid Curtains: China’s CCP, Russia, and the New Barriers to the West

 From Iron and Bamboo to Today’s Digital and Hybrid Curtains: China’s CCP, Russia, and the New Barriers to the West


Origins of “Iron Curtain” and “Bamboo Curtain”

The term “iron curtain” originally comes from 19th‑century theatre safety: an iron fire screen that could drop between stage and audience to contain flames. By the 20th century, it evolved into a political metaphor for an impenetrable divide. In 1946, Winston Churchill famously said an “iron curtain has descended across the Continent,” describing the closed, controlled borders between Soviet‑dominated Eastern Europe and the liberal democracies of the West. The phrase stuck as shorthand for the physical and ideological partition of the Cold War blocs.

Bamboo curtain” was coined later as an Asian counterpart. It drew directly from “iron curtain,” but used bamboo—an image of East Asia—to describe the communist barriers separating the People’s Republic of China (PRC), North Korea, and other communist or single‑party states in East and Southeast Asia from the capitalist West. Unlike the heavily fortified European frontier, the “bamboo curtain” was often less about walls and more about censorship, visa controls, and political isolation; it was also less stable, shifting with the Sino‑Soviet split and later with Sino‑US rapprochement in the 1970s.

By the late Cold War and early post–Cold War period both terms lost their crispness. The “bamboo curtain” came to describe more fluid, uneven barriers—for example, closed regimes like Burma/Myanmar or later North Korea—while the “iron curtain” faded after the 1989 revolutions and the Soviet Union’s collapse.


What Curtain Today for the CCP’s PRC?

For the Chinese Communist Party–ruled PRC today, the old “bamboo curtain” no longer fits neatly. The PRC is deeply integrated into global trade and finance, yet it remains a highly controlled, surveillance‑heavy autocracy. The most accurate contemporary metaphors are:

  • “Cyber‑wall curtain” or “firewall curtain”: The Great Firewall already blocks foreign platforms, censors information, and controls digital discourse; state media and AI‑driven propaganda further deepen this barrier.

  • “Digital bamboo curtain”: A hybrid name that keeps the “bamboo” image but adds “digital” to stress how control now runs through internet regulation, social‑credit‑like monitoring, and data sovereignty rather than just physical borders.

This “digital curtain” reflects how the CCP lets capital and tourists cross the border but restricts ideas, information flows, and political organization. It is porous economically yet rigid ideologically, making it less a solid wall and more a filtering curtain—selectively blocking and reshaping what can enter and leave.


What Curtain Today for Putin’s Russia?

For Putin’s Russia, the old “iron curtain” also needs updating. Russia is not sealed off like 1980s Eastern Europe; it still trades with Europe, the Middle East, and Asia while running a large‑scale disinformation and cyber‑espionage apparatus. Modern labels that fit better include:

  • “Mirror‑iron curtain” or “hybrid‑iron curtain”: The iron image remains (centralized control, repression of dissent, state‑directed media), but now layered with cyber‑warfare, disinformation, and hybrid tactics aimed at weakening Western democracies from the outside.

  • “Imperial‑iron curtain”: Stresses Putin’s model—restoration of a great‑power, autocratic zone around Russia, backed by military coercion and economic leverage on neighbors—while still allowing selected elites to move abroad and spend in the West.

Unlike the Soviet curtain, which sought to lock out the West, Putin’s curtain is aggressively outward‑looking: it seeks to disrupt and fracture NATO and the EU even as it keeps domestic opposition fenced in. In that sense, it is an offensive “iron curtain plus,” not just a barrier at home but a weapon abroad.