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Chavez’s Death May Challenge China, a Friend

BEIJING â€" Domestic politics trumps international politics, in China as everywhere. So even though China on Tuesday lost a friend in Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who died in Caracas, the homepage of Xinhua News Agency online today is mostly filled with news of the National People’s Congress meeting in Beijing, where important appointments will be made such as naming a new president (certain to be Xi Jinping, barring an extraordinary and unforeseen event.)

Venezuela and China’s relationship has been very close, especially economically. Yet reporting Mr. Chavez’s death, Xinhua’s homepage had only a small box with a photograph of him and five topics next to it; two chronologies (a “simple introduction” and “major events.”) A third asked “did America poison him” and the final items were “who next” and “analysis.” still, photographs of Chavez were displayed prominently, in rotation, with photographs from the congress.

The eaction was more low key than one might have expected, raising the question: is China perhaps distancing itself from the polarizing figure who has dominated politics in Venezuela for over a decade, as people here and there wonder, what next

The poison question is curious, as is the prominence given to it.

Xinhua’s story, datelined Caracas, cited Venezuela’s vice president, Nicolás Maduro, as saying that Mr. Chavez had been the target of a “technical and scientific attack” by Americans to induce illness (in Xinhua’s words. Other media, including The New York Times, also reported Mr. Maduro’s comments. The accusation is not new.)

The Xinhua report did little to support Mr. Maduro’s assertions, noting that since June 2011 Mr. Chavez has frequently sought treatment in Cuba for cancer. Xinhua also said Mr. Chavez had “tumors in the pelvic cavity” (that might be singular, since Chinese doesn’t necessarily distinguish between singular and plural.)

On China’s busy microblogs, the issue was raised, but barely. While ordinary Chinese would have no way of knowing either way, the lack of interest may indicate they thought it not a topic worthy of discussion. By noon on Wednesday, there were around 200 comments for “Chavez” and “technological and scientific attack” and about 140 for “Chavez” and “poison.” By Chinese standards, that’s a damp squib.

Still, the death of Mr. Chavez is a challenge for China. As Matt Ferchen of the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy wrote before Mr. Chavez’s death but after his serious illness was known, China’s close friendship has produced deep economic ties but could lead to problems.

Mr Chavez’s re-electin to a third term late last year “elicited almost universal praise from Chinese media and foreign policy analysts,” noted Mr. Ferchen, who specializes in China’s relationship with other developing nations. The two countries have a very strong economic relationship, he noted, based mostly on China’s growing oil needs.

In fact, the China Development Bank, China’s “Superbank,” “has led China’s financing efforts in Venezuela with more than U.S. $42 billion in loans-for-oil deals since 2007,” wrote Mr. Ferchen.

Those deals represent “the bank’s largest loan exposure anywhere outside of China and account for nearly 60 percent of the bank’s loans to Latin America and the Caribbean,” Mr. Ferchen noted.

Mr. Chavez’s death could threaten all that, he writes, against a background of “a reinvigorated Venezuelan political opposition movement.”

“Henrique Capriles, the youthful leader of the opposition, has stated that if he were president, while not seeki! ng to ove! rturn the loans-for-oil deals with China, he would review their legality,” wrote Mr. Ferchen, pointing out that little is known publicly about the details of the deals.

The risk “China may learn that partnerships of convenience with polarizing, strong-man leaders like Chávez can also quickly and unexpectedly become highly inconvenient,” he wrote.

Meanwhile, in the microblogging sphere, there was support for Mr. Chavez.

One person on Sina Weibo, @guda baihua, wrote that after the death of Mr. Chavez, whom he described as an “anti-American fighter,” the Huffington Post carried many comments from Americans supporting him, and he translated them into Chinese.

So in Chinese, monicaangela said: “Rest in Peace, President Chavez. … Thank you for fighting the oil companies and nationalizing the oil of Venezuela so that those profits could be used to life the people of your natin up.”

And, also in Chinese, DeanAdams wrote: “He was far from perfect but he certainly had the interest of ALL of his people at heart. More than can be said for many of the elected officials in this country.”



Around the World in 80 Days for Cuba’s Most Famous Dissident Blogger

WASHINGTON â€" Yoani Sanchez, Cuba’s most famous dissident blogger, arrived in Brazil looking like a sixties hippie, her hair falling below her waist, her dark ankle-length skirt floating under a summery flower-child top. It was the first stop on Ms. Sanchez’s 80-day tour of South America, Europe and the United States.

For the past few years, she’s been a darling of both liberals and conservatives outside Cuba, a 37-year-old phenomenon, a fierce anti-Castro leader, a whip-smart intellectual and canny self-promoter. Her much awaited tour, her first trip outside Cuba in five years, comes with some of the fanfare reserved for major world figures.

I write the Cuban revolution’s double-edged legacy when it comes to women’s rights in my latest Female Factor column.

Ms. Sanchez, named by Time magazine one ofthe world’s 100 most influential people in 2008 and a recipient of Columbia University’s Maria Moors Cabot prize in 2009, is quite possibly the most famous living Cuban not named Castro.

The creator and instigator of the Generation Y blog - named after her first initial or after the Russian-influenced generation whose names start with a Y - Ms. Sanchez made a splashy landing in Brazil to the chants of fans and the shouts of opponents. Placards and banners accused her of complicity with the United States and betrayal of her country. Later, in Salvador, her second destination in Brazil, she had to evade demonstrators, but she seemed to enjoy the attention.

“At the arrival many friends were welcoming me and other people yelling insults. I wish it would be the same in Cuba. Long live freedom!” she exclaimed on Twitter.

Her elation needs little explanation. She has spent years risking her freedom at home while giving the wo! rld descriptions of the reality of daily life under the Castro regime. She has defied the authorities by sneaking her Generation Y blog out of Havana via stealth visits to Internet-equipped hotels where she manages to email her blogs to friends outside the country who then post them online. (The blog is said to be available in 17 languages.)

Now free, at least while she’s abroad â€" and perhaps protected by her own fame â€" after defying authorities and facing arrest, beatings and kidnapping in Cuba, she’s letting it all out with a vengeance.

Speaking about the protests against her in Brazil, she wrote: “I have experienced several acts of repudiation up close, whether as victim, observer, or journalist, never â€" I should clarify â€" as a victimizer. But last night was unprecedented for me. The picketing of the extremists…was something more than the sum of unconditional supporters of the Cuban government…They shouted, interrupted, and at one point became violent, and occasionally launced a chorus of slogans that even in Cuba are no longer said.”

She went on, singing a hymn to herself, saying, “Their necks swelled, I cracked a smile. They attacked me personally; I brought the discussion back to Cuba which will always be more important than this humble servant. They wanted to lynch me; I talked. They were responding to orders; I am a free soul.”

Within 24 hours of President Raul Castro’s announcement on February 24 that he would step down after his term ends in 2018 â€" and his subsequent designation of Miguel Diaz-Canel as first vice president and most likely successor â€" Ms. Sanchez was tearing up any illusions anyone could have about any loosening of the reins in Cuba.

“Diaz-Canel possesses characteristics that undoubtedl! y influen! ced his appointment,” she wrote in her blog for Huffington Post. “A man who shines very little, from whom we cannot recall a single phrase of his monotonous speeches, someone who projects absolute fidelity, a good physical presence and a dose of youth (52), so needed by Raul Castro to show that his government is generationally renewing itself.” She cautioned that, given the fate of previous aspirants to the Castro seat, Mr. Diaz-Canel “awaits an uncertain journey fraught with booby-traps.”

The journey Ms. Sanchez is on has its own perils. How free is she What will happen when she returns to Cuba Will she return It’s easy to see a scenario in which she settles in a European country, or even in the United States, living in freedom and surrounded by honors, comforts and money from speaking tours, blogs and books, and her family would probably be allowed to join her.

She married at age 18, n 1993, and had a son two years later. In 2002, she left Cuba and emigrated to Switzerland alone, but was later joined by her husband, Ricardo Escobar, and their son. They returned to the island in 2004, citing “family reasons.”

She could pull up stakes again. But now it’s different. Living as an exile, even a famous exile, she could lose the edge that sets her work apart. The mystery, what remains after so much publicity, would fade fast, and she would lose the aura of a prophet speaking truth in her own land.



Venezuela After the Death of Chávez

Marcus Mabry, Rendezvous's editor, talks with Shannon O'Neil of the Council of Foreign Relations about the ramifications of Hugo Chávez's death on Venezuela, Latin America and the world.

Favorite Grammar Gaffes: Danglers

On our list of recurring grammatical woes, dangling modifiers rank right alongside subject-verb problems and who-whom missteps.

Participle constructions, appositives and other modifying phrases generally should be followed immediately by the noun or pronoun that the modifier describes. Getting this right lends polish and precision to our prose; missteps make our writing seem slipshod.

Here are a few of the latest lapses:

---

Mr. Hagel has long been on the outs with some party mates because of policy disagreements with them over the years, which sometimes made him seem more like a Democrat. But stemming from their Senate ranks as he did, the intensity of their grilling was striking and illustrative of how the old ways of the Senate are disappearing.

This is a classic dangling participle. The first noun or pronoun after the introductory modifying phrase should be the thing the phrase describes. In this case, that would be Hagel, not “intensity.”

---

Silver-haired, stooped and cerebral, Benedict’s influence could well extend to the choice of a successor since he has molded the College of Cardinals â€" the papal electoral body â€" by his appointment of kindred spirits during his papacy.

A common type of dangler problem. Immediately after the modifiers, we should find the noun being modified. But the possessive “Benedict’s” can’t fill that role grammatically, since it, too, functions as a modifier. So “silver-haired, stooped and cerebral” seem to describe “Benedict’s influence” â€" not what we meant.

---

Unlike a legal proceeding, no one testified under oath and witnesses were allowed to speak anonymously in the Freeh report, which also failed to conduct interviews with “most of the key witnesses,” the Thornburgh report said …

The noun right after the “unlike” phrase should be the thing that is “unlike.” Perhaps recast the sentence: “Unlike a legal pr! oceeding, the Freeh inquiry did not involve sworn testimony, and …” (Trying to skirt this issue by using a phrase like “unlike in a legal proceeding” is no better, since “unlike” is a preposition and should be followed by a noun or pronoun, not another preposition.)

 
In a Word

This week’s grab bag of grammar, style and other missteps, compiled with help from colleagues and readers

---

The mayor, finally, makes for a diffident diplomat. His journeys to Albany feature elbow shots at the governor and legislators. Last week, he offered a seminar in how to turn off friends and fail to influence enemies.

As a reader pointed out, “diffident” means timid or shy, certainly not what we wanted to say here. Perhaps we meant “reluctant”

---

Fun., the Brooklyn pop-rock trio, won best new artist and song of the year for “We Are Young,” their inescapable hit that spent six weeks atop the Hot 100 andsold more than six million copies.

Let’s draw the line at changing the rules of punctuation in names. We don’t give Yahoo its exclamation point or Kesha her $, either. The period at the end of the name looks like a typo, which could cause readers to be confused or think we are sloppy. It has no practical effect on pronunciation, understanding or search.

---

It turned out the activity was centered around a high school in Orange County.

From the stylebook:

center(v.). Do not write center around because the verb means gather at a point. Logic calls for center on, center in or revolve around.

---

Prisoners have an important role in Palestinian society, with even those convicted of murder often upheld as heroes of resistance against Israel.

Make it “held up.”

---

What he did not know was that the United States was quietly advocating against him.

“A! dvocate” means speak or act in favor of something; avoid the phrase “advocate against.”

---

“I couldn’t understand any ideology that justified living here and not praying for the soldiers who are risking their lives for us to be here,” said Mr. Lipman, who grew up in Maryland.

Rabbis should keep that title in all references; throughout this article, we referred to Rabbi Dov Lipman as “Mr. Lipman.”

---

But that has never stopped me from thinking with a shiver, when some poor civilian sap becomes the focus of an actor’s jibes and sallies, “There but for the grace of God …”

“Gibes,” not “jibes.” From the stylebook:

jibe. Colloquially, it means conform. In sailing, it means shift. Gibe means jeer or taunt.

---

A cyclist made their way through the snow in Boston.

The plural “their” does not work with the singular “cyclist.â

---

Perhaps the reason so many people are in the dark is because they want it that way.

“Because” is redundant after “reason.” Make it “that,” or rephrase.

---

Tunisians had prided themselves on largely avoiding the political violence that has troubled transitions in neighboring countries like Libya, where the government has been unable to reign in militias that fought Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, or interrupt a cycle of political assassinations in the city of Benghazi.

A common lapse. Make it “rein in,” not “reign in.”

---

In 2011, he encouraged Jewish voters in Brooklyn and Queens to vote for a Republican, Bob Turner, instead of a Democrat, David I. Weprin, in order to send a message to President Obama, whom he felt was not supportive enough of Israel.

Make it “who,” the subject of “was.”

---

The Brooklyn Bridge may not be f! or sale, ! but surplus paint from the span is.

From the stylebook:

span. It is the part of a bridge between piers or supports. Do not use the word, even in a headline, to mean bridge.

---

The iron was the odd piece out after it received the fewest number of votes among the original pieces.

Redundant. “Fewest votes” would have been fine.

---

Mr. Hauer said that coastal areas of Queens, Brooklyn and Long Island could see flooding and should be prepared to seek alternative shelter.

The coastal areas won’t seek shelter; the people who live in them will.

---

“We are gonna weaken the United States and make it much more difficult for us to respond to the crises in the world,” he said.

No reason to use this nonstandard dialect spelling. Many â€" probably most â€" American speakers pronounce the phrase this way but it’s still spelled “going to.”

---

The main criteria used by judges is the risk of the defendant’s not returning to court for trial. …

In recent years, the use of bail bonds and pretrial release rates have fallen, he said.

In the first sentence, we meant “criterion,” singular. In the second sentence, make the verb “has fallen” to agree with the singular subject “use.”



Favorite Grammar Gaffes: Danglers

On our list of recurring grammatical woes, dangling modifiers rank right alongside subject-verb problems and who-whom missteps.

Participle constructions, appositives and other modifying phrases generally should be followed immediately by the noun or pronoun that the modifier describes. Getting this right lends polish and precision to our prose; missteps make our writing seem slipshod.

Here are a few of the latest lapses:

---

Mr. Hagel has long been on the outs with some party mates because of policy disagreements with them over the years, which sometimes made him seem more like a Democrat. But stemming from their Senate ranks as he did, the intensity of their grilling was striking and illustrative of how the old ways of the Senate are disappearing.

This is a classic dangling participle. The first noun or pronoun after the introductory modifying phrase should be the thing the phrase describes. In this case, that would be Hagel, not “intensity.”

---

Silver-haired, stooped and cerebral, Benedict’s influence could well extend to the choice of a successor since he has molded the College of Cardinals â€" the papal electoral body â€" by his appointment of kindred spirits during his papacy.

A common type of dangler problem. Immediately after the modifiers, we should find the noun being modified. But the possessive “Benedict’s” can’t fill that role grammatically, since it, too, functions as a modifier. So “silver-haired, stooped and cerebral” seem to describe “Benedict’s influence” â€" not what we meant.

---

Unlike a legal proceeding, no one testified under oath and witnesses were allowed to speak anonymously in the Freeh report, which also failed to conduct interviews with “most of the key witnesses,” the Thornburgh report said …

The noun right after the “unlike” phrase should be the thing that is “unlike.” Perhaps recast the sentence: “Unlike a legal pr! oceeding, the Freeh inquiry did not involve sworn testimony, and …” (Trying to skirt this issue by using a phrase like “unlike in a legal proceeding” is no better, since “unlike” is a preposition and should be followed by a noun or pronoun, not another preposition.)

 
In a Word

This week’s grab bag of grammar, style and other missteps, compiled with help from colleagues and readers

---

The mayor, finally, makes for a diffident diplomat. His journeys to Albany feature elbow shots at the governor and legislators. Last week, he offered a seminar in how to turn off friends and fail to influence enemies.

As a reader pointed out, “diffident” means timid or shy, certainly not what we wanted to say here. Perhaps we meant “reluctant”

---

Fun., the Brooklyn pop-rock trio, won best new artist and song of the year for “We Are Young,” their inescapable hit that spent six weeks atop the Hot 100 andsold more than six million copies.

Let’s draw the line at changing the rules of punctuation in names. We don’t give Yahoo its exclamation point or Kesha her $, either. The period at the end of the name looks like a typo, which could cause readers to be confused or think we are sloppy. It has no practical effect on pronunciation, understanding or search.

---

It turned out the activity was centered around a high school in Orange County.

From the stylebook:

center(v.). Do not write center around because the verb means gather at a point. Logic calls for center on, center in or revolve around.

---

Prisoners have an important role in Palestinian society, with even those convicted of murder often upheld as heroes of resistance against Israel.

Make it “held up.”

---

What he did not know was that the United States was quietly advocating against him.

“A! dvocate” means speak or act in favor of something; avoid the phrase “advocate against.”

---

“I couldn’t understand any ideology that justified living here and not praying for the soldiers who are risking their lives for us to be here,” said Mr. Lipman, who grew up in Maryland.

Rabbis should keep that title in all references; throughout this article, we referred to Rabbi Dov Lipman as “Mr. Lipman.”

---

But that has never stopped me from thinking with a shiver, when some poor civilian sap becomes the focus of an actor’s jibes and sallies, “There but for the grace of God …”

“Gibes,” not “jibes.” From the stylebook:

jibe. Colloquially, it means conform. In sailing, it means shift. Gibe means jeer or taunt.

---

A cyclist made their way through the snow in Boston.

The plural “their” does not work with the singular “cyclist.â

---

Perhaps the reason so many people are in the dark is because they want it that way.

“Because” is redundant after “reason.” Make it “that,” or rephrase.

---

Tunisians had prided themselves on largely avoiding the political violence that has troubled transitions in neighboring countries like Libya, where the government has been unable to reign in militias that fought Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, or interrupt a cycle of political assassinations in the city of Benghazi.

A common lapse. Make it “rein in,” not “reign in.”

---

In 2011, he encouraged Jewish voters in Brooklyn and Queens to vote for a Republican, Bob Turner, instead of a Democrat, David I. Weprin, in order to send a message to President Obama, whom he felt was not supportive enough of Israel.

Make it “who,” the subject of “was.”

---

The Brooklyn Bridge may not be f! or sale, ! but surplus paint from the span is.

From the stylebook:

span. It is the part of a bridge between piers or supports. Do not use the word, even in a headline, to mean bridge.

---

The iron was the odd piece out after it received the fewest number of votes among the original pieces.

Redundant. “Fewest votes” would have been fine.

---

Mr. Hauer said that coastal areas of Queens, Brooklyn and Long Island could see flooding and should be prepared to seek alternative shelter.

The coastal areas won’t seek shelter; the people who live in them will.

---

“We are gonna weaken the United States and make it much more difficult for us to respond to the crises in the world,” he said.

No reason to use this nonstandard dialect spelling. Many â€" probably most â€" American speakers pronounce the phrase this way but it’s still spelled “going to.”

---

The main criteria used by judges is the risk of the defendant’s not returning to court for trial. …

In recent years, the use of bail bonds and pretrial release rates have fallen, he said.

In the first sentence, we meant “criterion,” singular. In the second sentence, make the verb “has fallen” to agree with the singular subject “use.”



Spain’s Crisis Sparks Another Revolution

Faced with an unrelenting economic crisis, Spaniards have been getting creative with their housing arrangements. In the southern Spanish state of Andalusia, a network of urban squatters operating under the umbrella name of Corrala Utopia has started occupying some of the more than 130,000 homes and spaces made vacant by the country’s housing crisis.

Although Spain’s squatting tradition goes back decades, the economic crisis has accelerated what was once a largely political movement. More than ever, as a traditional squatters’ slogan says, there are “many people without houses and many houses without people.”

And there are few signs of improvement on the horizon.

Since January 1, 2008, Spanish judges have ordered more than 350,000 evictions. Spanish banks have foreclosed on tens of thousands of homes acoss the country, sending scores of families into the streets looking for shelter. In 2012 alone, more than 50,000 families were made homeless after failing to pay their mortgages. The rate has been increasing lately. The eviction figures for the second quarter of 2012 (19,000) were nearly four times as high as they had been in the first part of 2008 (5,614).

The housing panic has led to high drama in Spain recently. Since October, a rash of suspected eviction-related suicides has swept the country as people, many of them elderly, chose to end their lives, reportedly because they couldn’t escape debt.

A long-standing Spanish law stipulates that banks can pursue people for monies owed even after they relinquish their homes, leaving many saddled with debt to death and to the next generation. The latest eviction-related suicide came two weeks ago on the island of Mallorca when! a couple, aged 68 and 69, killed themselves in their house.

Some Spaniards are fighting back. An anti-eviction campaign called PAH, or Mortgage Victims’ Platform, has been gaining momentum. In November the group sponsored a petition signed by more than 1.4 million people to pass a bill that would end evictions. The new PAH-sponsored bill would also reverse the old law. According to AFP, anti-eviction protesters in Madrid were said to have shouted, “These aren’t evictions, they are murders.”

Over the last several weeks, four more corralas have sprouted up in other southern Spanish cities hit hard by the mortgage crisis and high unemployment figures. Locksmiths and firefighters across the country have joined the fray, refusing in many cases to help court bailiffs open doors and break into houses.

The president of the Locksmiths Union, David Ormachea, told AFP, âœFamilies’ lives were being ruined and we were acting as executioners.”

It’s not just private homes that are being affected by Spain’s tumbling economy. Also affected is the country’s much-celebrated network of castles, monasteries and churches, called the Paradores de Turismo, that are at risk of being shuttered, perhaps permanently. As the Times’ Suzanne Daley recently reported, the network posted a €28-million loss, and threatened to close 7 of the country’s 93 paradores permanently. The decision was since reversed, but the threat still looms.

To cope with its economic woes, Spain has taken drastic measures. This week, the Spanish government announced that any British residents of the country, of which th! ere are a! n estimated 800,000 or so, would be required to declare any and all assets worth more than €50,000 being held outside the country or face stiff penalties starting at €10,000 and up.

Today, Spain’s jobless figures rose to record heights. With more than five million unemployed people, how many will be able to afford a place to live And if they cannot, where will they go

Scott Johnson is the author of the forthcoming memoir “The Wolf and the Watchman” about life with his CIA father, to be released by W.W Norton in May, 2013



IHT Quick Read: March 5

NEWS Millions of Kenyans poured into polling stations on Monday to cast their ballots in a crucial, anxiously awaited presidential election, and as the voting proceeded relatively smoothly a real chance emerged that a candidate charged with crimes against humanity could win the race. Jeffrey Gettleman reports from Nairobi.

Wen Jiabao is expressing regrets in his final days as China’s prime minister for falling short of achieving genuine political and economic reforms, but he is also defending his integrity. Andrew Jacobs and Jonathan Ansfield report from Beijing.

More than 40 Syrian soldiers who had sought temporary safety in Iraq from rebelfighters along the border were killed on Monday in an attack by unidentified gunmen as the Iraqi military was transporting the soldiers back to Syria in a bus convoy, the Iraqi government said. The attack threatens to inflame the sectarian tensions that already divide Iraq, where a Sunni minority sympathizes with Syria’s overwhelmingly Sunni opposition. Duraid Adnan reports from Baghdad, and Rick Gladstone from New York.

A South Korean-born American entrepreneur, nominated by President Park Geun-hye to be minister of education, science and technology, withdrew on Monday, blaming political gridlock that delayed his confirmation hearing at the National Assembly. Choe Sang-Hun reports from Seoul.

Roughly 50,000 men persecuted for homosexuality in Germany after World War II have yet to have the convictions stricken from their police records. But that could change in an election year. Chris Cottrell reports from Berlin.

Climate change was a major driving force behind a string of extreme weather events that alternately scorched and soaked large sections of Australia in recent months, according to a report issued Monday by the government’s Climate Commission. Matt Siegel reports from Sydney.

The prospect of natives of Romania and Bulgaria being able to wok freely in Britain beginning next year, in line with European Union regulations, has provoked protests. Stephen Castle reports from London.

The British finance minister, George Osborne, is expected Tuesday to urge his European Union counterparts to water down proposed rules restricting the size of bankers’ bonuses. James Kanter reports from Brussels.

ARTS When construction workers began dismantling a roughly 70-foot section of the Berlin Wall’s longest remaining expanse â€" a nearly mile-long monument to peace that is covered in paintings and is known as the East Side Gallery â€" protesters turned up in droves. Chris Cottrell reports from Berlin.

FASHION The collection that the designer Riccardo Tisci unveiled was as surprising as it was tough and tender. Suzy Menkes reviews from Paris.

SPORTS In Cuba, where the domestic league, or National Series, is strictly amateur and players must defect to play in Major League Baseball, the national team is the pinnacle of the sport. The World Baseball Classic is a rare chance to compete against the world’s best talent, whipping this baseball-mad country into a fervor. Ben Strauss reports from Haana.