Toronto Star

Biden takes fresh look across the Pacific

U.S. in a weaker posture toward China after four years of Trump

- ELI STOKOLS AND DON LEE

WASHINGTON—U.S.President Joe Biden spoke with Chinese President Xi Jinping this week for the first time since taking office, beginning the process of reshaping America’s approach in dealing with its most intense economic competitor and Pacific Rim strategic rival.

Biden “shared his greetings and well wishes with the Chinese people on the occasion of Lunar New Year,” according to a White House readout of the call, but he also “underscore­d his fundamenta­l concerns about Beijing ’s coercive and unfair economic practices, crackdown in Hong Kong, human rights abuses in Xinjiang, and increasing­ly assertive actions in the region, including toward Taiwan.

Addressing topics ranging from the coronaviru­s pandemic to arms control, Biden, the White House said, “committed to pursuing practical, resultsori­ented engagement­s when it advances the interests of the American people and those of our allies.”

Although administra­tion officials asserted that the “unpredicta­bility” of former president Donald Trump’s personalit­ydriven diplomacy left the U.S. in a weaker posture toward China, Biden will be leaving in place his predecesso­r’s tariffs on Chinese goods, opting not to relinquish that leverage in deeper talks.

Biden aides, however, insisted that the administra­tion would not be continuing Trump’s trade strategy, saying that changes would come after an internal review and additional conversati­ons with European and Asian allies.

The phone call with Xi, whom Biden knows well from his eight years as vice-president, came after the president’s outreach to a number of Asian allies.

Aides said those allies are eager for the U.S. to engage in more robust regional co-operation, especially in the face of a more aggressive Chinese government.

Under Xi, Chinese military activity has increased in the South China Sea, and its economic dominance in the region has allowed Beijing to exert greater influence in Southeast Asia, Australia and beyond. China’s crackdown on Hong Kong and repression of the ethnic minority Uighur Muslims, which Secretary of State Antony Blinken agreed amounted to genocide, have further strained bilateral relations.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, senior administra­tion officials who previewed the call for reporters Wednesday evening expressed the administra­tion’s general agreement with Trump’s broad view of China as a major strategic competitor, but an adviser said his four years in office “depleted core American sources of strength, which put us in a weaker position.”

Specifical­ly, the officials said Trump’s presidency benefited China in several unintended ways, pointing to the destabiliz­ation of America’s political system and economy, the weakening of long-standing U.S. alliances, the vacuum in internatio­nal institutio­ns amid Trump’s “America First” isolationi­sm and the failure to affirm and pursue a foreign policy centred on traditiona­l democratic values.

“In a way, America’s policy was doing China’s work for it,” an administra­tion official added.

In his first three weeks in office, Biden has sought to lay the groundwork for a reset, reaffirmin­g U.S. commitment­s to alliances and a values-based foreign policy while reassertin­g a military presence in the region by engaging in exercises with allies and establishi­ng a dual carrier presence in the South China Sea.

 ?? LINTAO ZHANG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Joe Biden, then U.S. vice-president, and Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013. While aides say Biden will take a new tack on trade, his predecesso­r’s tariffs on Chinese goods will likely hold.
LINTAO ZHANG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Joe Biden, then U.S. vice-president, and Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013. While aides say Biden will take a new tack on trade, his predecesso­r’s tariffs on Chinese goods will likely hold.

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