China Daily (Hong Kong)

Congressma­n’s remark should make US accept reality as it is

- The author is deputy editor-in-chief of China Daily USA. huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

Delivering a keynote address at a Brookings Institutio­n forum on “The End of US Engagement with China?” on March 7, US Congressma­n Rick Larsen jestingly said: “I think you got your title wrong … a more appropriat­e title would be: ‘(Is This the) End of US Engagement with China, the EU, Canada, Mexico?’ and so on.”

On a serious note, he said: “The short answer to that I think is, no.”

Larsen, Democratic representa­tive of Washington’s Second District since 2001, is a politician with humor and sees “a lot of room for cooperatio­n” with Beijing. And as the co-chair of the bipartisan US-China Working Group, he has a “realistic” playbook guiding his attitude and approach toward China.

Larsen said he could understand the anxiety of some over China’s recent efforts in the South China Sea, its moves for market access and other commitment­s. But while some of his colleagues in Congress have called for a more hawkish approach toward China, Larsen highlighte­d “a more nuanced approach”.

The need is not to build another structure but to renovate the existing one to better reflect the new reality and meet countries’ needs.

He cited the latest issue of Foreign Affairs, in which Kurt Campbell, chairman of the Asia Group, and Ely Ratner, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, note that the US has always set too high a bar in its expectatio­ns of shaping China’s trajectory. “Reality warrants clear-eyed thinking of the US approach to China,” they said. “Building a stronger and more sustainabl­e approach to, and relationsh­ip with Beijing requires honesty about how many fundamenta­l assumption­s have turned out wrong.”

To explain a more realistic “side of things”, Larsen used an American football analogy: “Does the US need to act like a defensive coordinato­r? Or, do we need to think like a head coach and develop new offensive and defensive strategies, a new playbook, or even dust off the old playbook, that are better tailored to the outcome that we want to see? I certainly … fall on the latter side.”

As an example of “thinking about what offensive tools that we already have and what tools we can develop to play offense”, Larsen said that rather than responding to China’s Belt and Road Initiative with alarmism, the US should reinvest in existing programs that promote trade, investment and economic diplomacy.

The growth model the US used to talk about — open markets, engagement and trade — is “pretty good” but “we are not doing that in this administra­tion … We are not taking every opportunit­y we can to remind folks about the growth model for the last 70 years that created the wealth in the world, that created the opportunit­y in the world that many countries benefited from, including China,” he said.

China has said the current internatio­nal system is like a well-designed building with multilater­alism being its cornerston­e. The need is not to build another structure but to renovate the existing one to better reflect the new reality and meet countries’ needs.

Larsen said: “And I think, again, we don’t need to sometimes create new plays in our playbook, but we have a pretty good playbook already, and we need to enhance what we are doing.” On Capitol Hill, people tend to think of competing with China all the time, when in fact there is a lot of room for cooperatio­n, such as on climate change, counter-terrorism and on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Larsen said.

“We need to think long term about that, and not … stay focused just on the current president’s policies and proposals regarding climate change,” he said. The US’ relationsh­ip with China is a little like the stock market, going up and down, and “it can only grow … through continued engagement, through continued dedication and maybe a shot or two of baijiu,” he said. Baijiu means liquor or spirit in Chinese.

Indeed, Larsen’s speech sparked spirited discussion that day. Let us hope it will also prompt US politician­s to wake up to the reality of the realistic side of things.

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