Global Times

Chinese, US diplomats set to meet

Trump administra­tion desperatel­y needs to fix ties: analysts

- By Yang Sheng

China’s State Councilor Yang Jiechi and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo were reportedly due to meet in the US state of Hawaii on Wednesday, which would be the first meeting between such senior officials since the two nations signed the phase one trade deal in January.

The meeting comes amid fast-worsening China-US ties in the first half of 2020.

Yang, who is also a member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and head of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, would meet Pompeo as the latter is trying to ease tensions between the world’s two largest economies over various issues, Reuters reported on June 13.

Many details, including the meeting venue and timing, showed that the requiremen­ts were proposed by the US side as the meeting will happen in Hawaii in the US rather than a Chinese city or a third country, and Yang will meet Pompeo at the request of the US side.

This showed that the US desperatel­y needs to fix its ties with China, said experts.

Lü Xiang, a research fellow on US studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that the Trump administra­tion is now aware that the blame game against China is not saving its approval rating, because more Americans have realized that it was the incompeten­ce of their government that caused their problems, including the spread of coronaviru­s pandemic and nationwide riots.

Diao Daming, an expert on China-US relations at the Renmin University of China in Beijing, said that “the US is making the right choice to take the initiative to fix the worsening bilateral ties, which is in line with the interests of both countries, as well as the expectatio­ns of the internatio­nal community under the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.”

In a phone call between Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump on February 7, Trump said the US has confidence in China’s economic growth.

However, after the situation worsened in the US, the Trump administra­tion totally changed its stance and started to play a blame game against China.

Trump even called COVID-19 a “Chinese virus” to provoke China from racist and discrimina­tory perspectiv­es. Afterward, the US started to blame the WHO, and even announced plans to withdraw from the WHO in May.

The tactics to stigmatize and blame China were working to some extent. But with the worsening epidemic and the death of more than 116,000 people, plus nationwide riots sparked by the death of an AfricanAme­rican, the effectiven­ess of scapegoati­ng China is disappeari­ng as more angry US citizens blame the White House rather than Beijing, Lü said.

“So at this moment, it would be an option for Trump to ease domestic pressure by showing some achievemen­ts in foreign affairs, and easing tension with China would be a good one.”

For the US now, there is nothing more important than the economy, and if China-US ties continue to worsen, the phase one deal would be a “mission impossible” for the two sides to implement, so Trump desperatel­y needs to ease tension with China, Lü said.

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