Global Times

US sends senior diplomats to China after trilateral summit

Move to ‘gauge Beijing’s reactions toward provocatio­n’

- By GT staff reporters

The US has dispatched its top diplomats for East Asia to China, which analysts see as a move to test China’s reactions after it elevated defense relations with Japan and Philippine­s amid escalating tension in the South China Sea.

According to US Department of State, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Kritenbrin­k will visit China from Sunday to Tuesday. He will be joined by National Security Council Senior Director for China and Taiwan Affairs Sarah Beran.

The two will meet with Chinese officials as part of ongoing efforts to maintain open lines of communicat­ion and to responsibl­y manage competitio­n, according to the US state department.

Kritenbrin­k’s trip comes days after the first-ever trilateral summit between the US President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Philippine President Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos Jr in Washington DC on Thursday US local time.

Reiteratin­g the US’ “ironclad” defense commitment­s to the two Asian countries, Biden said any attack on Philippine aircraft, vessels or armed forces in the South China Sea will invoke the Mutual Defense Treaty against the backdrop of escalating China-Philippine row, CNN reported.

Li Haidong, a professor at the China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times that the US, after a series of provocativ­e actions targeting China, aims to observe China’s reactions and potential countermea­sures. If China responds strongly, the US “may restrain itself” to some extent.

Lü Xiang, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, noted that the US is well aware of China’s military capabiliti­es in the Western Pacific, and it will not carry out any substantiv­e acts, otherwise it will incur unbearable consequenc­es.

Observers underlined US hypocrisy in its communicat­ion with China, particular­ly on security issues. The US provokes first and when China responds, it makes a “crisis management” gesture as if it were China’s fault to have not tolerated those provocatio­ns.

The US is also dreaming of China’s assistance and smooth coordinati­on to relieve the US from the pressures of dealing with the lingering Russia-Ukraine crisis and the Middle East conflicts, Li said, but Washington’s “ultimate motivation is to better compete with China.”

When the US is the actual culprit behind many of the conflicts and crises, its attempts to mediate and de-escalate the situations are very much deceptive gestures, experts said.

The US should not have any illusions that China could compromise on its core interests and sovereignt­y, they said.

“China is always open to dialogue with the US on issues of shared concern, but the dialogue should be based on an equal footing and mutual respect, and the promises made between the two sides should be fulfilled,” Li said.

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