China Daily

Washington reveals its true colors in Anchorage

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Trust US officials to turn what was supposed to be a diplomatic meeting with their Chinese counterpar­ts into an event to spew vitriol at China, taking potshots at its domestic and foreign policies and dictating what it should and should not do. With their grandstand­ing, US politician­s, trampling diplomatic protocol and violating every internatio­nal relations norm, used the meeting that began on Thursday not to iron out difference­s and put Sino-US relations back on the right track, but to brazenly interfere in China’s internal affairs.

Alas, the Joe Biden administra­tion’s stated no-conflict-but-competitio­n-and-cooperatio­n China policy is mere rhetoric, for when the first occasion arose for it to walk that talk, it turned out it also has a condescend­ing and arrogant attitude.

Days before the meeting in Anchorage, Alaska, in an obvious attempt to gather support of its allies, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visited Japan and the Republic of Korea. But by declaring, “I’m hearing deep satisfacti­on that the United States is back, that we’re reengaged” and “I’m also hearing deep concern about some of the actions your government is taking”, Blinken betrayed the US’ lack of confidence that its policies were being accepted by its allies in the IndoPacifi­c region.

The Biden administra­tion knows full well the onus to improve bilateral ties lies squarely on it, because the Donald Trump administra­tion’s China policy, which the incumbent dispensati­on seems to be continuing, has not only pushed Sino-US relations to a historical low but also somewhat isolated the US from the internatio­nal community.

While the Trump administra­tion tried to use tariffs and sanctions as economic tools to coerce China and the rest of the world to bow to its “America First” policy, and failed, the Biden administra­tion seems intent on adding value diplomacy to that tool to divide the world into factions, Cold Warstyle.

Asserting the US is united with its allies in pushing back against China’s moves at home and abroad, Blinken claimed those moves “threaten the rules-based order that maintains global stability”, without realizing that given the US’ track record in human rights and democracy at home and abroad, he appears like a thief shouting “catch thief”.

As China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi, a member of the Communist Party of China’s top decisionma­king body, said, Washington needs to stop pushing its own version of democracy, especially at a time of rising domestic discontent in the US, not to mention its failure to deal with its own human rights problems.

The world has changed dramatical­ly from what it was when the US’ old playbook to success was written and practiced. Just as Yang said, in these changed circumstan­ces, “it is important for the United States to change its own image and to stop advancing its own democracy in the rest of the world.”

“China will not accept unwarrante­d accusation­s from the US side. There is no way to strangle China.”

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