The Jerusalem Post

Quiet success for China at G-20 as Xi avoids drama and spotlight

No mention of difference­s with US over Taiwan, South China Sea

- • By BEN BLANCHARD

BEIJING (Reuters) – From US anger over inaction on North Korea to a festering border dispute with India and the ailing Chinese Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo, last week’s G-20 meeting was strewn with minefields for China’s President Xi Jinping.

By chance or by strategy, Xi and his officials picked their way through unscathed.

Beijing is ultra-sensitive about Xi’s image and ensuring he gets the respect it sees as his due as leader of an emerging superpower, especially when traveling to Western countries where it cannot so tightly control the public narrative.

Diplomatic sources in Beijing, speaking ahead of Xi’s trip to the G-20 gathering in Hamburg, Germany, said Chinese officials had in private expressed nervousnes­s he could be asked awkward questions about North Korea, or the cancer-struck Liu, jailed for 11 years in 2009 for “inciting subversion of state power.”

In the end it was US President Donald Trump’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, amid accusation­s of Russian interferen­ce in the US election, and Trump’s refusal to return to the Paris climate agreement that dominated the limelight.

Xi, by contrast, avoided controvers­y in his bilateral meetings and reaffirmed China’s commitment to the Paris deal and to an open global economy, in what the official China Daily called Xi’s “burnishing of reputation.”

“Nobody talked about the South China Sea. No one talked about trade. Everyone was happy with Xi. I think he played this well,” said Ulrich Speck, senior fellow at the Elcano Royal Institute in Brussels.

“All eyes were on Trump and Putin. But the fact that there was no US-China clash was at least as important. Xi stayed out of the alpha-male fight. China presented itself as a partner to Europe.”

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Xi “made it clear that the G-20 should adhere to taking the path of open developmen­t and mutual benefit leading to all-win results, support a multilater­al trade mechanism, and promote internatio­nal trade and investment”.

“China was in a good place at G-20, with reasonable policies,” said Jin Canrong of the School of Internatio­nal Studies at the Renmin University of China, who has advised the government on diplomatic matters.

“So President Xi was comfortabl­e and positive there.”

Potentiall­y the biggest test was Xi’s meeting with Trump, who in the run-up to Hamburg had voiced frustratio­n over China’s inability to rein in its troublesom­e erstwhile ally, North Korea.

At the event, Trump returned to the conciliato­ry tone struck at their first meeting in April, telling the Chinese leader it was “an honor to have you as a friend” and that he appreciate­d actions Xi had already taken to try to dissuade North Korea from pursuing nuclear weapons.

Influentia­l Chinese state-run tabloid Global Times said in an editorial on Monday that the Xi-Trump meeting had defied “the naysayers in the West.”

“Beijing and Washington saw friction on issues including Taiwan and the South China Sea ahead of the meeting, and there was speculatio­n from Western public opinion that the China-US ‘honeymoon’ had come to an end. But the Xi-Trump meeting repudiates such speculatio­n,” the paper said.

Speaking to reporters later on Air Force One, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the Trump-Xi meeting lasted more than an hour-and-a-half, and would have gone on longer had they not had to leave for other engagement­s.

Ruan Zongze, a former Chinese diplomat now with the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, a think-tank affiliated with the Foreign Ministry, said Xi was much more upbeat than when he spoke to Trump a few days ahead of G-20 and mentioned certain unnamed “negative factors” in their relationsh­ip.

“Even on trade Trump underscore­d that he wants cooperatio­n,” Ruan said.

China’s biggest concern had been US policy towards selfruled Taiwan, after the Trump administra­tion approved a $1.42 billion arms package for Taiwan, claimed by China as its own.

Neither government mentioned Taiwan in their respective accounts of their G-20 meeting.

Chinese officials were at pains to point out their good relations with the new administra­tion in Washington.

Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao told reporters in Hamburg that the Chinese and US teams dealing the bilateral financial relationsh­ip clearly understood that both would be hurt by fighting with each other.

“Our strength is communicat­ing every morning and every evening. This is unpreceden­ted,” Zhu said.

On India, where China has over the past few weeks accused New Delhi of provocatio­n by sending troops across the border in a disputed region, Xi avoided drama by not having a formal bilateral meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, though India’s Foreign Ministry said they did speak.

Even on Liu Xiaobo, Xi avoided being put on the spot, with China on Saturday allowing a US and German doctor to meet him at his hospital in northeaste­rn China.

Still, the fault lines remain in the tricky China-United States relationsh­ip.

China may respond more assertivel­y if, for example, more Chinese entities are sanctioned by the United States over North Korea or Trump raises barriers to Chinese goods, as he has frequently threatened, said a senior Beijing-based Western diplomat.

“China has been restrained so far in reacting to Trump, but that is unlikely to last,” said the diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Things are gearing up to be a summer of drama between China and the United States.”

 ?? (John Macdougall/Reuters) ?? CHINESE PRESIDENT Xi Jinping talks to Guinean President and Chairman of the African Union Alpha Conde (left) and South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma at the G-20 meeting in Hamburg, Germany, last week.
(John Macdougall/Reuters) CHINESE PRESIDENT Xi Jinping talks to Guinean President and Chairman of the African Union Alpha Conde (left) and South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma at the G-20 meeting in Hamburg, Germany, last week.

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