Kuwait Times

Why China may want to keep Trump in the White House

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BEIJING: Donald Trump has frustrated and enraged China during a tumultuous first term, but Beijing may welcome his re-election as it scans the horizon for the decline of its superpower rival. Relations are as icy as at any time since formal ties were establishe­d four decades ago, with China warning it does not want to be drawn into a new “Cold War” with the United States. Under his ‘America First’ banner, Trump has portrayed China as the greatest threat to the United States and global democracy.

He has launched a massive trade war that has cost China billions of dollars, harangued Chinese tech firms and lay all the blame for the pandemic with Beijing. But another Trump triumph in November may have its advantages for China as President Xi Jinping seeks to cement his nation’s rise as a global superpower. China’s leadership could be handed “the opportunit­y to boost its global standing as a champion for globalisat­ion, multilater­alism, and internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” said Zhu Zhiqun, professor of political and internatio­nal relations, Bucknell University.

Trump has pulled America from a sprawling Asia-Pacific commercial deal and climate agreements, imposed billions of dollars of tariffs on Chinese goods, and withdrawn the US from the World Health Organizati­on at the height of a global pandemic. Where the US has retreated, Xi has stepped forward. He has presented his country as the champion of free trade and a leader in the fight against climate change, as well as vowed to share any potential Covid-19 vaccine with poorer nations. “A second Trump term could give China more time to rise as a great power on the world stage,” Zhu said.

Philippe Le Corre, a China expert at the Harvard Kennedy School in the United States, agreed an extension of Trump’s ‘America First’ policies would be of long-term benefit for Beijing. “(It) partially cuts Washington off from its traditiona­l allies,” he added, and that gave China room to manouevre. China’s nationalis­ts have openly cheered, or jeered, for Trump. “You can make America eccentric and thus hateful for the world,” Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of the Global Times, a chest-beating nationalis­t paper, warned in a Tweet directed at the US president. “You help promote unity in China.” Trump is also lampooned on China’s heavily censored social media as ‘Jianguo’, meaning “help to build China”.

Biden trouble

Trump has undoubtedl­y inflicted economic and political pain on China. “China has lost out enormously in its plan for trade and technology,” said Beijing-based political analyst Hua Po. In January the US and China signed a deal bringing a partial truce in their trade war that obliged Beijing to import an additional $200 billion in American products over two years, ranging from cars to machinery and oil to farm products.

Washington has also turned its guns on Chinese tech firms it says poses security threats, throwing the future US operations of video-sharing app TikTok - owned by Chinese parent company Bytedance - into uncertaint­y. Mobile giant Huawei is also on Trump’s hitlist. The enmity also extends into defense and human rights, with Taiwan, Hong Kong and the treatment of China’s Muslim Uighur minority all making waves in US. But China may not win much relief in any of these areas if Trump loses to Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

 ?? —AFP ?? BEIJING: This file photo taken on Nov 9, 2017 shows US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping shaking hands during a business leaders event at the Great Hall of the People.
—AFP BEIJING: This file photo taken on Nov 9, 2017 shows US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping shaking hands during a business leaders event at the Great Hall of the People.

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