BusinessMirror

US, China clash over how to describe crucial first meeting

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THE US and China laid out differing expectatio­ns for a key first meeting next week, showing the domestic pressure on both sides to avoid looking weak while reopening relations.

The encounter between US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and their Chinese counterpar­ts in Alaska would represent the highest-level meeting between the two sides since President Joe Biden took office. But the two sides quickly disagreed over whether the exchange was a “strategic dialogue,” a reference to regular talks that fell apart under former President Donald Trump.

“This is not a strategic dialogue—there’s no intent at this point for a series of follow-on engagement­s,” Blinken told members of Congress on Wednesday.

Who invited who?

CHINESE Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian later released a response to Blinken’s remarks, describing the meetings on March 18-19 as a “high-level strategic dialogue” being held “at the invitation of the US.”

The posturing illustrate­s the high stakes for a meeting that could set the tone for the world’s most important diplomatic relationsh­ip. While Biden faces bipartisan demands for maintainin­g much of Trump’s hard-line approach to Beijing, Chinese President Xi Jinping must also contend with deep nationalis­t support for pushing back against US pressure over issues from trade to Taiwan.

Still, the meeting demonstrat­es a willingnes­s to reengage after ties last year sank to their lowest level in decades, with both nations ramping up sanctions and tariffs, expelling journalist­s and closing consulates. The US and China have both expressed interest in collaborat­ing on global issues such as climate change and indicated an openness to make early goodwill gestures.

“It’s already a good gesture by the Biden administra­tion given the US domestic politics,” said Zhu Feng, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Nanjing University. “Both sides have insisted the other should right the wrongs. It’ll be a positive result if the two countries could go further than repeating such rhetoric, and start to build back dialogue mechanisms on issues of concerns, such as technology decoupling, Taiwan and trade.”

Boosting trust, dispel misgivings

CHINESE Premier Li Keqiang told his annual news briefing Thursday in Beijing that he hoped to see “various levels” of dialogue with the Biden administra­tion. “Even if we cannot work everything out any time soon, such exchange of views will help boost trust and dispel misgivings,” Li said.

The face-to-face meeting will come on the heels of days of high-profile meetings between US officials and key Asia-pacific partners, including the first-ever state leaders meeting from the Quad grouping of democracie­s. The schedule—as well as the venue on American soil—allows the US side to project strength.

Blinken told the US House Foreign Affairs Committee that future engagement­s with China would happen only if the administra­tion saw tangible progress on the issues of concern. “But this is an opportunit­y for us to put it on the table,” he said.

The Chinese delegation will arrive in Alaska days after lawmakers in Beijing defied US sanctions to approve sweeping legislatio­n to limit the opposition’s participat­ion in Hong Kong elections. The measure was passed as part of an annual legislativ­e session that ratified a series of plans aimed at expanding China’s economy, modernizin­g its military and reducing the country’s dependence on American technology.

The Chinese delegation will be led by top diplomat Yang Jiechi—a member of the ruling Politburo—and Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Both men have suggested in recent remarks that the onus was on the US to repair ties after four years of Trump, and they’ve urged Washington to reopen regular dialogue platforms.

“We demand the US adopt an objective and rational attitude toward bilateral ties, abandon its Cold War mentality and zero-sum mindset, respect China’s sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests, and stop interferin­g in China’s internal affairs,” Zhao, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, said Thursday.

 ?? ANGELA WEISS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A CHINESE flag hangs between American flags in Chinatown in New York City.
ANGELA WEISS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A CHINESE flag hangs between American flags in Chinatown in New York City.

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