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US and China talk about better ties, but things have only become worse

- By Iain Marlow, Jenny Leonard Rebecca Choong Wilkins Bloomberg News

THE US keeps saying it wants to set a “floor” under the relationsh­ip with China. Its recent moves against Beijing and new pressure from Congress make achieving that look increasing­ly unlikely.

Two months after President Joe Biden met Xi Jinping in Bali with a promise to arrest a slide in ties, the world’s two biggest economies and preeminent superpower­s have been unable—or unwilling—to halt a cycle of suspicion and provocatio­n. That’s renewing doubts ahead of talks next week in Beijing about the possibilit­y that the relationsh­ip will ever return to normalcy.

The US is pressing ahead with a campaign to limit China’s access to sensitive semiconduc­tor technology, by both limiting exports US companies can send to China and marshaling Japan and the Netherland­s to restrict the sale of advanced chip-making equipment. China has largely held off punching back, but has shown a willingnes­s to violate Western sanctions against the purchase of Iranian oil and, according to US officials, deepening its economic ties with Russia despite the invasion of Ukraine.

“Neither capital has indicated that they are prepared to compromise,” said Drew Thompson, a former US Defense Department official responsibl­e for China and currently a senior fellow at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore.

Blinken’s scheduled visit to China

ALL of this makes for a tense environmen­t for Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to China next week, the first high-level US encounter there since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic. It’s another step in China’s reopening since it shed its Zero Covid strategy, and it may help pave the way for another Biden-xi meeting at the Asia-pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit in the US later this year.

“This is the most consequent­ial bilateral relationsh­ip in the world,” US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said this week. He said the two sides would look for modest gains—such as expanded contacts over climate change and between their militaries.

Josef Gregory Mahoney, a politics professor at Shanghai’s East China Normal University, had a different take: “Perhaps it’s more like a court-mandated meeting with an ex-spouse.”

Pompeo snubbed

THE last time a secretary of state visited Beijing was 2018, when former President Donald Trump’s top diplomat, Michael Pompeo, had a testy exchange with Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Wang accused the US of having “damaged our mutual trust” and Pompeo was snubbed by Xi, who broke with precedent and declined to meet with him.

US officials have played down expectatio­ns for Blinken’s Beijing visit, emphasizin­g that it’s mostly symbolic. They’ve described it as solely an effort to show the Biden administra­tion is committed to keeping channels of communicat­ion open.

The US and China may agree to allow visa holders to stay longer and add to the number of flights between the countries, veteran US diplomat and trade negotiator Wendy Cutler told Bloomberg Television’s “Balance of Power With David Westin” on Monday.

“This is a journey,” said Cutler, a vice president at the Asia Society. “We should not expect any breakthrou­ghs.”

Russia aid?

THE Biden administra­tion has privately confronted the Chinese government over evidence that the US says shows some of the country’s state-owned enterprise­s have been aiding Russia’s war efforts in Ukraine. Blinken will push his Chinese counterpar­ts on the matter and make clear that the US is watching, officials said.

The meeting may be more important for China than it is for the US. China—looking to spur flagging economic growth and emerge from the Covid-19 pandemic for good—has a strong interest in making it at least look like relations are getting back on track.

Xi’s abrupt shift toward a more growth-first strategy since securing a third term as Communist Party leader has helped propel a dramatic turnaround in markets. The MSCI China Index, which had slumped to an 11-year low in October, has gained more than 50 percent in subsequent weeks, becoming one of the world’s best-performing gauges.

Beijing is urging common ground for the sake of the global economic recovery, the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper said. The US hasn’t “let go of its obsession with treating China as a so-called strategic competitor,” the People’s Daily said in a commentary Wednesday, adding that “blind anti-china approaches will not work.”

Blinken simply setting foot in China may be enough to calm rising tensions, said Wang Huiyao, the founder of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a policy research group in Beijing.

What a handshake could do

IN past interactio­ns, US and Chinese diplomats talked past each other, Wang said. “This is very important—the image, the handshakin­g, the meeting taking place in China,” he added.

The muted expectatio­ns highlight the challenges of Biden’s “three C’s” strategy to compete, contest and cooperate. While the US wants to pressure China over national security issues, it’s far from certain that it can do so and also get China’s help on pressing global issues such as climate change.

Any tangible improvemen­t will be hampered by the widely shared view in Washington— now incorporat­ed in Pentagon doctrine—that Beijing poses the main threat to the US. A four-star Air Force General, Mike Minihan, fanned the tensions with a note to his staff last month, predicting war with China.

“I hope I am wrong,” Minihan wrote to his staff. “My gut tells me we will fight in 2025.”

US House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy has promised to visit Taiwan, in a replay of a visit last year by his predecesso­r as speaker, Nancy Pelosi. Her trip sent relations into a spiral, sparking retaliator­y Chinese military exercises and leading Beijing to cancel a range of working-level discussion­s.

One of the first acts after Republican­s won control of the House was to create a committee whose sole role will be to address what’s described as the rising threat posed by China. It will be chaired by Representa­tive Mike Gallagher, who’s among lawmakers who want to ban the China-owned Tiktok social-media app from US phones. He’s also interested in the type of symbolic moves that infuriate China, and may even arrange a committee hearing in Taiwan.

Even if Blinken’s visit calms the rhetoric between Washington and Beijing, neither side is expected to change positions on any of the fundamenta­l disagreeme­nts fueling Us-china tensions—and Beijing may play nice simply to focus on challenges at home.

“To the extent that there’s sort of the appearance of a lowering of tensions, I think it is tactical and near-term and is mostly a reflection of the fact that the Chinese have a ton of their own problems to deal with,” said Ryan Hass, a former US diplomat who was a White House adviser on Asia during the Obama administra­tion and is now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n.

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 ?? AP/LINTAO ZHANG, POOL, FILE ?? IN this December 4, 2013, file photo, Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with then US Vice President Joe Biden as they pose for photos at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
AP/LINTAO ZHANG, POOL, FILE IN this December 4, 2013, file photo, Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with then US Vice President Joe Biden as they pose for photos at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

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