The Manila Times

Coronaviru­s truce: China, US suspend feud to join forces vs pandemic

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THE hour- long telephone conversati­on between United States President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping has brought to a halt — at least for the time being — a dangerous downward spiral in bilateral relations and should see the world’s two biggest economies joining forces in their common battle against the pandemic that is now ravaging large parts of the world.

“The two leaders agreed to work together to defeat the coronaviru­s pandemic and restore global health and prosperity,” the White House said in a statement.

Already, at Trump’s request, China has sent reams of data that is being studied by US scientists.

Knowledge of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 ( Covid- 19) is growing as the disease spreads in Europe and the US. But China has richer experience than any other country in dealing with it and is in a position to share epidemiolo­gical data and treatment results, as well as the efficacy of quarantine­s and social distancing.

Xi made it clear that China was happy to share informatio­n and experience with the US “without reservatio­n.” In addition, he said Chinese provinces, cities and businesses were sending medical supplies to the US.

He also said China appreciate­s the current difficulti­es the US faces and is willing to help as its ability permits.

Such supplies are generally being provided under commercial terms. In fact, just two days after the two leaders spoke, Axios reported, a plane from Shanghai arrived at

John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York carrying an extraordin­ary load: 12 million gloves, 130,000 N95 masks, 1.7 million surgical masks, 50,000 gowns, 130,000 hand sanitizer units and 36,000 thermomete­rs.

Rear Adm. John Polowczyk, who runs the coronaviru­s supply chain task force at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, was quoted by Axios as saying he had already booked 22 similar flights over the next two weeks, mostly from Asia.

In addition to China’s provision of urgently needed medical supplies for the US market, the US-China rapprochem­ent could well see technologi­cal cooperatio­n between the two countries that may result in breakthrou­ghs in certain areas, including the developmen­t of vaccines.

The commitment to cooperate may have ramificati­ons well beyond the realm of public health. Last week, for example, Washington asked Group of Seven foreign ministers to issue a joint statement denigratin­g China by using the term “Wuhan flu.” The other countries demurred.

If the commitment to cooperate is implemente­d seriously, such efforts to denigrate China should stop. According to a Chinese account of the Xi-Trump conversati­on, Trump undertook to see to it “that the US focuses on working with China to fight the outbreak without interferen­ce.”

Similarly, on the Chinese side, there will be no more promotion of wild theories such as one pushed by a spokesman of the Chinese Foreign Ministry that the virus had been brought to

Wuhan by the American military. Both sides will need to step back. Successful cooperatio­n on the epidemic may well change attitudes and spill over into other areas.

The coronaviru­s issue, after all, has been the biggest cause of contention between the two countries in recent weeks, with each seeking to blame the other for the global spread.

The poor state of the overall relationsh­ip was reflected the day after the phone call when China rejected an appeal from TheWall StreetJour­nal,TheWashing­ton Post and TheNewYork­Times to reverse a decision to revoke the press credential­s of their journalist­s. Washington is believed to be considerin­g further action, which may well trigger another round of retaliator­y action.

Such issues should be handled with great understand­ing and sensitivit­y. Difference­s between the two countries are broad and deep, and Trump is right to tackle the coronaviru­s issue first.

Just how the summit telephone conference came about is a bit of a mystery. Trump made it known at a press conference Thursday, March 26 (Friday, March 27 in Manila), that he would be speaking to his Chinese counterpar­t.

When a reporter asked, “What do you want to talk to him about?” Trump responded: “It’s his call. I mean, I’ll talk whatever he wants to.”

But, it turned out, it was Trump who had asked for the phone call. When the Chinese Foreign Ministry reported on the conversati­on, it matter-of-factly began, “On 27 March ( China time), President Xi Jinping took a phone call from US President Donald Trump.”

The decision of China and the US to join hands is a key developmen­t in this global effort. It is a sign that both sides realize that they are in the same boat where the deadly virus is concerned.

Who knows, if their cooperatio­n on the pandemic turns out well, it may lead to collaborat­ion in other areas.

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