Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIDEN’S NORTH KOREA, TAIWAN PROBLEMS

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In North Korea and Taiwan, President Biden faces two of the world’s most dangerous problems. His challenge is to convince potential adversarie­s that a politicall­y divided United States is stronger than it looks.

Biden sounded a firm note on both fronts last week. He warned North Korea that “there will be a response” if it continues its recent missile tests, but he also offered “some form of diplomacy” with “the end result of denucleari­zation” of North Korea.

On China, Biden pledged “steep, steep competitio­n,” by reinvestin­g in science at home and U.S. alliances abroad. But he also affirmed his personal relationsh­ip with President Xi Jinping, whom he called “a smart, smart guy.”

Biden’s priority, for now, is domestic reconstruc­tion rather than foreign interventi­on. On Afghanista­n, for example, he came close to setting a year-end deadline for withdrawin­g all U.S. troops, even though a political framework for power sharing and a cease-fire aren’t yet in place.

North Korea had delivered a fiery calling card over the past week by launching a series of short-range missiles. Biden initially dismissed the tests as “business as usual,” but said he agreed with former president Barack Obama that North Korea was the most important foreign policy issue. The president’s aides are debating how to frame a peace initiative that would take up where the Trump administra­tion’s showy diplomacy left off.

North Korea offers a rare example of where Trump prepared carefully for a diplomatic pressure campaign. After just three months in office, Trump hosted Xi at his Mar-a-Lago Club — enlisting Xi as a diplomatic partner in squeezing North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. In the end, Trump got little to show for his leverage, except three meetings with Kim.

Biden has taken the opposite opening move with Xi’s China. With Biden, the initial venue was the deep freeze of Anchorage. During the encounter last week between Secretary of State Antony Blinken, national security adviser Jake Sullivan and their Chinese counterpar­ts, both sides sought to demonstrat­e resolve for what Chinese official media have called a period of “protracted struggle.”

Taiwan is where Chinese overconfid­ence seems most likely to produce a dangerous miscalcula­tion. U.S. officials in Anchorage came away worried that Xi might be preparing to abandon the ambiguous but relatively stable status quo in Taiwan — described in the nearly 50-year-old formula of “one China” but two government­s — in favor of a risky push for reunificat­ion.

Taiwan poses an interestin­g test of whether Chinese leaders really believe their rhetoric about American decline. If Xi thinks the United States’ demise is permanent and irreversib­le, the wise course presumably would be to wait until America is even weaker. But if Xi instead fears a U.S. rebound, then he might be tempted to act more quickly.

For all of China’s newfound confidence, its leaders seem to want regular dialogue with the United States, rather than a sharp rupture. As diplomats Yang Jiechi and Wang Yi left the meeting with Blinken and Sullivan, they proposed a reciprocal meeting in China. “Thank you,” said Blinken, and the Chinese kept pressing (apparently without success) to find out whether that meant yes.

Since Anchorage, Chinese think tanks have been using a phrase that means “hit, hit, talk, talk” to describe what’s ahead with the United States, according to one top Sinologist. The “hit, hit” part of that formula carries significan­t risks — especially if China continues to believe that a weakened America isn’t ready to fight back.

 ??  ?? David Ignatius
David Ignatius

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