China Daily Global Weekly

Time for US to step up China talks, mend ties

Improved China-US relations will benefit not only the two countries but also the whole world

- By Chen Qi and Xue Jing

With China easing the COVID-19 control measures, the world is wondering whether and how the United States will improve its China ties.

Hopes of a thaw in China-US relations have risen following the meeting between President Xi Jinping and US President

Joe Biden on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Bali, Indonesia, on Nov 14, and phone talks between US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and newly appointed Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang last month.

Blinken will visit Beijing from Feb 5-6, marking the first trip by the top US diplomat in four years. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is also expected to travel to China soon.

However, conceptual obstacles between the two countries are so hard to surmount that it would be over-optimistic to predict a substantia­l improvemen­t in SinoUS relations soon. Since assuming office in 2020, Biden did not reverse, and instead strengthen­ed, the competitiv­e strategy against China that his predecesso­r Donald Trump had championed.

Using its overall national strength, the United States tries to overpower its rivals through fierce competitio­n. Accordingl­y, Washington has labeled Beijing as a major rival and dragged China into a fierce competitio­n in all fields. And according to the Pentagon’s National Security Report in October, the US has adjusted its military strategy to target China.

To isolate China, the US has spread anti-China sentiments across the internatio­nal community by portraying China as a threat to Western society, institutio­ns and lifestyle. It has also formed new anti-China alliances such as the “Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity”, AUKUS (Australia, the United Kingdom and the US defense alliance) and the Quad (security partnershi­p between the US, India, Japan and Australia).

The US has roped in its allies and partners to squeeze China out of the global supply chains and to check its economic and high-tech developmen­t.

Since 2018, the US’ machinatio­ns and strategy against China have undermined Sino-US mutual trust. And bilateral relations teetered on the brink of collapse after previous US House of Representa­tives speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan in August.

Misunderst­andings and lack of cultural exchanges cause suspicion. The West believes internatio­nal politics is a zero-sum game of power and views China’s philosophy of peaceful developmen­t with suspicion.

Instead of the disagreeme­nt on the internatio­nal order and interests, the difference in political thoughts is at the root of the frigid China-US relationsh­ip today. Given this, the two countries should sincerely communicat­e with each other, so as to figure out how to break the deadlock and revive normal bilateral ties.

Only if Washington abandons its sense of supremacy, and understand­s and respects non-US values and developmen­t models will the vicious spiral of China-US relations end.

However, the risk of China-US disputes escalating will remain, according to Alan W. Wolff, a distinguis­hed visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics. First, even if the Biden administra­tion wants to improve Sino-US ties, China will be constraine­d to reciprocat­e because of the hard-line antiChina stance prevailing in Washington, just like the reviving McCarthyis­m in the US Congress.

Losing control of the House of Representa­tives in the November midterm elections, the Democratic Party will have a hard time fulfilling its domestic agenda goals. So the Biden administra­tion is likely to pay greater attention to making diplomatic achievemen­ts in order to ensure victory in the 2024 presidenti­al election. For that to happen, however, the White House has to expand communicat­ion with China.

Bilateral channels of communicat­ion were reopened after the Bali meeting between presidents Xi and Biden. But anti-China rhetoric was used as a political tool to get more votes in the midterm elections — the ploy was used by both the parties — amid the polarizati­on of US domestic politics. Worse, the Republican-led House of Representa­tives recently voted to establish a select committee on strategic competitio­n with China.

Second, Washington has limited choices to improve relations with China. The anti-China alliances that the US has built using the carrot-and-stick policy are flimsy. Many countries have just paid lip service to the US’ policies while sitting on the fence.

The US is facing the pressing problem of declining hegemony. Tensions have arisen between the US and its European allies due to the energy crisis following the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the US Inflation Reduction Act.

The US’ influence has declined in the Middle East, too, while India has shown little interest in Washington’s “Indo-Pacific strategy” and has been importing Russian oil despite US objections. And the rise of the left in Latin America in 2022 is a slap in Washington’s face, while the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations has maintained its close economic ties with China.

Meanwhile, as Washington signals readiness to improve ties with China, it will render its anti-China cliques inactive, prompting the US to calculate whether it needs such alliances.

The Taiwan question has come under the spotlight in China-US frictions and may become the last but the most disastrous card the US plays if it does not get satisfying results from the high tariffs, trade sanctions, supply chain disruption­s, technology blocking and media warfare against China.

Washington does not want to lose the important tool to contain China, so it has been more frequently interferin­g in affairs concerning the Chinese island of Taiwan, challengin­g Beijing’s redline. In fact, the Biden administra­tion has maintained strategic ambiguity on Taiwan while trying every possible way to hollow out the one-China principle. Such a contradict­ory narrative has narrowed the room for improving China-US relations.

But that does not mean China-US relations will head toward disaster.

China and the US have remained in agreement that the two countries cannot bear the consequenc­es of decoupling. That is why they have been saying they are willing to maintain communicat­ion to avoid miscalcula­tions and manage conflicts.

While China held the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, the US held the midterm elections in 2022. Along with that, the meeting between the two presidents has opened a window of opportunit­y for the two countries to increase communicat­ion. If they can work together to improve bilateral relations and continue cooperatio­n, they will benefit people not only in the two countries but also the whole world.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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