China Daily Global Weekly

US plan to suppress China ‘not realistic’

Containmen­t policy on Beijing must be abandoned as it does Washington no good, ex-American diplomat says

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

The United States’ containmen­t policy against China is not realistic and not in the US’ own interests, a China expert said, adding that Washington must return to diplomacy to address bilateral tensions.

“I don’t think at this point that (containmen­t policy) is a very good strategy,” Susan Thornton, a former US diplomat and senior fellow at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center, said during a webinar earlier this month.

Under its so-called containmen­t policy, the US has labeled China as an adversary, and tried to isolate and contain it, she said, emphasizin­g that the approach is not a “positive one for the US” and that it will not pay “big dividends” either.

According to Thornton, the thinking among US political elites that China can be systemical­ly weakened is not realistic, and it is not going to leave a lot of room for bilateral talks or cooperatio­n.

It is critically important to normalize regular official meetings between Washington and Beijing, the former US diplomat said, warning that otherwise there would be “a very dangerous escalatory security dilemma that will lead to conflict”.

“In the absence of constructi­ve official discussion­s, I think it’s really important that we try to keep up other connection­s. This (China) is the most populous country in the world, the second-largest economy; it’s not going anywhere,” she said. “We need to figure out how we’re going to coexist with China. We’re not going to defeat them. We’re not going to overturn their government. We’re not going to invade them.”

Thornton suggested keeping people-to-people and business connection­s going, and attempting to find some areas in multilater­al talks where the two countries can work together.

A major problem in US-China relations is the Taiwan question, she said, adding that people in the US unfortunat­ely do not understand how provocativ­e and threatenin­g US actions with regard to the island are for China.

“We have to take their (China’s) concerns seriously, or we may end up in a situation that we really didn’t design and didn’t want to be in,” Thornton said.

“In the past five years, the careful management of this issue has been dropped, and we have been using it as a kind of a cudgel in the USChina relationsh­ip … I think this is extremely dangerous … for the US and China, and the rest of the world.”

Thornton said there are still many areas in multilater­al forums where the US could cooperate with China. She cited the recent negotiatio­n over a United Nations treaty on the high seas, where US and Chinese delegates worked together to get the agreement across the finish line.

 ?? THIBAUD MORITZ / AFP ?? Bystanders gather near burning waste containers during a protest in Bordeaux in southweste­rn France on March 18, two days after the French government used special constituti­onal powers to push through a plan to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.
THIBAUD MORITZ / AFP Bystanders gather near burning waste containers during a protest in Bordeaux in southweste­rn France on March 18, two days after the French government used special constituti­onal powers to push through a plan to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.

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