China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Ignoring China cannot make US great again

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President Donald Trump’s often changing foreign policy positions and unorthodox diplomatic exchanges have made theUnited States an unpredicta­ble partner in internatio­nal affairs, especially in Sino-US relations and Pacific affairs.

“The indispensa­ble nation” appears to be isolating itself from internatio­nal trade relations. Trump terminated the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p agreement on his first day in the WhiteHouse.

Ending the TPP trade pact means China can expand its domain of influence in the Pacific Rim region as otherUS allies and friends inevitably look for a more reliable trade partner in the neighborho­od. As these geopolitic­al realities set in, will his campaign promises to “Make America Great Again” eventually default to “Making China Great Again” and make theUS a dispensabl­e nation?

China is taking note that the “declining” US is giving up on its founding trade vision and empowering it with China’s commercial mission through the Belt and Road Initiative. At the 21-member Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n Economic Leaders’Meeting in Peru last November, President Xi Jinping reaffirmed that China and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations would indeed invite the TPP member-nations to join the Beijing-supported Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p.

Acknowledg­ing the kiss of death the Trump administra­tion would give the TPP, former president Barack Obama warned of the detrimenta­l impact on theUS economy of a protection­ist president in the WhiteHouse, but also on theUS’ credibilit­y around the world. Cancelling the colossal 12-nation Pacific Rim trade pact and even renegotiat­ing theNorth American Free Trade Agreement are not panaceas for theUS’ social decay, racial tension, and economic problems, which are largely attributab­le to technologi­cal advancemen­ts, demographi­c changes, corporate strategies and taxation structures.

It is likely Trump’s on-the-jobtrainin­g will soon bring awareness that the checks-and-balances in theUS political system mean running the country is different from running a private enterprise.

Neverthele­ss, Trump and his team will certainly change course, especially in dealing with China.

Like his other incendiary rhetoric during the presidenti­al campaign, Trump has accused Beijing of being responsibl­e for “raping” theUS with its trade policies. When he realizes the mutually beneficial trade relationsh­ip between China and theUS is more complicate­d than that, Trump will have no choice but to strengthen the evolving China-US bond without losing out to the Chinese leadership and its rulemaking power in the global trade architectu­re.

Ignoring China would be a mistake. The Sino-American relationsh­ip has been mutually beneficial for both countries. The Trump administra­tion can hardly “Make America Great Again” without making “China Great Again”.

TheUS still depends on the global supply chain. When the Trump administra­tion begins to deal with other countries, the elephant at the table of every trade negotiatio­n will be China.

The evolving multifacet­ed bilateral relationsh­ip is intrinsica­lly complicate­d yet mutually beneficial for theUS and China, which are connected through growing trade, investment and people-topeople exchanges. No matter what the Trump administra­tion may have in store for China and the world, one thing can be predicted: theUS must and will accept China’s inevitable rise.

As a self-professed titan of dealmaking, Trump could “Make America Great Again,” by simply embracing the founding vision of Thomas Jefferson for political reasons: “Peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations; entangling alliances with none.”

... Trump will have no choice but to strengthen the evolving China-US bond without losing out to the Chinese leadership ...

The author is an associate-in-research of the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies atHarvard University. The article is an excerpt of his commentary on chinausfoc­us.com

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