China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Sino-US ties vital for them and world

- Chen Weihua The author is chief of China Daily EU Bureau based in Brussels. chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

The appointmen­t of China’s ambassador to the United States Qin Gang as the new foreign minister is a clear signal that managing well the most consequent­ial bilateral relationsh­ip of the 21st century is crucial for the world’s two largest economies and the rest of the world.

The appointmen­t of Qin as the foreign minister also shows China’s resolve to put Sino-US ties onto the right track — the track that it was on since former US president Richard Nixon made the icebreakin­g visit to China in 1972 to the Barack Obama administra­tion, in which many current senior Joe Biden administra­tion officials, including Biden himself, served.

Speaking at a recent talk at Stanford University with former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd, former US secretary of state Condoleezz­a Rice recalled her days in the George W. Bush administra­tion, saying that the prospect for a manageable US-China relationsh­ip looked considerab­ly better.

She also said the US had an “integratio­nist narrative about China”, citing the “responsibl­e stakeholde­r” speech by her deputy Robert Zoellick in 2005.

Rice praised China for doing a reasonably good job after being invited to chair the Six-Party Talks to discuss the Korean Peninsula denucleari­zation issue during her tenure. She also talked about the critical time when US Navy EP-3 spy plane collided with a Chinese fighter jet off the coast of China’s Hainan province on April 1, 2001, saying that “the overall context of the relationsh­ip” was “that we’ll get through this”.

As for Rudd, he praised then President George W. Bush for reining in then Taiwan leader Chen Shuibian, who wanted to push his “Taiwan independen­ce” agenda forward.

As one senior US State Department official had then told me, that if Taiwan declared independen­ce, the US would be the first to say it does not recognize its independen­ce, in order to defuse the tension.

As a matter of fact, there were many ups and downs in Sino-US relations during the eight-year Obama administra­tion, from the South China Sea issue to cybersecur­ity, but the two sides believed their difference­s should not prevent them from deepening cooperatio­n in certain fields.

I strongly disagree with Rudd for saying there is a need to arm Taiwan into a “porcupine”. As a China specialist, Rudd should know that China has been constantly stressing that it will exercise patience and ask the Taiwan ruling party not to go down the path of independen­ce while trying to peacefully resolve the Taiwan question.

That’s precisely the advice Rudd should give the Taiwan leaders, because no “porcupine strategy” will provide Taiwan with security. That is why the continued US provocatio­ns including increasing arms sales to Taiwan and the change of its decades-old practice on the sensitive issue are so dangerous.

Rice’s question should make the Biden administra­tion think why it cannot manage the Sino-US relationsh­ip as well as the administra­tions from Nixon to Obama.

As a matter of fact, there were many ups and downs in Sino-US relations during the eight-year Obama administra­tion, from the South China Sea issue to cybersecur­ity, but the two sides believed their difference­s should not prevent them from deepening cooperatio­n in certain fields.

That is why China and the US could play an instrument­al role in reaching the Paris Agreement, preventing nuclear proliferat­ion, fighting the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, holding dozens of highlevel talks each year and launching the 10-year visa program. That is also why the US encouraged the study of the Chinese language in the US, invited Chinese investors to the US, and welcomed the Chinese navy to take part in the Rimpac naval exercises.

However, the Donald Trump administra­tion was devoid of such spirit, and it is nowhere to be found in the Biden administra­tion.

In a tweet on Sunday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had spoken over the phone with new Chinese foreign minister Qin Gang. “We discussed U.S.-PRC relationsh­ip and maintainin­g open lines of communicat­ion,” he said. Yet China and the US need to be much more ambitious than just maintainin­g open lines of communicat­ion between the two sides.

Washington’s reckless containmen­t policy against Beijing, including its recent bid to cut global semiconduc­tor exports to the Chinese mainland and using the Taiwan island as a tool to provoke the mainland, has raised concerns around the world about a possible clash between the world’s two largest economies, a clash that will spell disaster for the whole world.

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