Dayton Daily News

U.S.-China relations arrive at turning point

- By Ken Moritsugu

Four decades after the U.S. establishe­d diplomatic ties with Communist China, the relationsh­ip between the two may have reached a turning point.

Tensions have reached new heights on what has always been a rocky road, as the ambitions of a rising superpower increasing­ly clash with those of the establishe­d one. China ordered the closing of the U.S. Consulate in the southweste­rn city of Chengdu on Friday, in rapid retaliatio­n for the closing of its consulate in Houston.

Two weeks ago, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi asked aloud if relations could stay on track. On Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo delivered an answer: The time has come to change course.

“The old paradigm of blind engagement with China simply won’t get it done,” he said in a speech at the Richard Nixon Presidenti­al Library in Southern California. “We must not continue it. We must not return to it.”

It was Nixon’s visit to China in 1972, the first by an American president since the Communists took power in 1949, that upended a Cold War paradigm and paved the way for the normalizat­ion of relations in 1979.

The United States had been a close ally of then-Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek in World War II and for three decades recognized Taiwan as the government of China after Chiang fled there when he lost control of the mainland in 1949.

Relations between Washington and the Communist government in Beijing began to thaw in the 1970s, as China’s ties with the Soviet Union deteriorat­ed and leader Mao Zedong sought a counterwei­ght to its more powerful neighbor.

A new leader, Deng Xiaoping, visited the U.S. in 1979 after the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties, smiling in photos as he tried on a cowboy hat in Texas. The Houston consulate that is being shut opened later the same year. It was China’s first in the United States.

Setting aside political difference­s, the U.S. and China promoted economic, social and cultural ties that were briefly interrupte­d a decade later by China’s military crackdown on the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrat­ions in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.

Economic links grew exponentia­lly in the following years, with heavy investment by U.S. businesses in China and an accompanyi­ng Chinese trade surplus that has reached $350 billion annually.

The relationsh­ip was punctuated by bouts of tension. The U.S. continues to support Taiwan militarily, and the

Clinton administra­tion sent an aircraft carrier through the Taiwan Strait in 1996 after China fired missiles toward the island.

In 2001, a Chinese fighter jet and a U.S. Navy surveillan­ce plane collided over the South China Sea, a vital shipping lane in the Asia-Pacific region. China detained the U.S. crew for days after its plane made an emergency landing at a Chinese base.

As China has grown into the world’s second-largest economy, behind only the U.S., it is increasing­ly viewed as a competitor, both economical­ly and militarily, and a potential challenger to the Western-led democratic model that has dominated the post-World War

II era.

Election-year politics in the U.S. are fanning the flames, as President Donald Trump appears to be using friction with China to drum up support among his base. Whether or not he is reelected in November, underlying difference­s will remain.

“We are looking at a structural change in the relationsh­ip, which will continue even if Trump does not get a second term,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies.

Militarily, American and Chinese warships often jockey for position in the South China Sea.

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