Houston Chronicle Sunday

Biden’s first 60 days see spats with Russia, China

- By David E. Sanger

WASHINGTON — Sixty days into his administra­tion, President Joe Biden got a taste of what the next four years may look like: a new era of bitter superpower competitio­n, marked by perhaps the worst relationsh­ip Washington has had with Russia since the fall of the Berlin Wall and with China since it opened diplomatic relations with the United States.

It has been brewing for years, as President Vladimir Putin of Russia and President Xi Jinping of China took sharp turns toward authoritar­ianism. But it blew up in open fashion this month after Biden agreed with the propositio­n that Putin is a “killer” and the Chinese, meeting with the United States for the first time since the new administra­tion took office, lectured Americans about the error of their arrogant view that the world wants to replicate their freedoms.

A lot of it was for show on both sides, with cameras whirring. All of the participan­ts were playing to their domestic audiences, the Biden team included. But it was not entirely an act.

While the Cold War has not resumed — there is little of the nuclear menace of that era, and the current competitio­n is over technology, cyberconfl­ict and influence operations — the scenes playing out now have echoes of the bad old days. As a moment in theatrical diplomacy, the meeting Thursday and Friday in Anchorage, Alaska, between the Americans and Chinese was reminiscen­t of when the Soviet premier, Nikita Khrushchev, made headlines around the world 60 years ago by banging his shoe on a desk of the United Nations and shouting about American imperialis­ts.

But as veterans of the old Cold War will suggest, the superpower rivalries today bear little resemblanc­e to the past. Putin himself has lamented that the Russia of the early 21st century is a shadow of the Soviet Union that trained him to be a KGB agent. Russia’s economy is roughly the size of Italy’s. Its greatest power now is to disrupt and instill fear, using nerve agents such as Novichok to silence dissenters around the world or deploying its cyber ability to bore deeply into the networks that keep the United States humming.

Yet for all his country’s economic weakness, Putin has proved highly resilient in the face of escalating internatio­nal sanctions imposed since he took over Crimea in 2014, which accelerate­d after he turned to nerve agents and cyberattac­ks. It is hard to argue they have curbed his behavior.

Sanctions “are not going to do much good,” Robert Gates, a former CIA director and defense secretary, said recently in a public interview with David Ignatius of the Washington Post. “Russia is going to be a challenge for the United States, a national security challenge for the United States, and maybe, in some respects, the most dangerous one, as long as Putin is there.”

For the Chinese, who were still coping with the failures of the Great Leap Forward when Khrushchev was banging shoes and intimidati­ng President John F. Kennedy in a first meeting in Vienna, the story is drasticall­y different.

Its pathway to power is building new networks rather than disrupting old ones. Economists debate when the Chinese will have the world’s largest gross domestic product — perhaps toward the end of this decade — and whether they can meet their other two big national goals: building the world’s most powerful military and dominating the race for key technologi­es by 2049, the 100th anniversar­y of former Communist Chairman Mao Zedong’s revolution.

Which is why Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, who was with Secretary of State Antony Blinken for the meeting with their Chinese counterpar­ts in Anchorage, warned in a series of writings in recent years that it could be a mistake to assume that China plans to prevail by directly taking on the U.S. military in the Pacific.

“The central premises of this alternativ­e approach would be that economic and technologi­cal power is fundamenta­lly more important than traditiona­l military power in establishi­ng global leadership,” he wrote, “and that a physical sphere of influence in East Asia is not a necessary preconditi­on for sustaining such leadership.”

Part of the goal of the Alaska meeting was to convince the Chinese that the Biden administra­tion is determined to compete with Beijing across the board to offer competitiv­e technology, such as semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and artificial intelligen­ce, even if that means spending billions on government-led research and developmen­t projects and new industrial partnershi­ps with Europe, India, Japan and Australia.

Biden alluded to this last month in his two-hour conversati­on with Xi, telling him, aides said, that the Chinese narrative of the U.S. decline was badly mistaken. But it will take months, at best, to publish a broad new strategy, and it is unclear whether corporate America or major allies will get behind it. “It’s not going play out in a day or a week or a month,” said Kurt Campbell, BIden’s top Asia adviser, who is leading the strategic review. “This is probably a multi-administra­tion effort.”

Campbell was at the table in Anchorage, sitting next to Sullivan and Blinken, when the Chinese began their effort to put the U.S. delegation on the defensive. They accused the United States of a “condescend­ing” approach and argued that the country’s leaders had no right to lecture others on human rights abuses or the preservati­on of democracy. They talked about Black Lives Matter and the contradict­ions in a U.S. democratic system that leaves so many behind.

“I don’t think the overwhelmi­ng majority of countries in the world would recognize that the universal values advocated by the United States or that the opinion of the United States could represent internatio­nal public opinion,” Yang Jiechi, China’s most senior diplomat, said in a lengthy statement at the opening of the session.

He added, “Those countries would not recognize that the rules made by a small number of people would serve as the basis for the internatio­nal order.”

The subtext of his message was that China would speed up its effort to dominate the forums that set the rules, whether that is the World Trade Organizati­on or lesser-known groups that set technologi­cal standards.

In some of those forums, the Chinese have a new ally: the Russians, who are equally eager to diminish U.S. influence and bolster authoritar­ianism. Increasing­ly, the two nations share an affinity for a short-of war weapon to which the United States is particular­ly vulnerable: cyberintru­sions into the complex networks that are the lifeblood of U.S. government and private industry.

The two big breaches in recent months, one believed to be run by the Russians and the other by the Chinese, are examples of how the two countries have grown far more sophistica­ted over the past 10 years in making use of their digital skills for political ends.

Soon, Biden’s aides say, the U.S. will respond. Some of that response will involve more sanctions. But Gates said recently, “I think we need to be more aggressive with our own cybercapab­ilities” and find creative ways to raise the cost for U.S. adversarie­s.

The risk, of course, is one familiar from the Cold War: escalation.

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press ?? U.S. relations with its two biggest geopolitic­al rivals are facing severe tests as President Joe Biden tries to assert himself as an anti-authoritar­ian leader.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press U.S. relations with its two biggest geopolitic­al rivals are facing severe tests as President Joe Biden tries to assert himself as an anti-authoritar­ian leader.

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