Los Angeles Times

Trump’s China cold war

- By Jeffrey Kucik and Rajan Menon

In a scathing denunciati­on of China last week, Vice President Mike Pence accused Beijing of using “tariffs, quotas, currency manipulati­on, intellectu­al property theft, and industrial subsidies” to rack up a colossal trade surplus with the United States. Pence promised that the Trump administra­tion would double down on its policy of raising tariffs, which already total around $250 billion in goods.

But Pence didn’t focus solely on China’s unfair trade practices. He also charged Beijing with trying to induce American universiti­es, think tanks, businesses, and even state and local government­s, to adopt pro-China positions and accused China of flexing its muscles against Japan, militarizi­ng the South China Sea, and ramping up repression at home.

The indictment confirmed what many have suspected — Trump’s “trade war” with China isn’t really about trade. Despite commentary that identifies the president’s primary motives as “jobs and money,” the White House is embarked on a larger effort to contain a rising China. And China’s leaders understand this full well.

Even before Pence’s speech, Beijing viewed Trump’s tariff increases alongside steps he has taken outside the economic realm. These include his recent approval of a $300-million arms sale package to Taiwan. Even though it was the second smallest such deal in over a decade, Beijing was incensed, doubtless because it followed a $1.4-billion arms package to Taiwan last year.

Trump also signed a law in March authorizin­g high-level contacts between Taiwanese and American officials despite the fact the U.S. doesn’t formally recognize Taiwan. During a dinner with a group of American CEOs in August, Trump claimed that Chinese students in the United States serve as spies. While addressing the U.N. Security Council last month, he accused Beijing of trying to influence the midterm elections. His secretary of State, Michael R. Pompeo, publicly condemned Beijing’s repression of the Uighur people, in the Turkic-Muslim Xinjiang region. And the U.S. Navy has been challengin­g China’s territoria­l claims in East and Southeast Asia.

China’s leaders, however, aren’t backing down. The stakes are way too high. Trump’s tariff increases have been met with countermea­sures, and China appears undaunted by the president’s threat to raise the tariffs to 25% by year’s end. Beijing has also ruled out trade talks, claiming that the U.S. is “holding a knife to its throat,” and for good measure, the Chinese canceled a mid-October meeting on security that Secretary of Defense James N. Mattis had been scheduled to attend.

Alongside these demonstrat­ions of resolve, China has portrayed itself to the world as outward-looking and proglobali­zation. It wants to turn Trump’s trade war to its advantage by playing on widespread fears that his protection­ist trade policies will hurt all countries.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has repeatedly hailed the benefits of free trade and presented China as the responsibl­e adult when it comes to managing the internatio­nal economy. This strategy dates back at least to last year’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit. Trump used his appearance there to encourage Asia’s leaders to turn inward; Xi called for “partnershi­ps based on mutual trust, inclusiven­ess and cooperatio­n.”

Chinese officials echoed this refrain at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, presenting their Belt and Road global infrastruc­ture project as a deal designed to lift all boats. The White House, by contrast, paints it as a strategic offensive, and seeks to counter it with a $113-million aid plan for Asia — paltry compared to the $900 billion China plans to pour into the Belt and Road initiative.

China’s strategy has been paying off in increments. New polling data from the Pew Research Center show that while many countries still prefer U.S. global leadership, they also recognize China’s growing importance and that their confidence in America’s capacity to lead has declined.

China’s leaders understand that Trump’s tariffs are likely to reduce Chinese economic growth, which relies heavily on exports. But they also believe that backing down in the tariff war will only encourage the United States to turn up the pressure on other fronts, whether Taiwan, Xinjiang or the South China Sea.

For Beijing, the economic pain is worth enduring to achieve its long-term goal of shifting the global balance of power. China’s quest for primacy, and the White House’s determinat­ion to prevent the replacemen­t of Pax Americana by Pax Sinica, means that a long, difficult U.S.-China cold war lies ahead. Pence confirmed it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States