Post Tribune (Sunday)

Blinken presses China’s top diplomat to ‘stand up’ against Russia’s war

- By Michael Crowley, Steven Erlanger and Catherine Porter

NUSA DUA, Indonesia — The battle in Ukraine shifted to a geopolitic­al front Saturday as Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with the Chinese foreign minister at the end of a Group of 20 summit in Indonesia, pressing him to change positions and join the United States and partners to “stand up” against Russia’s war, while also trying to ease overall tensions with Beijing.

It was a change of tone for the Biden administra­tion, which just over a week ago pushed for a NATO blueprint, released during a summit in Madrid, to include a sharp rebuke of China, labeling its policies “coercive,” its cyberopera­tions “malicious” and its rhetoric “confrontat­ional.”

The Biden administra­tion’s softer approach at the Group of 20 meeting reflected its conflictin­g foreign policy goals. As it works to shore up alliances with its Asian allies to constrain China, it is also trying to assemble a global effort to punish Moscow for its aggression in Ukraine — an effort that has little chance of success without cooperatio­n from China foremost, but also from countries like India, Brazil and Saudi Arabia.

During the five-hour meeting, held on the Indonesian resort island of Bali one day after the summit of G-20 foreign ministers, Blinken emphasized issues of shared interest with Beijing, including climate change and global health, while stressing U.S. concern over China’s alignment with Russia.

Speaking to reporters afterward, Blinken dismissed China’s claims to be neutral in the Ukraine war as implausibl­e. “I tried to convey to the state councilor that this really is a moment where we all have to stand up” to condemn Russian aggression, Blinken said, using the formal title for China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi.

“There’s a clear aggressor. There’s a clear victim,” Blinken added.

Wang responded sharply to Blinken’s statements, urging the United States to refrain from attacking China’s political system and recycling Cold War-era strategies of containmen­t, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry’s readout of the meeting. He also called on Washington to remove tariffs on Chinese products and to stop imposing sanctions on Chinese companies.

“If this ‘expanding threat’ concept is allowed to keep growing, the United States’ China policy will soon become an inescapabl­e dead end,” Wang said.

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