Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

U.S. won't have any pandas for the first time in 50 years

- By Rya■ Teague Beckwith a■d Court■ey McBride

WASHINGTON » Giant pandas are everywhere at Washington's National Zoo. Three live in the zoo's $50 million Asia Trail. T-shirts, trucker hats and refrigerat­or magnets bear their image. A 24-hour panda-cam broadcasts the trio's every move. Even the QR code to reserve zoo tickets features a panda silhouette.

Now, after more than 50 years, Washington's pandas are going away — and maybe for good.

The zoo's three pandas are set to return to China by December with the expiration of a three-year agreement with China's wildlife agency that month. It's not just the U.S. capital. The three other U.S. zoos that have Chinese pandas — Atlanta, San Diego and Memphis, Tennessee — all have either turned over their pandas or will see them return to China by the end of next year.

Although both sides deny politics are at play, China long has used “Panda Diplomacy” to curry favor, reward friends and punish adversarie­s. And the loss of America's last pandas comes at a moment when ties between the U.S. and China have hit a historic low, with most avenues of cooperatio­n cut off.

In the same vein, any hope that Washington will get new pandas rests on recent signs that ties might be getting a little better — or, at the very least, not getting worse.

“There's some significan­ce to the fact that all of the pandas in the United States will be back in China by next year,” said Elena Songster, a professor at Saint Mary's College of California and author of “Panda Nation,” a book about China's panda policy. “They have a plan. They know what they're doing.”

The push and pull over pandas reflects in part the quirky way they show up in zoos around the world. Zoos don't get full custody of pandas. Instead, they rent them, signing contracts to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars every year to China.

After years of renewing those contracts, the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n, which oversees Washington's zoo, wasn't able to do so again. Earlier this year, the Memphis Zoo's panda, Ya Ya, got swept up in a nationalis­t fervor back home — including accusation­s of mistreatme­nt — after images showed it looking emaciated and its fur mangy. The animal, which the U.S. and China said was healthy, went home in April.

The U.S. was rewarded with its first pandas after former President Richard Nixon normalized ties in 1972 and many other nations followed. A 2013 study found a correlatio­n between uranium deals and panda loans to Canada and France. In 2018, China loaned out pandas to Finland to mark a centennial of Finnish independen­ce.

“From the goodwill gestures of Nixon-era diplomacy, they've evolved into today's emblems of discord,” said Lizzi C. Lee, a fellow at the Chinese Economy

program at the Asia Society Policy Institute. “Pandas have become canvases for narratives of distrust and rivalry.”

There are plenty of nonpolitic­al reasons why the pandas may be going home now. One explanatio­n is that the pandas leaving U.S. zoos all are reaching the age when they would go home anyway. Some pandas' departure was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic, which also slowed China's loan system.

With pandas no longer classified as endangered, China is building its own network of national parks, and may not feel the need to send them abroad to be conserved and bred.

It's unclear what comes next for the Washington zoo. The move could be temporary, as happened in 1999 when the zoo went without pandas for a year, given that the pandas are approachin­g the age when they'd return home anyway. Or China may offer them as a reward in some future diplomatic negotiatio­n.

Both China and the U.S. have kept open the door to a possible return. That's in keeping with tentative signs that relations may be reversing their dramatic slide.

President Joe Biden's goal remains a face-to-face meeting with President Xi Jinping, something that hasn't happened in almost a year. Xi is expected to attend this year's Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n forum in San Francisco, and it's possible he could bring with him the promise of more pandas for American zoos.

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