Santa Fe New Mexican

Blinken visit reveals U.S., China chasm

- By David Pierson and Edward Wong

An austere greeting on the airport tarmac in Beijing sans a red carpet. A stonefaced handshake from China’s top foreign policy official. A seat looking up at the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, perched at the head of a long table.

To internatio­nal audiences, the optics of Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s two-day visit to Beijing barely raised any eyebrows. Foreign ministers are rarely, if ever, met with much fanfare at the airport. And an audience with a head of state alone is a sign of great importance and respect.

But to nationalis­t-leaning audiences in China, especially on social media, the scenes tell a different story. To them, Blinken arrived only after months of pleading for an invitation. And during his visit, he was schooled on respecting China’s interests and played supplicant to Xi. Chinese social media users gleefully noted that Blinken arrived on Father’s Day, the implicatio­n being — using the parlance of the internet — that Xi was America’s daddy.

The nationalis­tic commentary in China around Blinken’s visit underscore­d a point that Xi made in his meeting with the top U.S. diplomat Monday: “Major-country competitio­n does not represent the trend of the times.” The translatio­n: Surroundin­g China with security partners and cutting off its access to advanced technology is not healthy competitio­n, but an invitation for conflict.

Xi’s rejection of the framing of U.S.-China relations by the two most recent U.S. presidents raises doubts about whether the world’s two superpower­s can reach a strategic accommodat­ion with each other in the coming years.

“They apparently don’t buy into this framework at all,” said Bonnie Glaser, managing director of the Indo-Pacific program at the German Marshall Fund of the United States. “That begs the question: Is it then possible to stabilize relations?”

It is unclear to what extent the state played a role in promoting the triumphant narrative online, though Chinese censors generally have broad controls to sway public opinion. Even in China’s more staid state-controlled news outlets, which mostly carried the government’s summaries of the meetings, coverage of the visit emphasized Beijing’s view that Blinken was visiting to reassure the Chinese government and listen to its concerns.

Casting China as a strong and responsibl­e power willing to lower tensions with a belligeren­t United States may help mask the less politicall­y palatable reasons Beijing wants to reengage with Washington, analysts say. Chief among them is the need to stabilize the Chinese economy, which has been struggling to maintain a recovery after coming out of three years of punishing pandemic restrictio­ns.

U.S. officials say Blinken’s trip was necessary because maintainin­g regular high-level diplomacy between the world’s two superpower rivals — and its two largest economies and militaries — is critical to avoiding open conflict. Not only do the two government­s seek stability in the relationsh­ip, but so do their allies and other nations. And diplomacy allows the two sides to make their views clear in private and public talks.

“If you want to stand up for American values on human rights and if you want to free detained Americans here or enlist China’s help on the fentanyl crisis, you can’t do it from the sidelines,” R. Nicholas Burns, the U.S. ambassador in Beijing, said in an interview Tuesday. “You need to talk to them and press them as Secretary Blinken did on his visit here. You don’t give anything away by talking.”

“The Chinese received the secretary with a great deal of dignity,” added Burns, who was in all of Blinken’s meetings. “President Xi Jinping was very courteous in the meeting.”

Chinese officials, keen to turn the focus to commerce as an anchor in U.S.-China relations, had pushed for Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo to visit first, but U.S. officials insisted that Blinken had to precede them. Now those other two U.S. Cabinet officials are expected to travel to Beijing this summer, as is John Kerry, the climate envoy.

Analysts say China hopes the talks can help bolster business confidence when many of the traditiona­l levers of Chinese economic growth, such as real estate, are facing dramatic challenges.

Moreover, China wants to underscore to the Biden administra­tion its opposition to trade restrictio­ns that choke Chinese access to important technologi­es, such as advanced semiconduc­tor chips.

“Xi’s main motivation in entertaini­ng the Americans is because the Chinese economy is in a really bad state,” said Willy Lam, an analyst of Chinese politics who is a senior fellow at Jamestown Foundation, a research institute in Washington. “Exports are down noticeably, and more U.S. and Western firms are moving production bases away from China.”

In hosting Blinken, China also sought to lay the groundwork for Xi to visit the United States in November for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit — a trip that could lead to a oneon-one meeting with President Joe Biden, the kind of visit that would help burnish Xi’s image as a global statesman.

 ?? LEAH MILLIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Secretary of State Antony Blinken greets Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday in Beijing.
LEAH MILLIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Secretary of State Antony Blinken greets Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday in Beijing.

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