The Reporter (Vacaville)

A complicate­d relationsh­ip: Biden, Xi prepare for meeting

- By Aamer Madhani

WASHINGTON >> Joe Biden and China’s Xi Jinping have slurped noodles together in Beijing. They’ve shared deep thoughts about the meaning of America during an exchange on the Tibetan plateau. They’ve gushed to U.S. business leaders about developing a sincere respect for each other.

The American president has held up his relationsh­ip with Xi as evidence of his heartfelt belief that good foreign policy starts with building strong personal relationsh­ips.

But as the two leaders prepare to hold their first presidenti­al meeting on Monday, the troubled U.S.China relationsh­ip is demonstrat­ing that the power of one of Biden’s greatest professed strengths as a politician — the ability to connect — has its limits.

“When it comes to U.S.China relations, the gaps are so big and the trend lines are so problemati­c that the personal touch can only go so far,” said Matthew Goodman, who served as an Asia adviser on the National Security Council in the Barack Obama and George W. Bush administra­tions.

White House officials have set low expectatio­ns for Monday’s virtual meeting: No major announceme­nts are expected and there’s no plan for the customary joint statement by the two countries at the end, according to administra­tion officials.

The public warmth — Xi referred to Biden as his “old friend” when Biden visited China in 2013 while the then-U.S. vice president spoke of their “friendship” — has cooled now that both men are heads of state. Biden bristled in June when asked by a reporter if he would press his old friend to cooperate with a World Health Organizati­on investigat­ion into the coronaviru­s origins.

“Let’s get something straight: We know each other well; we’re not old friends,” Biden said. “It’s just pure business.”

Biden nonetheles­s believes a face-to-face meeting — even a virtual one like the two leaders will hold Monday evening — has its value.

“He feels that the history of their relationsh­ip, having spent time with him, allows him to be quite candid as he has been in the past and he will continue to be,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in previewing the encounter.

Biden and Xi, ages 78 and 68 respective­ly, first got to know each other on travels across the U.S. and China when both were vice presidents, interactio­ns that both leaders say left a lasting impression.

Of late, there have been signs that there could be at least a partial thawing after the first nine months of the Biden administra­tion were marked by the two sides trading recriminat­ions and by unproducti­ve exchanges between the presidents’ top advisers.

Last week, for example, the U.S. and China pledged at U.N. climate talks in Glasgow, Scotland, to increase their cooperatio­n and speed up action to rein in climate-damaging emissions.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping and Vice President Joe Biden hold T-shirts students gave them at the Internatio­nal Studies Learning Center in South Gate.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping and Vice President Joe Biden hold T-shirts students gave them at the Internatio­nal Studies Learning Center in South Gate.

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