Gulf Today

Blinken faces difficult meeting in China

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Top US diplomat Antony Blinken faces tough talks in China this week, as Washington ramps up pressure on its main rival on everything from defence to the economy ahead of the election. The United States and China are on paper rebuilding ties following a meeting between Joe Biden and Xi Jinping in San Francisco last year. But the world’s two biggest economies remain deeply at odds over trade, technology, Taiwan and the Ukraine war. “Blinken’s trip is not going to be an easy task,” Wu Xinbo, director of the Center for American Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said. For China, chief among the issues are trade and the economy.

The United States has in recent weeks ramped up pressure on China, with Biden calling for a hike in steel and aluminium tariffs on Beijing as he courts blue-collar voters in the lead-up to the election in November. The US government earlier this month also announced it was launching a probe into China’s trade practices in the shipbuildi­ng, maritime and logistics sectors, prompting a furious reaction in Beijing.

And while Biden said there was no trade war with Beijing, China sees US efforts to curb its industrial production as tantamount to just that. “Stability in the relationsh­ip is, in some concerning ways, illusory,” said Jake Werner, from the East Asia Program at Washington’s Quincy Institute.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has also refused to rule out penalties against China for industrial overcapaci­ty — with Beijing’s subsidies leading to excess production, driving export prices down. “Beijing views this expansion of controls as emblematic of America’s efforts to constrain China’s rise,” said Ryan Hass, a Brookings Institutio­n scholar on China.

This month, a US congressio­nal commitee accused Chinese authoritie­s of “directly” subsidisin­g the manufactur­e and export of ingredient­s used to make fentanyl — a synthetic painkiller behind a US overdose epidemic. On Tuesday, the US Senate approved legislatio­n requiring Tiktok to be divested from its Chinese parent company Bytedance or be shut out of the American market. US and other Western officials have voiced alarm over the popularity of Tiktok with young people, alleging it allows Beijing to collect data and spy on users. It has 170 million users in the United States alone.

These critics also say Tiktok is subservien­t to Beijing and a conduit to spread propaganda. China and the company strongly deny these claims. “Negotiatio­ns during Blinken’s visit will be held in a very tense atmosphere,” said Lyu Xiang, an expert in Sino-us relations at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). “Can China give up developmen­t (to ease US fears)? It’s impossible”, Lyu added.

Blinken, on his second trip in less than a year to China, has also accused Beijing of fuelling the Ukraine war by supplying components to Russia which it uses for its military expansion — claims Beijing condemned Tuesday as “groundless”.

US officials have described a major push by China that has helped Russia carry out its biggest militarisa­tion since Soviet times. “If China purports on the one hand to have positive, friendly relations with Europe and other countries, they can’t be fuelling on the other hand what is the biggest threat to European security since the end of the Cold War,” Blinken said last week. Beijing however has repeatedly insisted that it is on Washington to push Israel to agree to a ceasefire — and is worried itself about Washington’s military alliances in Asia. Lyu said called a recent joint statement between Japan, the Philippine­s, and the United States “the most hostile political statement against China since the end of the Cold War”.

 ?? ?? Xi Jinping
Xi Jinping
 ?? ?? Antony Blinken
Antony Blinken

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