The Standard (St. Catharines)

Europeans look to China as global partner

Macron’s visit to China leaves the United States at risk of being sidelined on global stage

- SYLVIE CORBET THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — When France’s president wants to carry European concerns to the world stage to find solutions for climate change, trade tensions or Iran’s nuclear ambitions, he no longer calls Washington. He flies to Beijing.

President Emmanuel Macron’s visit to China this week suggests that the United States risks being sidelined on the global stage under President Donald Trump. One moment spoke volumes: Chinese President Xi Jinping sampling French wines, which Trump’s administra­tion recently slapped with heavy new tariffs.

Macron portrayed himself as an envoy for the whole European Union, conveying the message that the bloc has largely given up on Trump, who doesn’t hide his disdain for multilater­alism.

Just as the Trump administra­tion formally launched the process of pulling out of the 2015 Paris climate agreement , France and China issued a “Beijing call” on Wednesday for increased global cooperatio­n in fighting climate change and better protecting biodiversi­ty. Both countries have deplored the U.S. withdrawal.

“One country’s isolated choice can’t change the course of the world. It only leads to marginaliz­ation,” Macron said.

While China’s president tasted French wines and high-quality beef at an import fair in Shanghai, Macron was pushing for a broader opening of the Chinese market to European products.

“I think he discovered Languedoc wine. He wasn’t familiar with it, he liked it. He tasted a Burgundy and a classic Bordeaux wine,” Macron told reporters.

Xi said the two leaders were sending “a strong signal to the world about steadfastl­y upholding multilater­alism and free trade, as well as working together to build open economies.”

During his first state visit to China in January 2018, Macron vowed to return every year in an effort to establish “mutual trust.”

Since then, Xi has travelled to France, when China signed an agreement in March to buy 300 aircraft from European plane maker Airbus.

This time, Macron travelled east, bringing with him an ambitious agenda that includes establishi­ng a joint stance on reforming the World Trade Organizati­on, fighting climate change and saving the nuclear accord with Iran.

After Trump pulled the U.S. out of the 2015 U.N. nuclear pact, France and China reiterated their support for the hardfought deal both countries had helped negotiate.

In Beijing, Macron described recent Gulf tensions as “the negative impact of the non-respect of a multilater­al agreement. ... The American error has been to leave (the pact) unilateral­ly.”

“Strong multilater­alism is more efficient than shrill unilateral­ism,” Macron said, praising China’s support for deescalati­on of the tensions as the Europeans try to save the nuclear deal with Iran.

“China and France are together with the Europeans and Russians,” he said. “We are convinced that we should increase our joint efforts to bring Iran back into compliance.”

On trade, the EU often joins U.S. criticism of China’s protection­ist policies, government subsidies and other restrictiv­e practices.

But whereas Trump has responded by aggressive­ly imposing tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of goods from China, Europe and elsewhere, bypassing rules set by the WTO, the EU considers that a trade war is not the appropriat­e response.

“We must get stable and co-operative trade rules at the internatio­nal level,” Macron said, referring to a plan to reform the WTO.

Trump complains that the WTO, which is tasked with resolving trade disputes, is weak and ineffectiv­e as China flouts its rules and it takes years to address trade complaints.

 ?? LINTAO ZHANG GETTY IMAGES ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, accompanie­s French President Emmanuel Macron to view an honour guard in Beijing.
LINTAO ZHANG GETTY IMAGES Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, accompanie­s French President Emmanuel Macron to view an honour guard in Beijing.

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