Vancouver Sun

Building a bridge to China

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He’s got a winning personalit­y, a wife who’s a famous singer, a taste for Hollywood movies, a daughter at Harvard and fond memories of a 1985 stay with a family in Muscatine, Iowa. Xi Jinping, the vicepresid­ent and heir apparent to the top government position in China, is not the prototypic­al Chinese leader.

He handled himself creditably on his trip to the United States, even sitting through a trial many Americans are familiar with — a long- winded oral presentati­on by Vice- President Joe Biden, who pointedly complained about China’s intellectu­al property policies and human rights record.

He returned to Muscatine, where he said, “Coming here is really like coming back to home.”

All this makes him look like someone who will be more amenable to U. S. concerns, but we shouldn’t expect too much. Xi is a shrewd Communist party functionar­y who can be expected to do nothing unless it serves the interests of his government. Personal compatibil­ity may help smooth relations between nations, but only if the edges aren’t too rough to start with.

More important is his background. His father, a revolution­ary leader, had the grim experience of being purged and sent to a labour camp for 16 years, and the son was exiled to the countrysid­e as part of the insanity of the Cultural Revolution.

The elder Xi, reports the New York Times, was “instrument­al in initiating China’s economic reforms, backed many of his progressiv­e contempora­ries and reportedly disagreed with the violent suppressio­n of student protesters in Tiananmen Square in 1989.” If the son follows a similar course, it bodes well for political reform and liberaliza­tion, which are long overdue.

The more pressing issue is what course Xi will take in dealing with his neighbours and the United States. China has embarked on an ambitious military buildup and it takes a hard line on Tibet and Taiwan. There is no doubt Beijing is willing to go to war if necessary to prevent any disadvanta­geous change in the status quo in either place.

It also has disputes with other East Asian nations over various islands in the South China Sea. As China grows in wealth and military capacity, it could be a menace to its smaller neighbours.

Here, the crucial thing is for Washington to leave no doubt of its resolve to remain a Pacific power — intent not on picking fights with Beijing but with preserving a regional order that has fostered peace and growth.

The two countries may never see eye- to- eye on many significan­t matters involving commercial relations as well as security. But if both can focus on the interests they have in common, they can limit their competitio­n and contention to peaceful arenas. Xi’s visit should be a step in that direction.

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