Global Times

China, Germany, EU leaders meet ‘tone-setter’ for ties

Areas on deeper cooperatio­n, difference­s likely to be raised

- By Zhao Yusha

Chinese President Xi Jinping’s scheduled video conference with the top leaders of Germany and the EU, after bilateral ties were warmed up by senior Chinese diplomats’ visits to Europe weeks ago, is likely to be the “tone-setter” for a deeper and more comprehens­ive relations, observers said, noting such cooperatio­n safeguards multilater­alism, as the world tries to recover from COVID-19, and global politics is disrupted by rising US hegemony.

Observers said the previous two high-profile Chinese diplomatic visits to Europe laid the foundation for post-pandemic China-EU relations. The video meeting between higher-level officials will address the areas for deeper cooperatio­n as well as areas with gaps to be bridged between China and the EU, whose ties have been hailed as the ideal model amid a complicate­d global sphere, but also challenged by fundamenta­l disagreeme­nts.

Xi will attend a China-Germany-European Union (EU) leaders’ meeting via video link on Monday, Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying announced Wednesday.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, President of the European Council Charles Michel and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen will attend the meeting, Hua said.

This year is a special year for China and the EU,

as it marks the 45th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic relations. Germany had planned an important meeting for leaders of China and the bloc, but the original plan was disrupted by COVID-19, Cui Hongjian, an expert on EU studies told the Global Times.

He noted that Germany’s push to resume high-level talks shows the desire of Germany, and the EU to talk to China, and the importance they attach to Beijing.

The two are likely to reach a consensus on the trade of agricultur­al products and intellectu­al property, experts said, noting that negotiatio­ns on the EU-China Comprehens­ive Investment Agreement will also likely be discussed during the meeting.

Germany’s half-year rotating presidency began on July 1 when the EU faced two major problems: its future in the post-pandemic era, and its role in COVID-19 and rising unilateral­ism, said Shi Mingde, a former Chinese ambassador to Germany.

He further explained that Germany has three major tasks: fight the virus, push forward integratio­n within the bloc, and form a united policy toward China. “So, Germany’s stance is of great significan­ce in deciding the future of the bloc’s relations with China,” Shi said.

Now that ties between Beijing and Washington are suffering from what Shi described as a “most severe situation” since diplomatic relations were establishe­d, he said the EU is in the US’ sights to contain China.

“This power struggle has put the bloc in an awkward position, but I believe the EU will try not to provoke either side,” Shi said.

China’s EU watchers noted that the bloc’s decision not to choose between the world’s two biggest economies is not only for diplomatic reasons, which the EU has long honored, but also for pragmatic reasons.

The economic foundation between Washington and Brussels has been shaken ever since US President Donald Trump put forward his “America First” policy. The US withdrawal from internatio­nal organizati­ons has also gone against multilater­alism, which the EU cherishes.

Washington’s moves have also hurt the EU economical­ly, which impaired the block’s willingnes­s to cooperate with the US, said Sun Keqin, a research fellow at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, citing the Nord Stream gas pipeline as an example.

He said that the EU is closely watching the US presidenti­al election. “The bloc is likely to lean more to China if Trump is reelected, as they believe they will be squeezed out of US protection­ism.”

In contrast, China and the EU support multilater­alism, Shi said. For example, he said trade between Beijing and Berlin has increased significan­tly and been balanced, which is ideal to win-win cooperatio­n.

In May, a chartered flight with German businessme­n became the first to China since the outbreak, which served as an example of the profound ties and dependence on each other.

Agree to disagree

The video conference between leaders of China, Germany and the EU was announced shortly after Wang and Yang concluded their European trips. Many foreign media reported that Wang’s trip was marred after European leaders raised Hong Kong and Xinjiang issues, and claimed Wang was pressured by Germany and France for rebuking Czech Senate Speaker Milos Vystrcil’s visit to the island of Taiwan.

“Those examples show the complicati­ons and disputes that riddle relations between China and the EU. We have cooperatio­n, but also have competitio­n, and even antagonism on certain issues,” Sun said.

Observers also called for deep and frequent communicat­ion between the two, which helps “our EU partners know where our bottom line lies. Hong Kong and Xinjiang are our internal affairs, and that a state official’s visit to island of Taiwan is intolerabl­e,” Sun said.

China’s EU watchers noted that the bloc’s decision not to choose between the world’s two biggest economies is not only for diplomatic reasons, which the EU has long honored, but also for pragmatic reasons.

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