Global Times

Biden makes ‘ logical mistake’ in splitting ChinaRussi­a ties

- By Yang Sheng and Zhang Han

US President Joe Biden has finished his trip to Europe, which is his first major diplomatic event since he assumed the presidency. But apart from a series of vague communiqué­s with his allies and a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, which ended with no significan­t breakthrou­ghs, there is nothing Biden can show to his people regarding his diplomatic efforts.

Biden, at least on the surface, has fixed transatlan­tic relations, which had been seriously damaged by Donald Trump, reached some vague consensuse­s with his G7 and NATO allies on confrontin­g China and Russia. However, none of those communiqué­s demonstrat­e how much resources and money the US would want to give for such magnificen­t goals, said Chinese experts.

Trump was not welcome in Europe, but he could still show something concrete to Americans, such as how much money he had forced US allies to pay, pleasing some US voters, analysts said. They predicted that in the next few weeks, Biden’s approval rating might slightly drop because of the lackluster visit to Europe.

‘ China’ all the time

Although there were no concrete outcomes that could make US allies or American people happy, China was the topic that persisted all the way through Biden’s trip, even in his oneman press conference after his meeting with Putin in Geneva on Wednesday.

The word “Chi-na” wasn’t even included in a ques----

tion raised by a reporter at the conference, which is about the potential of a new cold war between the US and Russia, but Biden, in his answer, said that “let me ask a rhetorical question: You [ Russia] got a multi- thousand- mile border with China. China is moving ahead… seeking to be the most powerful economy in the world and the largest and the most powerful military in the world.”

“Your [ Russian] economy is struggling; you need to move it in a more aggressive way, in terms of growing it… I don’t think he’s [ Putin) looking for a Cold War with the US,” Biden recalled on his talk with Putin while answering the question.

Jin Canrong, associate dean of the School of Internatio­nal Studies at the Renmin University of China, told the Global Times that “apparently, just as most people had predicted before the Putin- Biden meeting, Biden would definitely create some discord for China- Russia relations in his talk with Putin, but his approach was extremely poor and it would bring no effect.”

“China’s economic developmen­t is not a threat to Russia, but an opportunit­y. This is common sense for both China and Russia. Hilariousl­y, Biden told Putin that the Russian economy is struggling and he even tried to use this point to split China- Russia ties,” Jin said.

“Can he tell the difference between who is making the Russian economy struggle and who is helping Russia overcome economic difficulti­es?” Jin asked.

The US is the one that is making great efforts to sanction, contain and isolate Russia. China is the country which is always providing a helping hand and promoting trade with Russia, so Biden had made a very serious logical mistake, seriously underestim­ating Putin’s intelligen­ce and experience, Lü Xiang, a research fellow in US studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, told the Global Times on Thursday.

The Biden- Putin summit concluded with no significan­t breakthrou­ghs, but it has at least shown that US- Russia tensions have eased a little bit, so there are some positives that have come from this. It is still far from a diplomatic success though, Jin said.

“Interestin­gly, Biden had an argument with a CNN reporter in his press conference. We used to think this could happen only between Trump and the US mainstream media. This shows Biden is anxious and lacks confidence in dealing with tough questions. He can only speak fluently about vague ideas like democracy, human rights and so on, but when he talks about concrete issues, he gets muddled,” Lü said.

Is America back?

One major goal of Biden’s visit to Europe was to convince US allies that the US is back, which was partly achieved considerin­g the atmosphere of the events, including the G7 summit, the USEU summit and the NATO summit.

Cui Hongjian, director of the Department of European Studies at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times on Thursday that Europe’s concerns over the US’ respect for multilater­alism, commitment to allies and democratic values were assured to a certain extent, though the shadow of Trump administra­tion still lasts.

But when Biden shouted America is back, what he meant was “America was back to leadership,” which the visit failed to realize, Cui said.

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