South China Morning Post

NEW ENVOY SURPRISED BY THIRD POSTING TO U.S.

Consul general Huang Ping, who received his orders while still serving as ambassador to Zimbabwe, says American role is coveted by diplomats

- Robert Delaney, US bureau chief robert.delaney@scmp.com

China’s new New York-based consul general is more surprised than anyone to be posted to the United States for a third time.

“I said ‘What? I haven’t finished my term here,’” Huang Ping recounted at a couple of high-profile events in New York last week, referring to the orders he received while still in his posting as ambassador to Zimbabwe. “I asked, why are you sending me to the United States again, especially at this time?” Huang told those attending the China Institute’s annual gala at the opulent Fifth Avenue hotel, The Pierre, on Wednesday evening, sparking laughter.

The China Institute is a membership-based, non-profit organisati­on with a mandate to run programmes aimed at strengthen­ing America’s relationsh­ip with the country.

“I was not expecting that they would send me back again because in my system, America is a place lots of people want to come to,” Huang added. “If you have served twice, it’s better you serve somewhere else.”

Huang, who had served as a visa officer in Washington from 1988 to 1990 and as consul general in Chicago from 2008 to 2010, repeated the anecdote the next evening at China’s New York Consulate in midtown Manhattan.

Then he added a more characteri­stically diplomatic note that Beijing officials have cited recently to counter the more aggressive stance Washington has taken since Donald Trump entered the White House last year.

“China will further expand imports, open market access and foster a world-class business environmen­t,” Huang told an audience of more than 200 in the consulate’s banquet space overlookin­g the Hudson River.

“In the coming 50 years, China’s imports of goods and services are expected to exceed US$40 trillion and US$10 trillion, respective­ly. That means a bigger cake for all of the countries, including the US.”

China needs all the US expertise it can muster to help tamp down hostilitie­s that have flared on multiple fronts, according to Robert Kapp, a former president of the US-China Business Council, a membership-based advocacy organisati­on. Those hostilitie­s include a trade war.

Other issues – including US suspicion of Chinese investment­s, and military activities in the South China Sea – are also threatenin­g to undo the economic and cultural interdepen­dence that has grown in the last 40 years of diplomatic relations between Beijing and Washington.

“This is a time of crisis in USChina relations,” Kapp said, “and I think the Chinese government and leadership is probably hoping that putting people with lengthy experience in the US on the front lines of their official presence in America will help Beijing gain a more useful working understand­ing about what’s going on in the US.”

Huang’s presence would “also help convey to American audiences China’s official messages in a way that Americans will understand”, Kapp said.

Nicholas Platt, the long-time US diplomat who accompanie­d president Richard Nixon on the 1972 trip that restored relations with China and then set up the first US diplomatic outpost there since 1949, was an honoured guest at the consular event.

Concerning the frictions between the two superpower­s, Platt asked in his address: “Is conflict inevitable? I believe no.

“We have spent decades together, both competing and cooperatin­g, while dealing with serious crises along the way. China is too big to contain,” he said.

“The relationsh­ip is too complex to dismantle. We have no choice but to press ahead with the focus on practical solutions rather than ideologica­l pronouncem­ents.”

 ?? ?? China Institute trustee Michael Krupa, new consul general Huang Ping and his wife Zhang Aiping at last Wednesday’s gala dinner.
China Institute trustee Michael Krupa, new consul general Huang Ping and his wife Zhang Aiping at last Wednesday’s gala dinner.

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