Business Day

‘New start’ in US-China ties as Huawei boss freed

• Beijing in turn releases two Canadians as ‘hostage diplomacy’ brings end to fracas that began with 2018 arrest

- Agency Staff

The US has met one of China’s demands to improve relations with the release of a top Huawei Technologi­es executive, paving the way for better ties at the cost of appearing to reward Beijing for what critics have called “hostage diplomacy”.

Meng Wanzhou, Huawei ’ s CFO, flew to China from Vancouver after reaching a deferred prosecutio­n agreement with US authoritie­s to resolve criminal charges connected with US sanctions on Iran.

Shortly afterwards, China released two Canadian citizens — Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor — who were detained within days of Meng’s December 2018 arrest.

The deal comes two weeks after President Joe Biden called Chinese leader Xi Jinping in frustratio­n over Beijing’s move to link progress on climate change with other demands, including Meng’s release as well as lifting sanctions and removing punitive tariffs.

China had insisted the US take the first step to improving ties, with foreign minister Wang Yi saying earlier this month that the US “should meet China halfway”.

The agreement reached on Friday appears to do just that, amounting to the biggest US step in years to smooth over relations with Beijing after an onslaught of punitive measures backed with bipartisan support in Washington. Though a range of issues remain unresolved between the world’s biggest economies, one of the biggest stumbling blocks to more cooperatio­n is now gone.

“This is a very significan­t move and symbolises a new beginning for China and the US,”

said Henry Wang Huiyao, president and founder of the Centre for China & Globalisat­ion policy research group in Beijing. “Next there could certainly be co-operation on climate change” and tariffs, he said.

Meng’s arrest in December 2018, which came on the same day Xi met former president Donald Trump on the sidelines of a Group of 20 summit, shook elite circles in Beijing. She is the daughter of the founder of Huawei, a national champion at the forefront of Xi’s efforts for China to be self-sufficient in strategic technologi­es.

China treated the arrest as a national affront, quickly detaining two Canadian citizens on unspecifie­d national security charges and lashing out at the government in Ottawa.

Authoritie­s in Beijing repeatedly called Meng’s case “political” while insisting the Canadian detentions followed the rule of law — all while Chinese diplomats suggested the pair would be used as bargaining chips to secure her release. The showdown cost billions of dollars in lost trade and plunged ChinaCanad­a

bilateral relations to their worst point in decades.

China on Saturday reiterated its stance on the issue, saying the arrest of Meng was political persecutio­n against Chinese citizens with a purpose to suppress Chinese hi-tech companies. Allegation­s of fraud against Meng are purely fabricated, state broadcaste­r CCTV cited foreign affairs ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying as saying.

US prosecutor­s said Meng’s agreement shows she has “taken responsibi­lity for her principal role in perpetrati­ng a scheme to defraud a global financial institutio­n”.

“There are signs that the two sides no longer want to escalate, but they’re also unlikely to deescalate,”

said Shi Yinhong, professor of internatio­nal relations at Beijing’s Renmin University who has advised China’s State Council. “The two sides are trying to freeze the level of tensions, and this is going to last for a rather long period of time.”

For China, beyond the insult of arresting such a high-profile figure, the case was also egregious because it showed how the US could unilateral­ly put sanctions on an adversary and then prevent other countries from conducting normal business operations.

Beijing has sought to push back more broadly against US sanctions on Chinese officials, passing legislatio­n in 2021 that may force businesses to pick sides if implemente­d.

Meng’s deal was framed by US prosecutor­s as an admission of guilt. US secretary of state Antony Blinken avoided commenting on Meng while welcoming China’s move to send the Canadians home.

Bill Hagerty, a Republican US senator from Tennessee and a former ambassador to Japan, accused Biden of “appeasemen­t” in the face of China’s “hostage diplomacy”.

The tricky questions raised by the agreement were alluded to by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who said there would be “time for reflection­s and analysis in the coming days and weeks”.

‘NATIONAL SECURITY’

China has long rejected the label of “hostage diplomacy” as “totally groundless”, saying that no-one who follows the country’s laws should fear arrest. But Beijing’s expansive definition of national security in the mainland and now Hong Kong is raising risks for foreign businesses.

Cheng Lei, an Australian citizen who worked for a Chinese media outlet, has been held since August 2020 on national security concerns. Haze Fan, a Bloomberg News staffer who is a Chinese citizen, was detained on suspicion of endangerin­g national security last December.

For now at least, business groups are welcoming the resolution to the diplomatic spat, even as they note the lasting damage.

“Canadian and Chinese business leaders are both going to come away from this experience with a good deal more apprehensi­on or trepidatio­n than they had before,” said Noah Fraser, MD of the Canada China Business Council. “But this was a necessary first step along a road to rebuilding that confidence.”

CHINA TREATED THE ARREST AS A NATIONAL AFFRONT, QUICKLY DETAINING TWO CANADIAN CITIZENS

 ?? /Jin Liwang/Xinhua via Reuters ?? Back home: Huawei Technologi­es CFO Meng Wanzhou waves as she steps out of a charter plane at Shenzhen Baoan Internatio­nal Airport in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China on September 25 2021.
/Jin Liwang/Xinhua via Reuters Back home: Huawei Technologi­es CFO Meng Wanzhou waves as she steps out of a charter plane at Shenzhen Baoan Internatio­nal Airport in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China on September 25 2021.
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