Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Should’ve stayed home

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French President Emmanuel Macron might have thought he could escape turmoil at home and burnish his credential­s as a global statesman by making a high-level state visit to China earlier this month. Instead, he exposed disunity in Europe over Beijing, he handed Chinese President Xi Jinping a propaganda coup, and, for good measure, he threw Taiwan under the bus.

Mr. Macron’s stated intention for making the trip was laudable—to try to urge Mr. Xi to use his leverage with Russian President Vladimir Putin to end his atrocious war in Ukraine. But the presence of a planeload of business leaders accompanyi­ng Mr. Macron underscore­d how the visit was always as much about signing commercial deals as coaxing Mr. Xi to help end the war.

Deals were signed, some $15 billion worth, for civilian nuclear energy, wind power, cosmetics, Airbus jets, poultry, beef and pork, among others. But Mr. Macron went further than the normal commercial agreements. After being feted with a red-carpet welcome, cannons firing, banquets and a no-necktie walk with Mr. Xi around the picturesqu­e Pine Garden in Guangzhou with a chat over tea, the two presidents signed a 51-point joint declaratio­n that mentioned only a vague goal to “support all efforts to restore peace in Ukraine.” Nothing condemning Russia’s clear aggression, and no mention of China using its leverage.

It gets worse. In the agreement billed as France’s new “global strategic partnershi­p with China,” Mr. Macron and Mr. Xi agreed to “deepen exchanges” between the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s Southern Theater and the French military units in the Pacific. And at a time of U.S. and European anxiety about high-tech exports to China, Mr. Macron instead agreed to “the fair and non-discrimina­tory treatment of licence applicatio­ns from Chinese companies.”

Mr. Macron largely seemed to adopt all the Chinese talking points about the emergence of a new “multipolar” world and the end of a “Cold War mentality.”

Mr. Macron saved his biggest gaffe for the flight home, telling Politico and Les Echos aboard his plane that, when it comes to Taiwan, Europe needed to avoid becoming “America’s followers” and getting “caught up in crises that are not ours.”

If there was any doubt about how this trip became a triumph for Mr. Xi, just look at the glowing stories and headlines in some of China’s state-run media.

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