Houston Chronicle

China seeks to box out Biden with newdeals

- By Steven Lee Myers

Atrade pactwith14 other Asian nations. A pledge to join other countries in reducing carbon emissions to fight global warming. Now, an investment agreement with the European Union.

China’s leader, Xi Jinping, has in recent weeks made deals and pledges that he hopes will position his country as an indispensa­ble global leader, even after its handling of the coronaviru­s and increased belligeren­ce at home and abroad have damaged its internatio­nal standing.

In doing so, he has underlined howdifficu­lt it will be for President-elect Joe Biden to forge a united front with allies against China’s authoritar­ian policies and trade practices, a central focus of the newadminis­tration’s plan to compete with Beijing and check its rising power. The image of Xi joining Chancellor AngelaMerk­el of Germany, President Emmanuel Macron of France and other European leaders in a conference call Wednesday to seal the deal with the European Union also amounted to a stinging rebuke of the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to isolate China’s Communist Party state.

The deals showthe leverage Xi has because of the strength of the Chinese economy, which is the fastest-growing among major nations as theworld continues to struggle with the pandemic.

Noah Barkin, a China expert in Berlin with the Rhodium Group, called the investment agreement in particular “a geopolitic­al coup for China.” Chinese companies already enjoyed greater access to European markets — a core complaint in Europe — so they won only modest openings in manufactur­ing and the growing market for renewable energies. The real achievemen­t for China is diplomatic.

China had to make only modest concession­s to overcome increasing­ly vocal concerns about China’s harshest policies, including the crackdown on Hong Kong and the mass detentions and forced labor of Uighurs in Xinjiang, the western Chinese region.

“Itwould be wrong to see these Chinese concession­s as a significan­t shift in policy,” Barkin said. “Over the past year, we have seen the party tighten its grip over the economy, double down on state-owned enterprise­s and launch a new push for self-reliance. That is the direction of policy that Xi has mapped out, and it would be naive to believe that this deal will change that.”

Instead, China has demonstrat­ed once again that it pays little or no diplomatic cost for abuses that violate European values. The Europeans finalized the investment agreement, for example, a day after the European Union publicly criticized the harsh prison sentence handed down to a Chinese lawyerwho reported on the initial coronaviru­s outbreak in the city of Wuhan.

Australia faced a similar trade-off in November when it signed up for the Asian trade pact, the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, even as China waged a campaign of economic coercion against the country.

China’s vast economic and diplomatic influence, especially at this time of global crisis, means that countries feel they have lit

tle choice but to engage with it, regardless of their unease over the character of Xi’s hard-line rule. The Asian trade pact, for example, while limited in scope, covers more of humanity — 2.2 billion people — than any previous one.

“The values we all cherish in our Sunday sermons must be adhered to ifwe are not to fall victim to a new systemic rival,” said Reinhard Bütikofer, a German member of the European Parliament­who has spoken out against the European investment agreement with China.

“I think the understand­ing is increasing,” he added, “but how to respond is not yet clear.”

China’s overtures will not end the anger over its repressive policies, including its documented use of forced labor. They could mollify China’s critics, though, by using the lure of commercial profit in a country whose economy has rebounded from the

pandemic more robustly than others’ have.

That would also undercut Biden, who already must overcome four years of frustratio­n in Europe over President Donald Trump’s go-it-alone approach as he confronts China’s actions at home and abroad.

Xi, of course, has not acknowledg­ed that any of China’s policies have eroded global trust. Nor have officials signaled any reconsider­ation of its core policies.

The country’s “Wolf Warrior” diplomacy, named after a pair of jingoistic action movies, shows no sign of relenting. Australia still faces China’s wrath, as does Canada over the detention of the chief financial officer of Chinese technology giant Huawei at the behest of the United States.

A survey by the Pew Research Center in October found that in 14 economical­ly advanced countries, unfavorabl­e attitudes toward China had reached

their highest levels in more than a decade. A median of 78 percent of those surveyed said they had little or no confidence that Xi would do the right thing in world affairs. (One upside for Xi: 89 percent felt the same way about Trump.)

China’s economic recovery has nonetheles­s given Xi a diplomatic opening, and he has seized it. Xi’s pledges to accelerate China’s reduction of carbon emissions, which he began making in September, have won internatio­nal plaudits, even if the government has yet to detail how it will wean itself from coal and other heavily polluting industries.

Around the same time, Xi showed renewedint­erest in wrapping up discussion­s for the European investment agreement, which had been dragging on for seven years. Only months before, a deal seemed all but dead amid rising animosity toward China in Europe. “Real difference­s exist, and we won’t paper over them,” CharlesMic­hel, president of the European Council, said in September.

A breakthrou­gh came after the U.S. presidenti­al election. Trump showed disdain for America’s traditiona­l allies in Europe and Asia, but Biden has pledged to galvanize a coalition to confront the economic, diplomatic and military challenges that China poses.

China clearly foresawthe potential threat.

Only two weeks after the election, China joined the 14 other Asian nations in signing the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p. In early December, after phone calls with Merkel and Macron, Xi pushed to finish the investment agreement with the Europeans.

The prospect raised alarm, both in Europe and in theUnited States. Biden’s incoming national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, took to Twitter to hint strongly that Europe should first wait for consultati­ons with the newadminis­tration— to no avail.

The investment agreement must be ratified by the European Parliament before it can take effect, and it faces significat­ion opposition that could derail it. For now, Chinese officials have celebrated a deal that Xi called “balanced, highstanda­rd andmutuall­y beneficial.”

“The Chinese leadership is concerned about a transAtlan­tic front, a multinatio­nal front, against it, and it is willing to make, I think, tactical concession­s to bring the Europeans on board,” Barkin of the Rhodium Group said. “They’ve been very smart about this.”

 ?? Amr Alfiky / New York Times ?? President-elect Joe Biden hopes to galvanize a coalition to confront the economic, diplomatic and military challenges posed by China.
Amr Alfiky / New York Times President-elect Joe Biden hopes to galvanize a coalition to confront the economic, diplomatic and military challenges posed by China.

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