Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Xi warns Blinken against ‘vicious competitio­n’ between US and China

- By Iain Marlow Bloomberg News

President Xi Jinping warned America’s top diplomat that the U.S. shouldn’t target or oppose China, as the world’s largest economies wrapped two days of talks spanning thorny disputes on trade and Beijing’s support for Russia’s war machine.

The Chinese leader met with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Beijing on Friday afternoon, as the two superpower­s continued dialogue to manage a growing list of difference­s. While the substance of talks was confrontat­ional, both sides refrained from the sharpest rhetoric. They also announced a new working group on artificial intelligen­ce to start in the coming weeks, bolstering expectatio­ns for keeping ties steady.

“China and the United States should be partners rather than rivals,” Xi told Blinken, according to a Chinese Foreign Ministry statement. The two sides should “seek common ground and reserve difference­s, rather than engage in vicious competitio­n,” he added.

Blinken’s harshest criticisms were reserved for Beijing’s support of Russian aggression in Ukraine. China is the top supplier of military machine tools and a compound used in munitions and rocket propellant, he said. “Russia would struggle to sustain its assault on Ukraine without China’s support,” he added, noting that the U.S. was ready to impose additional sanctions on Chinese firms.

Since Blinken last visited Beijing 10 months ago at what he called a time of “profound tensions” — after the U.S. shot down an alleged Chinese spy balloon — leaders of both nations have pledged to keep ties on a more secure footing. An American election campaign, in which Beijing is a top target on all sides of the ballot, is now adding fresh volatility to the relationsh­ip.

President Joe Biden signed a law that could expel Tiktok — owned by China—based Bytedance Ltd. — from the U.S. as Blinken headed to China, days after vowing new tariffs on the Asian nation. The U.S. leader has also imposed a slew of trade curbs to block Beijing’s access to advanced chips citing national security concerns.

Blinken signaled more trade tensions ahead, emphasizin­g that the issue of Chinese manufactur­ing overcapaci­ty was now “front and center” of the relationsh­ip. “This is a movie that we’ve seen before and we know how it ends — with American businesses shuttered and American jobs lost,” he said.

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi accused the

U.S. of taking “endless measures to suppress China’s economy,” during five-and-a-half hours of talks with Blinken, which included a working lunch. “This is not fair competitio­n, but containmen­t — and it is not removing risks, but creating risks,” he added, noting while things were broadly stable “negative factors” in the relationsh­ip were rising.

Diplomatic visits between the two rivals are becoming “Trojan horses” to emphasize difference­s, according to Josef Gregory Mahoney, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Shanghai’s East China Normal University.

“This appears to be what the U.S. has in mind with guardrails,” he added. “It helps stabilize relations and to prevent the sort of dangerous tipping points experience­d last year while still marching toward a Cold War paradigm.”

The U.S. is rallying the European Union to forge a common front against China’s industrial policy, with Treasury Chief Janet Yellen warning leaders in Beijing this month that its cheap exports were a concern for the world

— a sentiment German Chancellor Olaf Scholz repeated on a trip to the Asian nation days later.

Yellen also raised the prospect of fresh sanctions on Chinese financial institutio­ns that the U.S. says are helping to prop up Russia’s defense industrial base, with the U.S. reportedly already drafting such measures.

Blinken touted to Xi the progress made on military communicat­ion, after both nation’s defense ministers recently held their first call, as well as counternar­cotics cooperatio­n. He also urged Beijing to use its influence to press Iran and limit conflict in Middle East during meetings with Chinese leaders.

Other flashpoint­s in the relationsh­ip such as peace around selfruled Taiwan, which the Chinese Communist Party considers its territory, and Beijing’s “dangerous” military activity in the South China Sea also featured in talks, according to the U.S. readouts.

Blinken devoted half of his trip to more relaxed engagement­s in Shanghai on Thursday. Those included attending a basketball game, eating dinner at a dumpling restaurant, taking a stroll along the colonial-era riverfront and addressing U.S. and Chinese students at a local New York University campus.

Few concrete deliverabl­es were expected from the U.S. diplomat’s trip. But overall it showed the two countries both want to avoid an escalation of conflict, said Allen Carlson, associate professor in Cornell University’s Department of Government.

“They have also tacitly acknowledg­ed that as a result of their ongoing economic interdepen­dence that they also still need each other,” he added. “But beyond such general points there is little that they agree on.”

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