Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pence’s claim about balloon is misleading

Blinken’s meeting was planned months before

- Amy Sherman PolitiFact

Former Vice President Mike Pence said at a conservati­ve conference that President Joe Biden’s stance wasn’t strong enough after a Chinese surveillan­ce balloon entered U.S. airspace earlier this year. Pence, who is running for the Republican Party’s presidenti­al nomination, said he would be tougher against China if elected president.

“I think it is incomprehe­nsible after China sent a balloon over strategic sites in the United States, and their ships cutting off our ships in the South China Sea, and their aircraft cutting off our aircraft in the Asian Pacific that President Biden literally sent the secretary of state hat in hand to go kowtow and ask for a meeting,” Pence said at the Aug. 18 conference in Atlanta with conservati­ve talk radio host Erick Erickson.

Pence said if such a thing happened on his watch, “I wouldn’t have sent my secretary of state. I would have sent an aircraft carrier. And I would have said, ‘You are going to knock this stuff off now, or we will send more until you want to sit down and have a conversati­on.’”

Pence’s comments could be interprete­d to mean that Biden dispatched Secretary of State Antony Blinken to arrange a meeting with China immediatel­y after the balloon was spotted in U.S. airspace. That’s not what happened.

Blinken’s February visit to China was postponed due to balloon

The Pentagon said Feb. 2 that a Chinese surveillan­ce balloon had entered continenta­l U.S. airspace a couple of days before.

Blinken had planned to go to Beijing the night of Feb. 3, but on that day, the State Department said the trip was postponed. That planned meeting stemmed from a meeting between Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Bali in November 2022. The New York Times reported that Blinken’s meeting was meant to keep communicat­ion lines open and discuss problemati­c issues to avoid conflict.

A senior State Department official told reporters Feb. 3 that after consulting with different U.S. government agencies and Congress, the department decided “that the conditions are not right at this moment” for Blinken to go to China. The State Department transcript does not identify the official, who added that the balloon’s presence was “a clear violation of our sovereignt­y, as well as internatio­nal law, and it is unacceptab­le that this has occurred.”

On Feb. 4, the U.S. military shot down the balloon off the South Carolina coast.

Blinken met Chinese officials in June

Pence’s campaign said he was referring to Blinken’s meeting with Chinese officials in June.

We asked Pence spokespers­on Devin O’Malley whether Pence believes that Blinken should not meet with China officials at all, but we did not get a direct answer.

During the June visit, Blinken and Chinese officials discussed a long list of issues including global topics such as the war in Ukraine, human rights violations in China, the flow of drugs and the continuati­on of the United States’ “One China” policy.

“We are working to put some stability into the relationsh­ip, to put a floor under the relationsh­ip, to make sure that the competitio­n that we’re in doesn’t veer into conflict,” Blinken told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria after the trip. A conflict, Blinken said, “would not be in our interest, their interest, or anyone else’s.”

Whether it was in the U.S,’ best interest to cancel the meeting in February and reschedule for June is a matter of opinion and politics, said Yun Sun, director of the China Program at the Stimson Center, a Washington D.C.based foreign affairs think tank.

It was politicall­y untenable for the U.S. to keep the February meeting after the balloon incident, Sun said. But if the U.S. wanted to “maintain the momentum of engagement and improvemen­t of relations since the Bali Summit last November, some level of exchanges, interactio­ns and visits are necessary and inevitable.”

Diplomacy is not a gift to the other side; it’s a necessary means of addressing difficult challenges, said Jessica Chen Weiss, a China and Asia-Pacific Studies professor at Cornell University.

“The postponeme­nt of Blinken’s visit was an unfortunat­e reflection of domestic political pressure, not our best interests,” Weiss said. “The Biden administra­tion’s efforts to reestablis­h channels of communicat­ion is necessary to reduce miscalcula­tion and ensure that efforts to support Taiwan within the context of our longstandi­ng unofficial relationsh­ip do not inadverten­tly provoke the very conflict we are trying to deter.”

It is standard practice for the U.S. secretary of state to visit Beijing, and it would be normal for such visits to alternate with Chinese officials visiting the U.S., said Susan Thornton, a senior fellow at the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale Law School and a retired senior U.S. diplomat.

“The visit of Secretary Blinken to Beijing was long overdue, mostly because of the pandemic,” Thornton said.

Our ruling

Pence said that “after China sent a balloon over strategic sites in the United States … President Biden literally sent the secretary of state hat in hand to go kowtow and ask for a meeting.”

Pence’s remark creates the misleading impression that immediatel­y after the surveillan­ce balloon was spotted, Blinken sought a meeting with officials in China. That’s not what happened.

Blinken’s February meeting with China’s President Xi was planned months before the balloon was noticed. Once the balloon was spotted, that meeting was postponed and the U.S. military shot the balloon down.

Blinken visited China in June, about four months later.

We rate this statement Mostly False.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States