Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. tensions with China are fraying long-cultivated academic ties

- By Didi Tang

WASHINGTON — In the 1980s, Fu Xiangdong was a young Chinese virology student who came to the United States to study biochemist­ry. More than three decades later, he had a prestigiou­s professors­hip in California and was conducting promising research on Parkinson’s disease.

But now Mr. Fu is doing his research at a Chinese university. His American career was derailed as U.S.-China relations unraveled, putting his collaborat­ions with a Chinese university under scrutiny. He ended up resigning.

Mr. Fu’s story mirrors the rise and fall of U.S.-China academic engagement.

Beginning in 1978, such cooperatio­n expanded for decades, largely insulated from the fluctuatio­ns in relations between the two countries. Today, it’s in decline, with Washington viewing Beijing as a strategic rival and there are growing fears about Chinese spying. The number of Chinese students in the United States is down, and U.S.-Chinese research collaborat­ion is shrinking.

This decline isn’t hurting just students and researcher­s. Analysts say it will undercut American competitiv­eness and weaken global efforts to address health issues.

“That’s been really harmful to U.S. science,” said Deborah Seligsohn, a former U.S. diplomat in Beijing and now a political scientist at Villanova University. “We are producing less science because of this falloff.”

For some, the prospect for scientific advances needs to take a back seat to security concerns. In their view, such cooperatio­n aids China by giving it access to sensitive commercial, defense and technologi­cal informatio­n. They also fear the Chinese government is using its presence in American universiti­es to monitor and harass dissidents.

The concerns were at the core of the China Initiative, a program begun in 2018 by the Justice Department under the Trump administra­tion to uncover acts of economic espionage. While it failed to catch spies, the effort had an impact on researcher­s.

Under the initiative, Gang Chen, a professor of mechanical engineerin­g at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, was charged in 2021 with hiding links with the Chinese government. Prosecutor­s eventually dropped all charges, but Mr. Chen lost his research group.

Mr. Chen said investigat­ions and wrongful prosecutio­ns like his “are pushing out talents.”

“That’s going to hurt U.S. scientific enterprise, hurt U.S. competitiv­eness,” he said.

The Biden administra­tion ended the China Initiative in 2022, but there are other efforts targeting scholars with Chinese connection­s.

In Florida, a state law aimed at curbing influences from foreign countries has raised concerns that students from China could be banned from labs there.

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