San Francisco Chronicle

U.S. ambassador in Beijing to step down next month

- By Steven Lee Myers Steven Lee Myers is a New York Times writer.

The American ambassador to China, Terry Branstad, announced Monday that he would resign in early October after a tenure that paralleled a sharp deteriorat­ion in relations between China and the United States.

Branstad, who twice served as governor of Iowa and was a crucial early supporter of Donald Trump’s presidenti­al candidacy in 2016, arrived in Beijing in the summer of 2017 with high hopes of using a personal connection to China’s leader, Xi Jinping, to build stronger ties.

Instead, he found himself on the front lines of Trump’s trade war and, by this year, a downward spiral of tensions that, to many, has heralded a new era of Cold Warlike confrontat­ion between the world’s two largest economies.

Branstad, who is 73, did not say why he was departing now, only months before the presidenti­al election, but it is not unusual for political appointees to serve only a single term.

In a statement announcing his departure, Branstad cited his role in two of the most contentiou­s issues between China and the United States during his tenure: the trade war, which ended with a tenuous truce in January, and a pledge by China to crack down on the illicit trade in fentanyl, the synthetic opioid fueling an epidemic killing tens of thousands of Americans a year.

He echoed the arguments of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other hawks in the administra­tion that the United

States needed “to rebalance” the relationsh­ip with China but added a conciliato­ry note that better ties would benefit both countries.

“We are rebalancin­g the U.S.China relationsh­ip so that it is fair and reciprocal and can fuel positive growth in both countries,” he wrote.

Pompeo said on Twitter that the president had chosen Branstad “because his decades long experience with China made him the best person to represent the Administra­tion and to defend American interests and ideals.”

Branstad kept a lower profile than some of his predecesso­rs at the embassy, though that in part reflected Trump’s outsize role as his own public messenger on China. The ambassador met privately with Xi, whom he first met in 1985 while the future Chinese leader was a county official touring the rural U.S., but the personal relationsh­ip failed to translate into closer ties.

Branstad traveled extensivel­y throughout the country, visiting 26 of the 34 provinces and regions, including a rare trip to Tibet in 2019. His efforts to build goodwill, however, often faced resistance from the Chinese as tensions rose over trade and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Last week the State Department complained that the People’s Daily, the main newspaper of the Communist Party, refused to publish an oped by Branstad, who hoped to take his message directly to Chinese readers as his counterpar­t in Washington, Cui Tiankai, often does with Americans.

“The People’s Daily’s response once again exposes the Chinese Communist Party’s fear of free speech and serious intellectu­al debate — as well as Beijing’s hypocrisy when it complains about lack of fair and reciprocal treatment in other countries,” the department said in a statement.

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in / AFP via Getty Images 2019 ?? Before arriving in Beijing as U.S. ambassador to China in 2017, Terry Branstad twice served as governor of Iowa.
Mark Schiefelbe­in / AFP via Getty Images 2019 Before arriving in Beijing as U.S. ambassador to China in 2017, Terry Branstad twice served as governor of Iowa.

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