China sanguine as Trump-Xi 'bromance'
sours over North Korea, Taiwan
Send a link to a friend
[July 01, 2017]
By Ben Blanchard and Christian Shepherd
BEIJING (Reuters) - China reacted
relatively calmly on Friday after a series of diplomatic broadsides by
the United States, expressing anger over new arms sales by Washington to
Taiwan but hoping ties could soon be brought back on track.
U.S. officials have said President Donald Trump is growing increasingly
frustrated with China over its inability to restrain North Korea's arms
and missile programs.
This week, the United States imposed sanctions on two Chinese citizens
and a shipping company for helping North Korea's weapons programs,
announced a $1.4 billion arms sale for Taiwan, and said it would like
sick Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo to be treated "elsewhere".
It has also placed China on its global list of the worst offenders in
human trafficking and forced labor and senior U.S. officials have told
Reuters that Washington is considering trade actions against Beijing,
including tariffs on steel imports.
Trump met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday at the White
House and made a point of noting that the United States, India and Japan
would be joining together in naval exercises soon in the Indian Ocean, a
point that seemed aimed at China.
It's a long way from the "bromance" that Trump and Chinese President Xi
Jinping appeared to have at their first summit in April. Trump had made
a grand gesture of his desire for warm ties in the meeting at his
Florida residence and subsequently called Xi a "good man".
While China said it was "outraged" at the arms sales for Taiwan, and
upset with the North Korea-related sanctions, it did not make specific
threats of retaliation. In 2010, Beijing threatened to sanction U.S.
firms that sell weapons to Taiwan after Washington announced a much
bigger $6.4 billion arms package.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said he hoped the United
States can correct its mistakes and get ties back on track "so as to
avoid cooperation in important areas being impacted". He did not
elaborate.
Jia Qingguo, dean of the School of International Studies at Peking
University and who has advised the government on foreign policy,
cautioned against interpreting recent events as indicating a shift in
China-U.S. relations, saying it was still too early to tell.
"We had a good first summit and a good beginning but the relationship in
the long run is characterized by not just cooperation but also
conflict," Jia said.
"Arms sales to Taiwan, the South China Sea and East China Sea, and other
problems in the relationship will appear. It's a question of how much
the two countries will be able to manage these conflicts, whether they
can manage them better than the previous administration."
TIES BACK TO NORMAL
Trump and Xi are expected to meet next week on the sidelines of a G20
summit in the Germany city of Hamburg.
China has long been cautious about Trump, China-based diplomatic sources
say, believing he is unpredictable and needs to be handled with care.
"How does the Chinese government view Trump? We're still discovering who
he is. He often does things we can't predict. We're not clever enough to
predict what he'll do," said Shen Dingli, a professor at Shanghai's
elite Fudan University.
[to top of second column] |
President Donald Trump welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping at
Mar-a-Lago state in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., April 6, 2017.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
Trump upset China even before taking office, taking a call from
Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen, overturning decades of precedent of
no high-level official contacts between the United States and an
island China considers to be a wayward province.
While China has worked hard to get Trump to understand the
importance of Taiwan to the China-U.S. relationship, it has never
seriously expected Washington to stop selling it weapons, provision
for which is explicitly made in U.S. law.
"The U.S. selling weapons to Taiwan is routine," said Shen. "They're
selling much less than before, and that's much better. So I don't
think there's anything too terrible about that."
Still, the risks around Taiwan are profound.
China's Defense Ministry, responding to the U.S. weapons sales, said
Taiwan was the "most important, most sensitive core issue" between
the United States and China.
The arms sale came hot on the heels of a U.S. Senate committee
approving a bill calling for the resumption of port visits to Taiwan
by the U.S. Navy for the first time since Washington ditched Taipei
and established ties with Beijing in 1979.
While China's Defense Ministry registered its opposition to the bill
on Thursday, spokesman Wu Qian pointed out that as long as they
respect each other's core concerns, the Chinese and U.S. militaries
can be an "engine of stability" for the two countries.
Shi Yinhong, who heads the Center for American Studies at Beijing's
Renmin University and has advised the government on diplomacy, said
it was important people are realistic about the challenges China and
the United States face.
"Perhaps people appraised too highly the Xi-Trump meeting. Although
the atmosphere was very good, there were still real problems there,"
Shi said, referring to the Florida summit.
"Maybe you can say that China-U.S. relations have gone back to being
normal," Shi added. "Trump has no patience, and nobody can be
surprised that he's pushed certain issues to the fore."
(Additional reporting by Gao Liangping; Editing by Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|