Vice President Pence to walk a tightrope in China speech amid trade deal
hopes
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[October 24, 2019]
By Alexandra Alper
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A year after the
U.S. Vice President's hawkish speech on China caused an uproar in
Beijing, Mike Pence is expected to strike a gentler tone in a second
policy address on the country Thursday, as hopes blossom for a partial
trade deal with Beijing.
Pence, who frequently takes a tough line on China, could easily use the
speech to harp on growing American frustration over Chinese treatment of
democracy protesters in Hong Kong and Muslim minority Uighurs held in
Chinese detention camps.
But with the speech coming just weeks before U.S. President Donald Trump
attends a summit in Chile where he hopes to close a "phase one" trade
deal with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Pence may be forced to stick to
more dovish language.
Fears of antagonizing Beijing prompted the White House in June to
postpone the speech ahead of a meeting between the leaders aimed at
getting trade talks back on track.
The administration "bragged about how important the speech was going to
be, then abandoned it in June, the last time President Trump thought he
had a China trade deal," said Derek Scissors, a China scholar at the
American Enterprise Institute in Washington.
The probable goal of the speech, Scissors said, is to preempt Congress
from approving a raft of tough-on-China bills "by using strong language,
but offering only watered-down versions of actions Congress is already
considering," he added.
Such a speech would contrast sharply with Pence's track record on China.
Aides had cast his postponed June speech as a sequel to a blistering
broadside he delivered in October 2018.
At that time, Pence shocked China watchers by laying out a litany of
complaints, chastising China for building "an unparalleled surveillance
state" and for government-run camps in the Xinjiang region where Muslim
Uighurs "endure around-the-clock brainwashing" just ahead of a major
Asia-Pacific conference that he attended on behalf of Trump.
His comments laid the groundwork for U.S. authorities this month to
include Chinese video surveillance firm Hikvision on a trade blacklist,
punishing Beijing for its treatment of Muslim minorities and ratcheting
up tensions ahead of trade talks.
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U.S. Vice President Mike Pence attends a news conference at the U.S.
Embassy in Ankara, Turkey, October 17, 2019. REUTERS/Huseyin Aldemir/File
Photo
Pence has also taken China to task over Hong Kong, urging
authorities in August to respect the special administrative region's
laws and repeating Trump's warning that it would be harder for
Washington to make a trade deal with Beijing if there were violence
in the former British colony.
Since then, lawmakers like Senate Republican Marco Rubio have
slammed Chinese companies for boycotting the NBA after Houston
Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey expressed solidarity with Hong
Kong protesters.
That spat played out amid unexpected progress in U.S.-China trade
talks to end a 15-month trade war that has roiled markets and
damaged global growth. The United States launched the trade war over
allegations of unfair trading practices such as theft of U.S.
intellectual property and generous industrial subsidies at the
expense of foreign competitors.
During a visit by Chinese Vice Premier Liu He this month, Trump
outlined the first phase of a trade deal covering agriculture,
currency and some aspects of intellectual property protections. U.S.
officials said later agreements could address other issues.
The White House has been nearly silent about the tenor of Pence's
remarks, which he will deliver at a Wilson Center event, saying only
that they will "reflect on the U.S.-China relationship over the past
year and look at the future of our relationship."
But many U.S.-China experts see a softer tone as probable.
"This may end up being one of the most anticlimactic firebrand
speeches of all time," said Scott Kennedy, a China trade expert at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper. Editing by Chris Sanders and Gerry
Doyle)
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