Blinken to say China strategy is about rules-based order, not 'new Cold
War'
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[May 26, 2022]
By Michael Martina and Humeyra Pamuk
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States
does not seek to sever China from the global economy, but wants Beijing
to adhere to international rules, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken
is expected to say in a long-awaited speech on Thursday.
"This is not about a new Cold War. This is not about dividing the world
into rigid ideological blocks," a senior U.S. administration official
told reporters in a briefing call in advance of the speech outlining the
U.S. strategy to deal with China's rise as a great power.
"It is about upholding and, just as importantly, revitalizing
international order in a way that protects core principles that have
enabled peace and prosperity for decades," the official said.
U.S.-China relations sank to their lowest level in decades under the
Trump administration and have soured further under President Joe Biden,
who has so far kept up his predecessor's sweeping tariffs on Chinese
goods, but also has pursued closer ties with allies in the Indo-Pacific
and beyond to push back on Beijing's growing influence.
Nonetheless, seventeen months into his administration, Biden has faced
criticism from Republicans and some foreign policy watchers for not
announcing a formal strategy on China, the world's second-largest
economy and Washington's main strategic rival.
Foreign crises, including the messy U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan
last year and Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine, have created distractions
for Biden, who has vowed not to let China surpass the United States as
global leader on his watch.
Blinken's speech coincides with the start of a sweeping tour by China's
foreign minister of Pacific island countries, an increasingly tense
front in competition for influence between Beijing and Washington and
its allies.
Blinken will make it clear that Washington's "unwavering focus" remains
on the Indo-Pacific and China, officials said, while laying out the
contours of the strategy, which is to invest in U.S. competitiveness and
align with allies and partners to compete with China.
"The Secretary will make it clear that the United
States is not looking to sever China's economy from ours or from the
global economy ... We simply seek to ensure that China plays by the same
rules as everybody else," a second official said.
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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi shows the way to U.S. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken, before their meeting on the sidelines of the
G20 summit, in Rome, Italy October 31, 2021. Tiziana Fabi/Pool via
REUTERS
Blinken will also underscore that the United States "will not trade
cooperation in these areas for compromise on our principles," the
official said.
Washington's approach will be to shape the environment around China,
not try to change its behavior, while ensuring that American
companies are protected from what it sees as Beijing's unfair
practices, such as state-led subsidies and market access barriers,
the officials said.
The Biden administration has sought to capitalize on fresh
solidarity with allies spurred by Russia's war in Ukraine and its
"no-limits" partnership with China announced just weeks before the
Feb. 24 invasion.
STRATEGIC AMBIGUITY
Increased U.S. support for the Chinese-claimed democratic island of
Taiwan has continued to be a point of contention between Washington
and Beijing, even though the United States, formally, has kept its
long-standing policy of 'strategic ambiguity' on whether it would
defend Taiwan militarily.
Blinken will reiterate U.S. commitment to the one-China policy, even
though Biden earlier this week said the United States would get
involved militarily should China attack Taiwan. He and his aides
later said his remarks did not reflect a shift in policy.
Postponed once after Blinken tested positive for COVID-19 earlier in
May, his address follows a month of intensive U.S. diplomacy focused
on the Indo-Pacific, including Biden's return this week from his
first trip as president to the region.
The president's meetings there with leaders from South Korea, Japan,
India, and Australia were intended, in part, to push back against
what Washington calls China's "coercive" behavior.
Biden also has sought to create fresh momentum in ties with
Southeast Asia, declaring a "new era" of relations at a summit in
Washington this month.
(Reporting by Michael Martina and Humeyra Pamuk; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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