Analysis: Republicans cry weakness, others see sense in Biden's China
protest response
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[November 30, 2022]
By David Brunnstrom, Michael Martina and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The administration of President Joe Biden has
drawn Republican fire for its cautious response to nationwide protests
in China against COVID-19 lockdowns, with some lawmakers accusing it of
failing to seize a historic moment.
But some analysts say caution is the right approach given the volatile
U.S.-China relationship and the risk of playing into a Chinese narrative
that accuses "foreign forces" of being behind dissent.
On Monday, the White House said it backed the right of people to
peacefully protest in China but stopped short of criticizing Beijing as
protesters in multiple Chinese cities demonstrated against heavy
COVID-19 measures.
The demonstrations came as the number of COVID cases in China hit record
daily highs and large parts of several cities faced new lockdowns.
The Republican response was swift.
Senator Ted Cruz called White House response "pitiful," adding in a
tweet: "At a potentially historic inflection point, Dems shill for the
CCP."
Other Republicans, including Senator Marco Rubio and Representative
Chris Smith weighed in on what they labeled a "weak" reaction from
Biden, while Michael McCaul, the Republican lead on the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, said in tweet: "As Chinese citizens bravely protest,
Joe Biden & the corporate class shrug."
McCaul vowed a tougher stance against China from the new
Republican-controlled House of Representatives from next year while
Rubio and Smith declared: "The United States must be unwavering in our
support for the Chinese people as they bravely call for freedom."
The Republican politicians did not state specifically how they would
respond in Biden's place.
The administration's careful language contrasted with Biden's earlier
expression of solidarity with protesters against the Iranian government,
when he told a political rally earlier in November that "we're gonna
free Iran."
RELATIONS FRAUGHT
China's biggest wave of civil disobedience since President Xi Jinping
took power a decade ago arrives at a delicate moment in U.S.-China
relations.
Following an August visit to Taiwan by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
China launched military drills around the island, which it considers
Chinese territory, and cut off communications with the U.S. in a number
of areas, including military issues and climate change.
Since then, China and the U.S. have worked to steady the relationship.
Biden and Xi met in-person on the Indonesian island of Bali earlier in
November and the countries have agreed to follow-up discussion,
including a planned visit to China by Secretary of State Antony Blinken
in early 2023.
A U.S. official involved in U.S.-China policy said the White House
believed Xi's handling of the COVID situation was undermining confidence
in his approach to the pandemic, but wanted to avoid being seen to be
interfering in domestic politics as they make progress in cooling down
the relationship.
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People take part in anti-Chinese
government protests, amid China's "zero-COVID" policy, near the
Chinese consulate in New York City, U.S., November 29, 2022.
REUTERS/David 'Dee' Delgado
Beijing and Washington have dealt with the spread of the coronavirus
pandemic in vastly different ways.
China's zero-COVID policy has kept its official death toll in the
thousands, against more than a million in the United States, but at
the cost of confining many people to long spells at home, inflicting
extensive disruption and damage to the world's No.2 economy.
Isaac Stone Fish of Strategy Risks, a firm that helps companies
navigate political risk in China, said the White House response was
likely conditioned by the fact that the United States has far more
at stake in its relations with China than with a country like Iran.
"It also may be a perception of longevity. The Biden administration
seems to think that the Chinese Communist Party is more likely to
survive its protests than Iran's government."
Beyond this, say analysts, the U.S. wants to avoid language that
allows China to pin the protests on U.S. interference.
"The White House is wise to refrain from speaking out in defense of
the protesters and their demands," said Scott Kennedy, at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies.
"China has long asserted the U.S. government has been behind
domestic protests, from Tiananmen in 1989 to Hong Kong in 2020.
Saying anything now would give life to those assertions."
On Monday, Chinese police tightened security at the sites of weekend
protests in Shanghai and Beijing and had begun inquiries into some
of the protesters, people who were at the Beijing demonstrations
told Reuters.
Without explicitly mentioning the protests, China's official Xinhua
news agency said domestic security chief Chen Wenqing held a meeting
of the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission on Tuesday
that vowed to "resolutely crack down on the infiltration and
sabotage activities of hostile forces."
Daniel Russel, who served as the top U.S. diplomat for East Asia in
the Obama administration, said the Biden White House would be
focused on the next steps by Chinese authorities.
"There will be plenty of time to turn up the rhetorical dial if
Beijing follows the violent Tiananmen Square or the Iranian model
and starts killing people," he said. "So getting out of the way and
keeping the spotlight on the protesters themselves is a smart move
at this point."
(Additional reporting by Steve Holland and Simon Lewis; Editing by
Don Durfee and Lincoln Feast.)
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