Biden team
resorts to confrontation to 'cover declining confidence, failed governance'
By
,
and
Zhang Han Published: May 28, 2021
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202105/1224733.shtml
On the surface, the Biden administration stresses "competition",
instead of confrontation pursued by its predecessors, but the US is actually
becoming more hostile as it hypes the issue of the
COVID-19 origin to stigmatize China again, with Chinese experts
warning that the US "competition" policy is in essence confrontation,
and this has reflected the declining confidence of Washington's elites on
healthy and fair competition with China.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao
Lijian said at Thursday's routine press conference that China-US relations are
just like other relations between major powers - the competition is inevitable.
"But using 'competition' to define or dominate China-US relations is
absolutely wrong, as this will only cause confrontation and conflicts."
The competition between China and the US should
be healthy, which could help both sides improve together, to march forward
together, rather than life-or-death competition, Zhao said, noting that
"China firmly opposes the US to use competition as a pretext to contain,
exclude and a crackdown on China."
Zhao's remarks are a response to Kurt Campbell,
the US coordinator for Indo-Pacific affairs on the National Security Council,
who said the era of engagement with China is over.
Campbell, who is Biden's Asia Czar, said
Wednesday that US policy toward China will now operate under a "new set of
strategic parameters," and "the dominant paradigm is going to be
competition," according to Bloomberg.
However, even as Biden ordered the US
intelligence community to probe the origin of the COVID-19, a move that
apparently targeting China, and his Asia Czar declared an "end" to a
period of engagement with China, Chinese and US senior trade officials held their
first phone call since Biden took office and struck a relatively positive note
in clear contrast to recent tense rhetoric from the US.
All of these recent actions made by the US have
sent a sign - the US is losing confidence to win the competition fairly, so it
needs to be nasty again, said Chinese experts, who hold that the communication
is necessary as the decoupling with China can't be realized.
Nasty
game
US President Joe Biden said Wednesday he has
directed the US intelligence community to redouble its efforts in
investigating the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic and report back to him in 90
days. The announcement comes after "a US intelligence report" hyped
the "lab leak" theory that indicates "the origin of the COVID-19
is from China's Wuhan Institute of Virology."
"Biden's order has no respect to science.
The investigation on the COVID-19 origin is a scientific issue that should be
done by scientists with no political bias and without a deadline. He was just
giving orders to his intelligence agencies to produce 'evidence' to smear
China," Lü Xiang, an expert on US studies at the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences told the Global Times.
The intelligence report for virus tracing, in
essence serves the political agenda and the results won't favor China.
"Otherwise, it should be scientists, not intelligence agents, to do the
job," Diao Daming, an expert on US studies at the Renmin University of
China in Beijing told the Global Times on Thursday.
Using intelligence agencies to "produce the
evidence whatever they want" to serve a strategic purpose is a long-standing
infamous tradition of the US, Lü said, adding that "everyone remembers the
'evidence' that the CIA provided to prove Iraq has weapons of mass destruction,
and now the Biden administration might want to play the same nasty trick
again."
The US has realized that China's strength
receives no significant impact amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and China's
reputation and influence are even improving in some regions, especially in the
third world, as China is the biggest supplier of vaccines and other medical
materials in the world while the US makes no significant contribution, and
politicians in Washington don't want to see this at all, said analysts.
The healthy competition should look like the US
providing more vaccines to more countries, to stop meaningless propaganda
warfare against China, and work together with China to save more lives, and let
the rest of the world judge which country is doing better in the global fight
against the COVID-19, said a Beijing-based expert on international relations
who requested anonymity.
"The COVID-19 battle resembles anti-fascism
fight in World War II. Who led the world to win the fight became the leader in
the post-war era. Now is the crucial time to see who is more qualified to be
that leader in the post-pandemic era," he noted.
The Biden administration won't compete with
China in a healthy way, because in nature, the capitalist system is selfish and
those capitalists and big corporations behind the Biden administration won't
let the White House do so, and the US has no confidence to win such competition
with China due to lack of capability to produce a massive amount of vaccines and
medical materials," he said.
The so-called virus tracing report will be
concluded in 90 days and the timing will overlap with some significant planned
events in China such as the 100th founding anniversary of the Communist Party
of China, and the Biden administration will likely use it to launch an
ideological offensive against China, Diao said.
Zero-sum
game enthusiasts
Chinese officials and scholars have warned the
US again and again that a zero-sum game is wrong, but US politicians are just
obsessed in the zero-sum game, because they hate to see that China barely received
harm while they are failing to heal America, said Chinese analysts.
Besides the fight against the pandemic,
political elites in Washington are also losing faith in US economic recovery as
rounds of stimulus packages have only produced limited effects, and in late
2021 or early 2022, the US economy will hit serious problems, Lü said.
"Cracking down on China and saving the US
are irrelevant, but the decision-makers and elites in Washington think this way
- when I get a cold, you should have fever as well, and pneumonia would be
better," Lü noted.
In other fields like the Taiwan question, the
Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, Xinjiang, and Hong Kong affairs, or regional hot
spot issues like the turbulence in Myanmar and upcoming power transitions this
year in some Southeast Asian countries like the Philippines, the US will make
efforts to create trouble for China, at least to slow down China's development,
said, experts.
"In nature, the Biden administration is
also playing the game of confrontation with China, not competition," Lü
said.
Keeping
in touch
Although the Biden administration wants to put
the "competition" at the center of the China-US relations, Washington
still has a desire to communicate with China.
During the phone call between Chinese Vice
Premier Liu He and US Trade Representative Katherine Tai, the two sides held
"candid, pragmatic and constructive exchanges with an attitude of equality
and mutual respect," the Chinese Commerce Ministry said in a statement on
Thursday. For its part, the office of the US Trade Representative also
described the exchange as "candid" in a statement.
While details of the talks remain unclear,
"the dialogue itself is positive," He Weiwen, a former economic and
commercial counselor at the Chinese consulates general in San Francisco and New
York, told the Global Times on Thursday, adding that the talks mostly focused
on issues of principle rather than specifics given huge differences between the
two sides over trade issues.
However, the phone call, which took place at the
US' request after weeks of calling for a meeting, underscored the Biden
administration's core strategy of pursuing both confrontation and engagement
with China, according to He. "We should see clearly the nature of the US'
toughness toward China has not and will not change. We can't have any illusion
about that," he said.
Still, the trade talks highlighted the role of
trade between the two countries as a stabilizer for the bilateral relationship,
despite major differences in policies, analysts noted, pointing to growing
bilateral trade despite a free fall in bilateral relations. In the first
quarter of 2021, China's exports to the US jumped 62.7 percent year-on-year,
while China's imports from the US increased 57.9 percent, according to Chinese official
data. Despite disputes, the two countries have also continued the phase one
trade agreement.
"The ballast stone for China-US relations
means economic and trade activities, not trade policies of the two countries.
And economic and trade activities will continue to grow. That could not be
changed by policies that are not based on economic rules," He
said.
The conversation between Liu and Tai is not
surprising as the US had expressed willingness to have such communication, Diao
said, noting even if the US wants to use "competition" to define
bilateral ties, the two sides will have to communicate on the role of
competition, and explore possible areas for cooperation.
Different forces inside the Biden administration
are competing for influence on the finalization of the strategy on China when
the president himself seems not to have a clear and determined idea yet, so
maybe Campbell's remarks can't represent the final stance. Other forces who
still support the engagement with China might make their move as well, Diao
noted.
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