Biden’s China policy at a strategic inflection point

Posted By : Telegraf
11 Min Read

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Considering the US media buildup as President Joe Biden’s climate envoy John Kerry set out for China, the four-day visit turned out to be an uneventful affair. Perhaps the chances of President Xi Jinping participating in the signature event in Washington – the Leaders Summit on Climate on April 22-23 hosted by Biden – may have somewhat improved. 

The joint statement following the talks in Shanghai between Kerry and Xie Zhenhua, his nominal counterpart, says the two countries “look forward” to the event. Kerry’s only interaction with the Chinese leadership was via a videoconference with Xie’s boss in Beijing, Vice-Premier Han Zheng, a member of the Standing Committee of the Politburo. 

Ironically, Han happens to be in charge of Hong Kong affairs, an issue that roils the Biden administration. Even as Kerry landed in Shanghai, Secretary of State Antony Blinken issued yet another vitriolic statement condemning “Beijing’s assault” on “freedoms and autonomy” in Hong Kong. 

Beijing has uncovered the footprints of the Five Eyes in Hong Kong, which puts US intelligence in a quandary. (Australia, the UK and Canada are also in China’s crosshairs.) On Thursday, Chinese intelligence flagged a “color revolution” as China’s biggest national-security threat.

In fact, Han was on record last month saying that Beijing’s electoral reforms for Hong Kong are no longer about whether the political system there is democratic or not, but about preventing subversion. 

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