海角大神

In Beijing, Obama cautiously confronts a rising China

As President Obama began his three-day visit in Beijing, he vaunted the potential of enhanced economic cooperation between the US and China, while also toeing a careful line on the Hong Kong political protests.

The purple silk, mandarin-collared shirt that President Obama wore for an Asia-Pacific leaders鈥 photo Monday was sure evidence that the normally suit-and-tie president is in Beijing for a three-day visit.

But Mr. Obama鈥檚 broad smile in the traditional 鈥渇amily photo鈥 of leaders attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting said nothing of the tricky nature of what is his second China visit as president. This trip includes a state visit with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday.

Mr. Xi will be looking to advance a vision that sees the United States as an important but receding power in an Asia where the relationship that matters will increasingly be the one between China and its neighbors.

Obama, on the other hand, is out to demonstrate that his administration鈥檚 鈥渞ebalance鈥 of US interests in Asia is on track 鈥 including the extension of American values such as political and economic freedoms across the region. The US has tried to do this without feeding China鈥檚 suspicions that the 鈥淎sia pivot鈥 is really about containing China.

Obama opened his visit Monday with a cautious tone, vaunting the potential of enhanced economic cooperation between the world鈥檚 largest and second-largest economies, while also toeing a careful line on the Hong Kong political protests.

鈥淲e want China to do well,鈥 Obama told Asian business leaders assembled at their own summit on the sidelines of the APEC forum. 鈥淲e compete for business, but we also seek to cooperate on a broad range of challenges and shared opportunities.鈥

On Hong Kong, Obama made it clear the US is not pushing for bolder action by Hong Kong protesters 鈥 something some in Beijing鈥檚 official circles have indicated they suspect 鈥 nor for confrontation with the Chinese leadership.

At a meeting with Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Obama offered a measured US approach to the political standoff. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to stop speaking out on behalf of the things that we care about,鈥 he said. At the same time, Obama said, the key concern for the US in the Hong Kong dispute is 鈥渢o make sure violence is avoided.鈥 He went on to acknowledge that China would not always act according to America鈥檚 vision for the world.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 expect China to follow an American model in every instance,鈥 he said, before adding, 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to continue to have concerns about human rights.鈥

As it turns out, the Beijing visit was also shaping up as a showcase for a new post-cold-war low in relations between the US and Russia. In particular, Obama鈥檚 dismissal of Russian leader Vladimir Putin as a leader the US can work with was on display.

Obama and Mr. Putin ran into each other on the stage for the silk-shirt family photo, and White House officials confirmed that the two leaders exchanged a few words. But both US and Russian officials said there was no actual 鈥渄iscussion鈥 between the two.

Clearly, the focus of Obama鈥檚 visit is on China 鈥 and on finding a way of working with Xi on issues like cybersecurity, climate change, North Korea鈥檚 nuclear threat, regional trade, and East Asian maritime security.

On Monday, Obama made a small but telling announcement that suggested the steady bridge-building the administration hopes to pursue with Xi. The two governments, the president revealed, have agreed on a new program that will allow students a five-year visa for study (replacing the current one-year, annually renewable student visa) and business people and tourists a 10-year visa.

Obama said the change would pump billions of dollars into the US economy and boost tourism-related jobs in the US by hundreds of thousands over the next decade.

Yet Xi 鈥 who is only in the second year of a likely 10-year presidency and who is feeling his oats at the helm of an increasingly regionally dominant power 鈥 is unlikely to be swayed from his perception of a lame-duck president reigning over a receding global power, some regional analysts say.

China, they note, is already the No. 1 trading partner of two-thirds of its East Asian neighbors: Roughly one-fifth of South Korea鈥檚 trade and nearly a quarter of Australia鈥檚 is with China. Analysts also say that the Chinese military鈥檚 continued flouting of established territorial waters in the East and South China Seas suggests a confident power asserting itself for a century of rising dominance.

But others say Obama also has a number of good cards in his hand as he sits down with Xi 鈥 among them, the strengthening US economy and many Asian countries鈥 closer affinity with America鈥檚 global vision.

鈥淐hina is trying to define Obama as a weak leader, and by extension, the United States as a weakening country,鈥 says Dan Blumenthal, director of Asian studies at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. 鈥淏ut structurally, the US is far stronger than many assume.鈥

The US has a number of crucial close friends and allies in the region, Mr. Blumenthal says, is on the way to becoming a net exporter of energy, 鈥渉as the world鈥檚 most powerful and tested military and ... has a set of principles and ideals that speak to universal hopes,鈥 he says. 鈥淐hina has none of these things.鈥

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to In Beijing, Obama cautiously confronts a rising China
Read this article in
/USA/Foreign-Policy/2014/1110/In-Beijing-Obama-cautiously-confronts-a-rising-China
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe