WASHINGTON/BEIJING — Three months after US President Donald J. Trump hosted a lavish welcome for his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at his Florida resort, the powers have made headway on an ambitious economic plan even as diplomatic rifts between them have widened.
Speaking in Paris on Thursday, the American leader was full of praise for Mr. Xi, proclaiming him a 鈥渇riend鈥 for whom he has 鈥済reat respect,鈥 a 鈥済reat leader鈥 and a 鈥渧ery talented man.鈥
The expressions of admiration have gone both ways — a day earlier Beijing鈥檚 foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang had hailed 鈥減ositive advances鈥 in China-US economic cooperation based on a spirit of 鈥渃onsensus鈥 between the two leaders.
Both sides see moderate progress on a wide-ranging 100-day economic action plan, first unveiled at Mr. Trump鈥檚 Mar-a-Lago estate in April that covers such areas as financial services, investment, energy and trade — a topic close to the US president鈥檚 heart.
Evans Revere, an analyst at Brookings Institution, told AFP: 鈥淏oth sides seem to share the view that the 100-day plan is largely on track.鈥
Jake Parker, vice president of the US-China Business Council in Beijing, largely agreed: 鈥淥verall, the 100-day outcomes are positive first steps addressing lingering issues in the US-China commercial relationship,鈥 he said, while adding that more needed to be done to address structural issues such as foreign investment restrictions.
But despite the effusive rhetoric, that progress has not been matched in other areas of the relationship with ever widening rifts on a host of foreign policy issues.
The US appears bitterly disappointed over China鈥檚 failure to exert pressure on North Korea in the wake of its first ever intercontinental ballistic missile test, while Beijing has been left fuming at American incursions into disputed territory in the South China Sea, arms sales to Taiwan and statements on human rights.
CHINESE BOGEYMAN
Mr. Trump made China a central part of his presidential campaign, denouncing the country for unfair trading practices that cost Americans jobs and accusing it of manipulating its currency.
Since becoming president, however, he has taken an about turn on the currency issue and in May announced a deal to export American beef and gas to China in the hope of reducing a massive trade deficit that totaled $347 billion in 2016.
These first results from the 100-day plan will likely be feted at the US-China Comprehensive Economic Dialogue that will be held on July 19 in Washington, hosted by US treasury and commerce secretaries Steven Mnuchin and Wilbur Ross and Chinese vice premier Wang Yang.
But in other contentious areas of the relationship — tensions in the Korean peninsula, China鈥檚 maritime disputes with its neighbors, Taiwan and human rights — 鈥渢he two sides are far apart,鈥 says Mr. Revere.
The US has scolded Beijing for not putting enough pressure on North Korea, which increased trade with its key diplomatic backer by 10.5% in the first half of this year.
The July 4 launch of an ICBM by Pyongyang signaled that Mr. Trump鈥檚 鈥渘aive experiment regarding China and North Korea is now coming to an end,鈥 said Mr. Revere, vindicating foreign policy experts鈥 skepticism towards relying on Beijing to rein in its neighbor.
PATIENCE EVAPORATING
As evidence of the shift, Mr. Revere cited US sanctions on Chinese entities such as the Bank of Dandong, which is accused of illicit dealings with companies linked to the weapons program, days before the launch.
Tensions have also been stoked by the passage of a US warship near a reef claimed by Beijing in May and two B-1 bombers over disputed waters in July, acts denounced by China as grave military and political provocations.
Washington meanwhile approved a $1.3 billion arms deal to Taiwan, an island which Beijing considers a rebel province awaiting re-unification.
The developments appeared to have been acknowledged by Geng Shuang as 鈥渘egative factors鈥 in the relationship brought about by 鈥渁ctions of the US.鈥
On the thorny question of human rights, statements from the US State Department have come pouring in — calling on China to respect Hong Kong鈥檚 freedoms, desist its crackdown on lawyers, or condemning Beijing for the death in custody Nobel peace prize winner Liu Xiaobo.
As for Mr. Trump鈥檚 continuing habit of praising the Chinese leader, Mr. Revere believes it stems largely from 鈥渁 desire to keep the door open in case Beijing changes its posture vis-a-vis North Korea, as well as to try to keep the US-China relationship on a steady course.鈥 — AFP


