By WU XINBO
China Daily Global | Updated: 2023-05-11
https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202305/11/WS645c26bba310b6054fad241b.html
MA XUEJING/CHINA DAILY
Dialogue
on multiple levels is the only way for China and the US to manage their
relations
From
the Donald Trump administration to the Joe Biden administration, the United
States has maintained a China strategy that focuses on containment and
suppression, and regards China as its main strategic rival. This strategy has
been continuously strengthened in both concept and practice during the two administrations.
In response, China has continued to adjust its US strategy. As a result, the
strategic competition between the two sides has become more intense, and China
and the US have developed increasingly negative perceptions of and narratives
on each other. The two sides are also more and more confrontational in their
behaviors, leading to a more obvious trend toward a vicious circle. Moreover,
this strategic competition and confrontation are increasingly driven by
international and domestic structural factors.
With
the Biden administration now into its third year in office, the strategic
competition between the two countries has became fiercer, and the
administration's China strategy and policies face a series of problems for
their implementation.
First,
China is an important part of the global economy, and is of great importance to
the stability and development of the US economy. So, although the US regards
China as the greatest geopolitical challenge and a major rival, pursuing a
policy of containment and suppression against China in the name of competition,
it has to cooperate with China in responding to global challenges such as
climate change and public health crises. Managing the two aspects of the
relations with China is the biggest challenge for Washington's China strategy
and policy.
Second,
the US, out of economic and security considerations, has put in place measures
against China, such as trade protectionism, a technology blockade, investment
restrictions, and the decoupling of industry chains. Such measures, while
hurting China, have also imposed huge costs on the US itself, arousing
dissatisfaction and opposition from the US business and tech communities.
Third,
the US has said that it does not seek confrontation or a new Cold War,
highlighting the need to manage risks and crises, while on the other hand
taking across-the-board containment and suppression actions against China in
economic, trade, science and technology, diplomatic and military affairs,
particularly in building up military threats against China and pushing up the
hostility and confrontation between the two militaries and nations. This is
essentially an unsolvable paradox. In fact, the US' China strategy is leading
to an increasingly stronger Cold War atmosphere between the two countries, with
political mutual trust decreasing, and the risk of confrontation growing.
Fourth,
due to the extremely negative and irrational political atmosphere in the US on
China issues, the Democrats and Republicans are competing to play the China
card, and Congress has been more active and tougher than ever on China-related
affairs. This, coupled with the weak capacity of the Biden administration to
handle domestic politics, has severely constrained its stated efforts to
"manage competition in a responsible manner".For example, the
presidents of the two countries had a telephone conversation on July 28, 2022
and reached some important consensus on the development of bilateral relations,
but just three days later, then US House speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan, a
trip that gravely damaged China-US relations.
Fifth,
the Biden administration is actively drawing its allies and other countries
into its efforts to contain China's development. However, the trade and
technology wars that the US has initiated against China have seriously damaged
the international economic and trade rules and disrupted the global industry
and supply chains. Its "Indo-Pacific strategy" has exacerbated
regional tensions as it relies too much on security measures. And the increasingly
prominent protectionism in the US economic and trade policy has eroded the
interests of many countries, including its allies. These factors have affected
the willingness of other countries to embrace its China strategy.
In
just a few years, the overall win-win relationship between China and the US
that had developed over decades has turned into a lose-lose one. Neither side
has reaped benefits from the worsening of bilateral ties in recent years, and
both are continuing to pay the price for the deteriorating relationship.
Washington continues to promote decoupling and confrontation and exert
economic, political and security pressure on China, while Beijing, in turn, is
firmly and tenaciously resisting the pressure. China-US relations are facing
huge uncertainties and there is a growing risk of severe conflicts. Considering
the current momentum of the bilateral ties and structural factors behind it, it
is unrealistic to expect any significant improvement in the relationship
between the two countries in the foreseeable future, and it is imperative to
determine the boundaries of their strategic competition — what will be the
extent of the "decoupling" and confrontation.
There
are two main paths to explore the boundaries: one is to draw experience through
handling incidents and crises, and the other is to gain inspiration through
policy and strategic dialogues. The tensions between China and the US and
across the Taiwan Strait caused by Pelosi's visit last year showed the
importance of not breaking the bottom line when dealing with major issues in
bilateral relations. And the negative impacts on bilateral relations by the
overreaction of the US to a Chinese meteorological research balloon that
strayed into its airspace in February due to force majeure showed the importance
of maintaining composure in handling emergencies and accidental events and
exercising caution despite the domestic pressure. In addition, assessing the
cost and effectiveness of the US trade war with China as well as its technology
"decoupling" and blockade will also help the US correctly understand
the limits of its unilateral coercive measures in its economic and trade
relations with China.
Meanwhile,
sustained and high-quality policy and strategic dialogues will help the two
countries form a principled consensus on how to handle this extremely important
and complex bilateral relationship. Such dialogues should be based on the
following basic understandings: it is impossible for the two countries to
completely decouple from each other in the fields of economy, trade and
people-to-people exchanges; there will be long-term strategic competition
between the two sides, but no side can completely outcompete the other; it is
necessary for the two countries to conduct cooperation and coordination in many
fields; preventing major conflicts is in the interests of both sides; other
countries should handle their relations with China and the US based on their
own interests, and taking sides is not the policy preference of most countries.
Consensus
reached through dialogues will enable the two sides to better balance between
competition and cooperation, exchanges and restriction, rivalry and compromise
in bilateral relations. Policy and strategic dialogues can be held through
multiple channels. Dialogues at the government level are more problem-oriented
and more substantive; "track 1.5" dialogues — conversations that
include a mix of government officials who participate in an unofficial capacity
and non-governmental experts — or "track 2" dialogues, meaning informal
and non-official communication between individuals or groups, offer greater
flexibility; and dialogues between experts and scholars will provide academic
support for understanding the bilateral relationship. In view of the complexity
of China-US relations, it is highly necessary for the two countries to carry
out multi-channel and multi-level policy and strategic communication on a
regular basis.
The
author is the dean of the Institute of International Studies and director of
the Center for American Studies at Fudan University. The author contributed
this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The
views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.
Contact
the editor at editor@chinawatch.cn
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