Trump declares that North Korea is ‘looking for trouble’ as tensions rise
President
 Trump tweeted Tuesday morning that the U.S. will give China a better 
trade deal if the nation helps “solve the North Korean problem.” Over 
the weekend, the Department of Defense ordered a strike group to the 
Korean Peninsula
Last week’s summit in Mar-a-Lago ended on the most awkward note.
Among
 the many U.S.-China summits held in the last four decades, President 
Trump's meeting last week with Xi Jinping at Mar-a-Lago was probably the
 most unusual - if not the strangest - affair.
For
 one, Trump warned the Twittersphere of a "very difficult" meeting with 
Xi because of America's large trade deficit with China. Then he 
surprised his guest with news that he had just ordered a cruise missile 
strike on Syria. The ensuing media frenzy completely overshadowed the 
most important U.S.-China summit in years.
Xi,
 who is typically obsessed with following protocols and expects others 
to do the same, was likely caught off guard. But while there was little 
doubt that Xi and his delegation were not pleased by the unexpected turn
 of events that ended the summit on the wrong kind of bang, they might 
nevertheless appreciate their host's effusive spin of the get-together. 
As the summit closed on Friday, Trump told reporters that he had made 
"tremendous progress in our relationship with China" and called the 
U.S.-China relationship he has developed with Xi "outstanding." He also 
predicted that "lots of very potentially bad problems will be going 
away."
In
 reality, though, based on officially disclosed details of the summit, 
little substantive progress was made on the most serious and divisive 
issues between the two countries, such as currency manipulation and 
trade deficits. In fact, even Trump himself implicitly acknowledged this
 fact when he tweeted, after his guest was safely back in Beijing, that 
despite the goodwill and friendship between him and Xi, "only time will 
tell on trade."
This
 rather sober assessment on trade is actually not far off the mark. To 
be sure, China did make two relatively minor concessions at the summit: 
Beijing will resume imports of banned American beef and allow U.S. 
financial firms to set up majority-owned subsidiaries in China. But 
Trump and Xi did not reach any substantive trade deals. What they did 
agree to do is to start a 100-day process of seeking compromises on 
trade between the US and China. In other words, the Mar-a-Lago summit 
bought both sides valuable time, but little else, in averting a 
potential trade war.
On
 North Korea, arguably the central national security issue on the 
summit's agenda, Trump and Xi did not reach any deal, even though they 
agreed that Pyongyang poses a serious threat to regional peace. 
According to White House press secretary Sean Spicer, the U.S. and China
 would increase cooperation to "convince North Korea ... to dismantle 
its illegal nuclear and missile programs." But we do not know what such 
"cooperation" would be. In all likelihood, Washington and Beijing have 
yet to determine what specific steps China should or can take in 
containing the North Korean threat.
For
 those obsessed with score-keeping, determining which leader, Xi or 
Trump, has improved his bargaining position as the result of the summit 
is a tricky exercise. In the media commentaries on the outcome of the 
summit, much attention has been directed to the implications of the U.S.
 missile strike against Syria. The conventional wisdom is that, with 
this unexpected shift in policy, Trump has put Xi on notice: if China 
fails to act on North Korea, the U.S. will take unilateral military 
action. Fearing the potentially devastating consequences, Beijing might 
now have greater incentives to cooperate with the U.S.
This
 could be true. But a brief moment of reflection would show that, on 
balance, Xi could not have been displeased by Trump's volte face on 
Syria. For one thing, striking Russia's client state has all but ensured
 that a U.S.-Russian rapprochement, a development greatly feared in 
Beijing, will not happen any time soon. For another, Trump's opening 
salvo of missiles is unlikely to be a one-off shot. Further escalations 
could drag his young administration deeper into the Middle East's 
quagmire, thus distracting his attention away from China.
As
 far as Trump's China policy is concerned, the future remains cloudy. 
The Mar-a-Lago summit has improved the atmospherics of U.S.-China 
relations and started a process that may reduce trade tensions and 
stabilize U.S.-China ties. But there is no evidence that the summit has 
produced concrete agreements that have removed the underlying sources of
 conflict between the two countries over geopolitical security and 
trade. Of course, we hope that the time bought by this summit will make 
it easier for Trump and Xi to keep the U.S.-China relationship on an 
even keel. Yet, as long as economic nationalists and establishment 
pragmatists in the White House wage pitched battles over the China 
policy and Beijing and Washington continue to see each other as 
potential adversaries, Trump's prediction that the "lots of very 
potentially bad problems will be going away" will turn out to be wildly 
optimistic.
Minxin Pei is a professor of government at Claremont McKenna College and author of the book, China's Crony Capitalism (2016).
No comments:
Post a Comment