Trump, Unorthodox as Ever, Offers Grand Bargain to Beijing

 Trump, Unorthodox as Ever, Offers Grand Bargain to Beijing
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Peter Heinlein/VOA News

President Donald Trump appears to be offering a grand bargain to Chinese President Xi Jinping in which each would get something he dearly wants — an assurance of economic stability ahead of a critical Communist Party Congress in exchange for Chinese help in halting North Korea’s nuclear programs.

The offer has come in a burst of television interviews and social media posts. In a pair of Twitter posts this week, Trump suggested he would agree not to launch a threatened trade war with China, helping to ensure a strong domestic economy as China’s ruling party reviews Xi’s achievements and determines whether he should stay in power. All Xi has to do, Trump says, is to ‘solve the Korean problem.’

Balbina Hwang, who served as a State Department special adviser on East Asian affairs in the George W. Bush administration, says Trump’s overture seems to be striking a nerve in Beijing.

“China understands that it cannot be engaged in an all-out trade war with the U.S. right now,” said Hwang, now a visiting professor at Georgetown University in Washington. “Certainly not before this fall’s crucial leadership conference. China and others frankly are going to scramble to come up with ways to essentially appease Trump before things go too far. “

President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping walk together after their meetings at Mar-a-Lago, April 7, 2017, in Palm Beach, Florida.

President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping walk together after their meetings at Mar-a-Lago, April 7, 2017, in Palm Beach, Florida.

A post-summit analysis in Hong Kong’s influential English language South China Morning Post argued that the real importance of the meeting for Xi was in building his portfolio ahead of the Communist Party congress, where he not only hopes to extend his term in office, but to cement his place in the pantheon of Chinese leaders.

The article quoted political commentator Zhang Lifan as saying Xi’s target is to stabilize the Sino-US relationship at all costs.

“A trade war with the U.S. would affect the Chinese economy badly, and a military clash on the Korean peninsula would trigger a political crisis in China and put the leadership under challenge from inside the Party,” Zhang said.

Trump’s diplomatic overture seems to have caught the Chinese leader’s attention. The U.S. president followed up Tuesday evening (Wednesday morning in China) with a phone call to discuss the latest developments on the Korean peninsula.

Chinese state media reported that during the call, Xi called for “peaceful resolution of tensions over North Korea.

Charles Stevenson, acting associate director of the American Foreign Policy Program at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, cautions that Trump’s very public negotiating strategy could backfire if he gets ahead of key U.S. allies in the region, South Korea and Japan.

“I hope the administration realizes that when Trump says, ‘if they won’t do it, I will’, which is the tone if not his exact words, it has to be consistent with what our regional allies can accept,” Stevenson says. “I’m more optimistic on this score than I was, but a tweet can blow up everything overnight.”

The latest Trump-Xi phone conversation comes as a U.S. aircraft carrier strike group heads to the waters off the Korean peninsula.

“We are sending an armada. Very powerful,” Trump said Wednesday in an interview with Maria Bartiromo of the Fox Business Network.

The president declined to be specific on his strategy with regard to Pyongyang. “I don’t want to talk about it,” he said. Asked about North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un, Trump told Bartiromo, “He is doing the wrong thing.”

Pyongyang said Monday it would “hold the U.S. wholly accountable for the catastrophic consequences” after Trump dispatched the USS Carl Vinson and an accompanying battle group to the region.

 


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