Voicing frustration over the lack of success in ending Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio called for renewed focus on “our No. 1 geopolitical foe” — China.
“Not that a war in Ukraine is not important, but I would say what’s happening with China is more important in the long term for the future of the world,” Rubio told Fox News host Sean Hannity.
US President Donald Trump’s inner circle has long spoken of China as the archenemy, with some suggesting that ending the Ukraine war would free up resources to counter Beijing — especially if it seeks to move on Taiwan.
Photo: Bloomberg
Yet more than 100 days into Trump’s term, observers notice a surprising lack of attention on China. Trump has hit the country hard with tariffs, but otherwise, there has been little by way of articulated strategy.
Rubio, who in his US Senate confirmation hearing warned that China could affect “virtually everything that matters to us in life” within a decade, has yet to visit East Asia, focusing attention on Trump’s priority of deporting mostly Latin American migrants as well as to diplomacy on Ukraine.
“I think that the White House thought that they’d be in a different place with China now than where they are,” said Wendy Cutler, a former top US trade negotiator who is now vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute.
Trump’s tariff war “escalated so quickly that it’s hard to unwind now,” she said.
China is “playing a longer game,” with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) rallying the population by blaming the US for economic pain, she said.
Trump is surrounded by reputed hawks such as Rubio, but the president appears “enamored with Xi Jinping,” Cutler said.
“He thinks that they get along well, and that if it’s leader to leader, they can figure out this relationship and put it back on track,” she said.
The US and China plan their first formal trade talks this week in Switzerland, over a month after Trump unveiled his sweeping levies.
Trump, who has vowed to remake the global economic system, has slapped 145 percent tariffs on products from China, which has responded with 125 duties on imports from the US.
Trump has shown himself to be far more radical than in his first term on a host of issues, but he has shown signs of pragmatism on China, despite heated rhetoric against Beijing on the campaign trail.
David Perdue, a former senator and Trump’s pick for ambassador to Beijing, wrote about China during the campaign that “America is at war,” but in his confirmation hearing said the US approach should be “nuanced, nonpartisan and strategic.”
Former US president Joe Biden’s administration also identified China as the top rival, but sought to work together on targeted areas, such as fighting climate change and curbing fentanyl.
Yet the Biden administration also pursued a broader regional strategy of facing down China through alliances. It began a shift of US forces in southern Japan and northern Philippines — within proximity of Taiwan — and pursued coalitions to reject the use of Chinese high-technology.
Trump has derided allies, especially in Europe, and has hit even US friends with tariffs, while China has quickly reached out to Japan and South Korea, among the closest US allies, to explore a free-trade deal.
“By undercutting core US alliances and partnerships across Europe and Asia, he is reducing the leverage that the United States can bring to bear vis-a-vis China,” said Ali Wyne, who follows China for the International Crisis Group.
He also questioned how the tariff war fit into a considered strategy on China, which has an incentive to double down on achieving greater self-sufficiency and has projected itself as “a more stabilizing geopolitical force than the world’s preeminent power.”
“Despite his alleged friendship with Xi and his stated desire for the United States and China to collaborate more robustly, he has created a trade impasse from which neither leader has an easy face-saving off-ramp,” Wyne said.
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