Advertisement

Can US pessimism and Chinese optimism find common ground?

Nong Hong says while there may be a consensus that China-US relations have entered a new era, assessments of the change in the bilateral relationship are starkly different in the two countries

Reading Time:5 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Nong Hong says while there may be a consensus that China-US relations have entered a new era, assessments of the change in the bilateral relationship are starkly different in the two countries
The US’ frustrated and negative assessment of ties seems to diverge greatly from the more optimistic Chinese view of the trajectory of the important bilateral relationship. Illustration: Craig Stephens
The US’ frustrated and negative assessment of ties seems to diverge greatly from the more optimistic Chinese view of the trajectory of the important bilateral relationship. Illustration: Craig Stephens
The new US National Defence Strategy, announced on January 19, kicked off a fresh round of speculation on US-China relations. The new strategy must be viewed in conjunction with the US National Security Strategy, announced in December, and the “Indo-Pacific” concept raised frequently by US President Donald Trump during his visit to Asia in November – and repeatedly echoed by his foreign policy team. All of this seems to suggest, at least from the US perspective, that American policy towards China has reached a transition point, from “engagement with competition” during previous US administrations to “competition with possible confrontation”. This frustrated and negative assessment seems to diverge greatly from the more optimistic Chinese view of the trajectory of the important bilateral relationship, especially after China’s 19th National Congress last October and Trump’s state visit to China in November.
Advertisement
Issues such as North Korea’s nuclear tests, trade and economic relations, and strategic competition in Asia’s maritime domain have posed critical challenges to the leaders of both countries, reminding us again of the importance of communication and trust. Trump’s visit to China was reported by the Chinese media as an opportunity to boost Sino-US relations, partly through stable and increasing personal ties between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Trump. On the other hand, many American analysts saw Trump’s visit as a victory for Chinese foreign policy and a loss for the United States. Although Trump’s visit to Asia covered many of the hot issues mentioned above, the perception of analysts in the two countries diverged sharply.

Trump and Xi’s Roller-coaster 2017

Why the US is no match for China in Asia, and Trump should have stayed at home and played golf

The North Korean nuclear crisis and its aftermath has become the No 1 test of US-China relations. There is a consensus among Chinese and US scholars that the crisis affects international security, regional stability and relations between the major powers. It has also been highlighted that the US is willing to consider a preventive war with North Korea as a means of denuclearising the Korean peninsula, which puts China in a difficult position. The fundamental interests of the US and China are not aligned on this issue – the US is happy to squeeze North Korea with military threats and sanctions to the point of collapse, but a chaotic North Korea would be a disaster for China, which stills holds out hope that the crisis can be resolved without war.

The Trump administration hasn’t fully grappled with the human and material costs of a preventive strike on North Korea. There is great uncertainty as to where the country’s nuclear assets are stored and a preventive strike would, at best, eliminate a fraction of that capability. Pyongyang’s reprisals thereafter and the outbreak of war could lead to massive casualties.

There was a wide consensus that American leadership in Asia and its broader interests in the Asia-Pacific region would suffer lasting damage because of Trump’s mercantilist stance and “America First” economic policy. Such policies are incompatible with the trend of globalisation, which is market-driven and not possible to arrest.
Advertisement

Some Chinese analysts hold that China’s engagement with the US is likely to receive a positive boost in light of the outcomes of the 19th party congress, at which President Xi reiterated his intention of promoting economic and structural reforms and further opening the Chinese economy to global market forces. This market opening holds out a useful opportunity to further deepen US-China ties and address the criticism directed against China by the US business sector – hitherto China’s most vocal backer – that the playing field is tilted in favour of domestic competitors at the expense of US companies in China. Unfortunately, this optimism in China is not shared in the US.

Advertisement