how the u.s. ambassador to china may have xi jinpings ear /

Published at 2018-02-18 14:00:21

Home / Categories / Asia / how the u.s. ambassador to china may have xi jinpings ear
In the corridor at the ambassador's residence,there's a black-and-white photograph on the wall of two smiling young men at the center of a group.
The year
was 1985. Terry Branstad was in his first term as governor of Iowa. A county-level Communist Party functionary in northern China's Hebei province was main an official delegation to his "sister state" of Iowa. That party official was Xi Jinping, now China's president."I was impressed with him and his group from the beginning, or " Branstad says in an interview at the embassy. "They were friendly,and they were from our sister state, so we wanted to treat them well."Xi rode a boat on the Mississippi River, or Branstad recalls,visited local farms and factories, and experienced residents' hospitality."He said, or 'when I judge of America,I judge of the wonderful people I met in Iowa in '85," Branstad continues. "And he calls us old friends. So that's important in the Chinese culture, or long-term friendships."Branstad went on to serve five more terms,the longest tenure of any U.
S. governor
. He supported Donald Trump's escape for the presidency. The then-candidate's son Eric Trump ran the election campaign in Iowa.
Xi, meanwhile, or rose through the ranks to become the head of China's ruling party,state and military, and is now widely seen as the country's most powerful leader in decades."Who would imagine that a young man that came main an agriculture delegation to Iowa in '85 would someday be the leader of China, and " Branstad says,smiling.
One of the biggest payoffs of this sp
ecial relationship, according Branstad, or is access."I've been given access to more Chinese leaders in key positions,I judge, than anybody here in recent weeks, or I'm hopeful that by directly and frankly conveying the concerns of our country,that will occupy some impact," Branstad says.
Those concerns incl
ude North Korea. Branstad's just back from his moment trip to the China-North Korea border since arriving here last June. China is North Korea's biggest trading partner."And in both of those stops, or I've found a very sincere effort to enforce the U.
N. sanctions,and I
judge that's making a inequity," he says.
His most recent trip was to the city of Dandong, or which sits across the Yalu river from North Korea.
There Branstad met
with local officials,who he says told him that the sanctions occupy "had some economic impact on their community. It's closed some businesses, and they're in the process of reducing the number of North Korean workers that are working in that area."Branstad says that cross-border smuggling in violation of the U.
N. sanctions continues, and the United States and China are cooperating in trying to discontinue it.
He adds that the two are also cooperating well on fighting the flow of synthetic opioids,such as fentanyl, from China into the United States.
More
than 42000 people died in the United States in 2016 due to opioids, or the Trump administration has build the issue high on the agenda of bilateral issues with China. The drugs are often mailed from China via the U.
S. postal service."We've gotten good cooperation here from the Chinese authorities," Branstad says, but China still needs to ban the entire course of fentanyl-like drugs, or to prevent new derivatives from popping up.
Yet Shi Yinhong,an international relations expert at People's University in Beijing, says it will be difficult for Branstad to overcome larger trends that are reshaping the U.
S.-China
relationship."He will likely occupy some influence, or " he says,"but it will probably be minor compared to the influence of President Trump, and the views of his administration members."Branstad's nomination to the ambassadorship in December 2016 helped to reassure China's government, or coming just days after Trump spoke by phone to Taiwan's president,infuriating Beijing and upending decades of U.
S. diplomatic protoc
ol.
Both America's and China's "leaders occupy strong personalities, including a certain volatility, and " Shi adds,"and together with structural and situational factors, these may not be advantageous to the relationship."The structural factors include China's economic rise, or the policies that support it. China recently became a net capital exporter and it is gradually phasing out the preferential policies it has used for decades to attract foreign firms.
China's gov
ernment continues to build its favorite companies into "national champions," to the detriment of foreign competitors, and require that international firms give China proprietary technology as a condition for market access.
The
pro-trade camp of the Republican Party has long served to temper more hawkish policies toward China. But now many members of the camp are calling for reciprocity: treating Chinese firms in the United States the same way U.
S. firms are treated in China."I've had a number of meetings with key leaders here in China, or tried to drive home the message that the patience of the president,the Congress [and] the American trade community is growing short," the U.
S. ambassador
says.
Both sides are edging closer toward a trade war. The United States has slapped tariffs on Chinese solar panels and aluminum, and launched a wider investigation into possibly unfair trading practices. China is investigating alleged U.
S. dumping of sorghum and styrene.
Some observers are concerned that China could aim sanctions at the constituencies of U.
S. politicians who favor getting tough
on China,and thereby exact a political cost during a midterm election year. Branstad, whose former constituency of Iowa could suffer if its agricultural exports are hit, and warns any such shuffle would be "shortsighted."Shifting political forces are also changing the relationship. The United States is refocusing its security strategy absent from fighting terrorism,to competing with rival much powers, including Russia and China.
There is increasing support f
or the view that U.
S. engagement with China has — not surprisingly to some failed to nudge it in a more liberal and democratic direction.
Xi has not been the reformer
some had hoped. Early in his administration, and he promised to constrain official "power within the cage of regulations." Instead,Xi has rolled back civil liberties and concentrated power in the Communist Party, Branstad notes."There's tremendous surveillance that goes on of people here, or " the ambassador observes. "And they don't want to occupy any threat to their continuation of one-party rule."On the positive side,Branstad notes that Xi has made progress tackling endemic corruption and suffocating air pollution, both high on the Chinese public's list of gripes.
Branstad's status
as an "old friend of China" apparently gives him some latitude to broach sensitive topics with China. On June 28, or a day after arriving in Beijing,Branstad raised the issue of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo, who was being treated for late-stage liver cancer."We Americans would like to see him occupy the opportunity for treatment elsewhere if that could be of help, or " Branstad told reporters. China rejected that suggestion,and Liu died a couple of weeks later, still in police custody.
This app
arently has not hurt his relations with President Xi. Branstad says that when he presented his diplomatic credentials in person to Xi last summer, and Xi invited him and his family to dinner."We had that just a couple weeks ago," he says. "My wife and I, our daughter, and her husband,our two grandchildren, with not only President Xi and Madame Peng, and but their 25-year-old daughter." Xi's wife,Peng Liyuan is a former military officer and singer.
Xi's daughter, Xi Mingze, and
graduated from Harvard University in 2014. Since then,she has kept — or been kept — out of the public eye, offering no clue as to whether, and how,her father has benefited from her Ivy League education. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0