Why Joe Biden’s first order of business should be America, not China
- Rebuilding America’s competitiveness at home and leadership abroad should be top priority for the next president. China must come later – when the US has regained its strength – and the focus should be on a return to routine
Everyone learns, sooner or later, when doing business with Communist China, that it is better to be in a strong position if you hope for any measure of success.
Now we know that Biden will also be beginning without the benefit of a friendly majority in the Senate, his need to focus narrowly is all the more crucial.
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Biden is already signalling his intention to tackle the dominant issues of the campaign: grappling with the pandemic, boosting the economy and addressing racial injustice. He needs to restore internal processes that will permit his administration to stay focused on these goals and cannot afford to be uselessly diverted.
So, rebuilding America’s competitiveness at home and leadership abroad are the first order of business, and China must come later.
Reversing the pandemic tide, strengthening fiscal tools, stimulating the return of middle-class productivity and incomes, encouraging research and development all provide precisely the means to begin the process of addressing the challenge from China to the US in the Asia-Pacific region.
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Biden should charge his top economic and health officials with the responsibility to cooperate with their international counterparts to stem the drift towards protectionism, promote global growth and mount common efforts to defeat the pandemic.
This should be explored first among a coalition of willing nations with common values and objectives. If China shows a genuine interest in cooperating, it should also be invited in time.
The RCEP also reminds us of how weak the agreement is without US participation, and how much better regional economic integration and common growth might be with a more ambitious agenda.
The vitriol exchanged between Beijing and Washington in recent months has sounded more like schoolyard taunts than sober diplomacy among potentially conflicting powers. This must be corrected. But calls for a summit between the leaders or new “national security strategies” to focus on relations with China are premature.
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The first order of China business for the Biden administration should be a return to routine. Nominees for senior positions can state the new president’s policy preferences in the ordinary course of their being approved by the Senate. Naming a competent ambassador to Beijing can help the return to civil dialogue and management of disputes.
As they are dragged out the door, the Trump administration’s China hawks are signalling that they want to leave as much wreckage behind as possible.
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Rather, these officials want to put Biden in a position where he will have to reverse these last-minute decisions and be criticised for being soft on China or a panda hugger.
The US needs – and its friends and allies want to see – a revitalised American vigour at home and in the region that China will have to reckon with. The Asia that Biden will deal with is not his grandfather’s, nor his father’s, nor even younger Joe’s Asia. China stands taller and is stronger.
The US day of unchallenged hegemony in the western Pacific is over. But the US, and the nations of the region that share its values and ambitions, will do much better holding on to what they have achieved in the post-World-War-II era if America comes back strong.
Douglas H. Paal is a distinguished fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace