US-China competition can avoid confrontation: China Daily editorial
In announcing he will meet with his Chinese counterpart this week, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said competition does not necessarily mean hostility. That statement deserves heeding by some of his colleagues in the Donald Trump administration.
There is a rough consensus in Beijing that the present turn in US China strategy is not entirely of the US president's making. But that does not alter the fact that Trump seems willing to see how the scheme that his strategists have come up with plays out.
In a flip to the ping-pong diplomacy that aimed to isolate the former Soviet Union, Washington has not only labeled China as the foremost rival of the US, it is also seeking to drive a wedge between Beijing and Moscow.
Just last week, US National Security Advisor John Bolton reportedly claimed Chinese missiles threaten the "Russian heartland", and called for talks with Russia about Chinese activities.
It is part of the bid by the US administration to alienate China from those countries that have friendly relationships with it, a tactic that is now in full swing.
On Friday, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo took a swipe at the Belt and Road Initiative, accusing China of using it to build a "treasury-run empire" by bribing foreign leaders "in exchange for infrastructure projects that will harm the people of that nation".
That was not the first time the top US diplomat has gone on the offensive in this way. In Southeast Asia and Latin America, he cautioned against Chinese investments. He is now leading a US government project to counteract the "Belt and Road" by mobilizing private-sector investments.
These, and the scurrilous speech by Vice-President Mike Pence earlier this month, show that the Donald Trump administration is doubling down on their assault on the Chinese economy. Indeed the rising frictions between the two countries have raised concerns that the trade frictions may be merely the precursor to a broader confrontation.
Beijing has continually sought to defuse the tensions and avert the new Cold War that many are predicting. With almost every statement of resolve to counter US threats, Beijing has simultaneously indicated willingness to negotiate.
Although Washington has shown no reciprocal inclination to talk, Beijing’s portrayal of bilateral trade as being beneficial to both countries is accurate. Its appeal for crisis management is also sincere.
Washington should be sensible about the competition between the two countries, which is unavoidable in more and more fields in the global context. It should accept the emerging reality and adapt to it. This may be the only way to prevent the competition from becoming antagonistic.
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