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3 reasons Xi-Trump summit won’t be a waste of time for China

· English· 南华早报

US President Donald Trump, left, and President Xi Jinping pose for a photo at the Forbidden City in Beijing on November 8, 2017.

Photo: AFP The Trump administration has assured us that the long-awaited summit in Beijing between President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump will now be held on May 14 to 15.

Whether you believe the meeting will go ahead is up to you.

Beijing has not confirmed it, but neither has it contradicted the White House.

That is more than can be said for Tehran’s brutal response to White House claims that US-Iran peace negotiations are under way.

Even if we take the White House summit claim at face value, we then have to ask: why?

Given the issues currently in contention between the United States and China and the doubts over whether even the most fleet-of-foot diplomacy can weasel some areas of agreement for a credible joint statement, there are many observers who see little upside in a meeting between the two leaders just now.

As political scientist Zhiqun Zhu wrote in ThinkChina, “How can China still welcome [Trump] as if nothing has happened?

And how can China justify this visit to Global South countries that look up to China for global leadership?” These questions are difficult to answer.

Beijing’s views on US activities in Venezuela or Iran are fairly clear, as are its views on the Trump administration’s global tariff war and its efforts to block China’s exports and cut the country’s access to semiconductors and other technology needed for its technological progress.

China has also made clear its view on US efforts to hamper the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the rules-based multilateral cooperation it espouses.

Only last weekend at the WTO Ministerial in Yaounde, Cameroon, China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao called on ministers to safeguard core “most favoured nation” trading rules, to “jointly send a firm message in upholding the multilateral trading system, and unequivocally oppose unilateralism and protectionism”.

He added: “Confrontation should give way to dialogue, [and] rules should be upheld against power politics.” President Xi Jinping, second right, and his wife Peng Liyuan, right, chat with US President Donald Trump, second left, and US first lady Melania Trump in the Baoyun Building of the Forbidden City in Beijing on November 8, 2017.

Photo: EPA In reality, there are probably three good reasons for China to bite its tongue and once again lay out the red carpet for Trump and his wife Melania.

原文链接: 南华早报