Biden launches Asia trip this week aimed at taking on China
As the president prepares to visit Japan and Australia, some say Washington and Beijing must lower the temperature
TOKYO
— President Biden heads to Japan on Wednesday for a wide-ranging trip
that marks a renewed push on his part to confront China’s growing
political, military and economic power, at a time when some experts warn
that tensions between the two superpowers have grown dangerously high.
Biden
is traveling to Australia and Papua New Guinea as well as Japan on the
seven-day excursion, which is also aimed at bolstering support for
Ukraine, combating climate change and tackling global inflation. But
more than any other issue, the trip is meant to counter China, a global
superpower that will not be at the meetings but will be very much top of
mind.
The trip comes as U.S.-China relations show little sign of warming, to the concern of many foreign policy experts.
“No
one is especially optimistic about the future of U.S.-China relations,”
said John Delury, a professor of Chinese studies at Yonsei University
in Seoul. “Blame will be apportioned differently, and opinions will
diverge over whether U.S.-China tension is desirable, inevitable or
avoidable. But most observers in the region will tend to share a
pessimistic view of where things are headed.”
Administration
officials say Biden has made clear he does not want a new Cold War with
China, and that he has pushed to engage with the Chinese in areas where
there is mutual interest or where it is crucial to avoid dangerous
outcomes. But aides say the success of that effort depends in part on
how firmly other countries ally with the United States in taking on
Beijing’s aggressiveness.
“The
best way to establish a constructive relationship with China, in which
there is an understanding about the larger framing, is to do that
diplomacy within the context of a strong allied and partner engagement,”
said a senior administration official, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to preview the president’s trip. “And that’s exactly what
we’re trying to do.”
Biden’s
trip will start Thursday with a summit of the Group of Seven leading
economies in Hiroshima, Japan, where on Aug. 6, 1945, the Enola Gay, a
U.S. bomber, dropped a uranium-235 bomb that killed an estimated 140,000
people. Biden and other leaders are expected to meet with survivors of
that bombing.
Then,
on Monday, Biden plans to be the first U.S. president to visit Papua
New Guinea, an island nation in the Southwest Pacific, for a brief stop
where he will address the 18-member Pacific Islands Forum. He is
expected to sign a defense pact that will help Papua New Guinea develop
security infrastructure and allow for more joint training exercises with
the U.S. military.
Like
the Japan visit, Biden’s stop in Papua New Guinea is aimed squarely at
shoring up the global alliance against China, especially its expanding
military operations in the South Pacific. China recently signed a pact
with the Solomon Islands that allows the country to request security aid
from Beijing, and in 2018, Papua New Guinea became the first South
Pacific nation to sign up for China’s global infrastructure program
known as the Belt and Road Initiative.
John
Kirby, a spokesman for the National Security Council, confirmed that
Biden would discuss China policy with other world leaders, but he said
the president’s trip is not about making countries choose between
Washington and Beijing. Rather, he said, “countries are coming to their
own conclusions about some of the pitfalls” of siding with China.
“We
are not going to the Indo-Pacific this week to arm-twist,” Kirby said.
“We’re going to talk to allies, partners, friends and neighbors about
mutual challenges and opportunities in the region, and how we can
capitalize on each other’s capabilities and the strong geographic
presence so many of these nations have.”
When
Biden took office, he sought to take a more assertive posture in the
region, including an effort to wrap in smaller countries that had long
felt neglected. The administration last year hosted a U.S.-Pacific
Island summit in Washington, bringing leaders together to negotiate new
security arrangements.
The president will continue his push in Australia, which recently signed a deal to receive submarine technology from the United States and Britain
in a counter to China’s military expansion in the Indo-Pacific region.
In Sydney, Biden will join meetings of the so-called Quad, a group that
includes Australia, India, Japan and the United States.
But
as each side pushes to shore up its alliances and expand its influence,
some foreign policy experts warn that Washington and Beijing are on a
dangerous path.
“The
two cannot continue aggravating and goading each other,” said Kerry
Brown, professor at King’s College London and author of “The World
according to Xi.” “The rest of the world lives like dependents of two
warring parents who are determined to rip the house up if they cannot
get their own way. This is a very scary situation, and one that needs to
be constantly managed and worked against.”
Michael
O’Hanlon, a foreign affairs specialist at the Brookings Institution,
added, “We’ve got to find a way to tone down the overall rhetoric.”
In
November, Biden met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping during a Group of 20
summit in Bali, Indonesia, using the decades-long relationship between
the two men to try to smooth relations between the two countries. They
emerged pledging to work together and deputized their advisers to
conduct high-level meetings on a range of topics.
But
tensions flared anew when a Chinese spy balloon floated across the
United States before being shot down off the Atlantic coast. Secretary
of State Antony Blinken responded by canceling a trip to Beijing, and despite talk of a phone call between Biden and Xi, none has been scheduled so far.
U.S.
and Chinese officials have spoken in recent weeks, including a meeting
between Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, and China’s
top diplomat Wang Yi. The senior administration official said there is
an expectation that Biden and Xi will engage again in coming months.
But
the relationship remains tense, and Delury said the possibility for
progress that came out of the Biden-Xi meeting six months ago has
largely evaporated. “We seem to be out of free-fall and settling into a
period of slower yet steady deterioration,” he said.
The
trip also comes at a dicey moment in domestic politics. Biden’s trip
could be overshadowed by concerns over whether Congress will allow a
potentially catastrophic U.S. government default. Asked last week
whether he might cancel the trip amid his debt limit talks with lawmakers, Biden said it was “possible but not likely.”
Biden’s
trip also comes ahead of the 2024 campaign, at a time when many
Republicans are challenging longtime pillars of U.S. foreign policy,
arguing for less American engagement in the world — and in some cases,
less confrontation with authoritarians.
“I’ve
rarely seen a foreign policy right now more tethered to domestic
political constraints than we have now — on Iran and on China, and even
to Ukraine to an extent,” said Aaron David Miller, a veteran diplomat
and senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
“Biden would say the greatest threat the public faces is not Xi or
Putin, it’s from us. We’ve seen the enemy and it’s us. We have to repair
ourselves.”
Even
as officials look for ways to lower the heat between the two
superpowers, conflicts over issues like Taiwan appear likely to keep
flaring up, as China bristles at any U.S. suggestion that the
self-governing island is not Chinese territory. In recent months,
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has fed concerns that China could similarly
move into Taiwan.
“Ukraine today may be East Asia tomorrow,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has said.
In
addition to the G-7 countries, Japan has invited several developing
nations to the Hiroshima summit, including Brazil, Vietnam, Indonesia,
India, Comoros (which currently holds the African Union presidency) and
the Cook Islands (current chair of the Pacific Islands Forum). South
Korea and Australia, which are not part of the G-7, were also invited.
At
the summit, leaders are expected to focus on concerns about economic
coercion on the part of Beijing, but it is not clear whether China will
be criticized in a public statement.
“It’s up to the leaders,” said a senior Japanese government official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to talk candidly.
“Our
target is not to get them to explicitly reject a deepening dependence
on China,” the official said, adding that the leaders would not make
such a declaration in any case. “But raising their awareness that
overreliance on one country, and using the economy as a diplomatic tool
to gain an advantage, these are not a good thing. If these are the
messages we can share with Asian countries, it would be a good thing.”
Biden
has significantly increased his international travel this year, already
visiting six countries and with more trips planned. With a deeply
divided Congress, it is a moment in his presidency where he can arguably
effect more change abroad than he can at home.
Hanging over the trip is the possibility that a different president could be in office after the 2024 election,
possibly even Donald Trump, who during his time in the White House was
eager to disrupt U.S. alliances and reach out to its rivals.
“The
U.S. does have a proactive role in the region, but with an election
coming up at the end of next year, all that could change,” Brown said.
“Ironically, these days the U.S. is the more unpredictable partner.
Under Xi Jinping, China has become way more predictable — though often
not in an entirely positive or reassuring way.”
Pager reported from Washington. Ellen Nakashima contributed to this report.
Matt
Viser is a White House reporter for The Washington Post. He joined The
Post in October 2018, covering the midterms and the 2020 presidential
election before moving over to the White House to cover President
Biden's administration. He was previously deputy chief of the Washington
bureau for the Boston Globe. Tyler
Pager is a White House reporter at The Washington Post. He joined the
paper in 2021 after covering the White House at Politico and the 2020
presidential campaign at Bloomberg News. Twitter