Changing the Face of Sino-American Relations
Apr 1, 2021ANNE-MARIE SLAUGHTER, SAMM SACKS
The US will never accept China’s violations of human rights and trade
abuses in exchange for climate cooperation. But to ensure that this approach
does not forestall much-needed cooperation, a broad dialogue, led by a
different set of faces and fortified by deeper personal relationships, is
essential.
WASHINGTON, DC – The Sino-American relationship is at its lowest point in
decades. Following the recent bilateral summit in Alaska – the first high-level
talks since President Joe Biden took office – it is far from clear whether the
new US administration understands what it will take to revive it.
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US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said that, while
America’s relationship with China has some “adversarial” aspects, it also has
“cooperative ones.” At the Alaska summit, however, there was little sign of the
latter, with Blinken and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan publicly
trading barbs with Chinese officials.
Biden said he was proud
of Blinken for sitting through an anti-American tirade, but acknowledged that
it was not a great start to his administration’s relationship with China. The
hope now, it seems, is that John Kerry, US Special Presidential Envoy for
Climate, will have more luck at the upcoming talks with
his Chinese counterpart in an area where both sides have expressed a
willingness to cooperate.
But what is really needed may be a much broader dialogue. At the last meeting of the
US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue, held in Beijing in 2016, the large US
delegation, led jointly by the secretaries of state and the Treasury, included
officials responsible for issues such as climate policy, ocean health,
counterterrorism, non-proliferation, food security, and mineral supply-chain
practices. Agreements were reached in every area.
If this kind of broad US-China dialogue were to be held today, imagine what
the US side of the table would look like. Alongside Blinken and Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen, we could expect to see Secretary of Commerce Gina
Raimondo, Trade Representative Katherine Tai, Chair of the Council of Economic
Advisers Cecilia Rouse, White House National Climate Adviser Gina McCarthy (the
first woman to hold that position), and Samantha Power, the incoming
administrator of the US Agency for International Development. Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan, Secretary of Health and Human
Services Xavier Becerra, and Attorney General Merrick Garland would join them.
That would be a far better picture to present to the world – a diverse
array of US officials, over half of them women, confronting a phalanx of
Chinese men – than the images from the Alaska summit, which could have been
taken anywhere between 1972 and the present.
In a similar vein, the United States could propose a bilateral dialogue
exclusively on cybersecurity and data-privacy issues, alongside planned
dialogues on issues like climate change. Here, again, women would dominate the
American side of the table. They include Anne Neuberger (Deputy National
Security Adviser for Cyber and Emerging Technology), Jen Easterly (awaiting
Senate confirmation as the National Cyber Director), and Mieke Eoyang (Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Cyber Policy). Shannon Coe, Jennifer Daskal,
Melanie Hart, and Cynthia Carras would also be in attendance.
Making these women the public face of the American half of a US-China cyber-policy
dialogue would be good for women everywhere. Moreover, much like a single broad
dialogue, the simultaneous pursuit of multiple targeted dialogues would
highlight the complexity of the bilateral relationship and the importance of
cooperation on a wide range of issues.
To be sure, simply replacing male officials with women will not bring about
harmony in Sino-American relations. Just ask Canadian Deputy Prime Minister
Chrystia Freeland, who has been locked in unproductive negotiations to free
Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig since they were arrested in China and charged
with espionage, apparently in retaliation for Canada’s 2018 arrest of Meng
Wanzhou, Huawei’s CFO, at the request of the US.
But as Biden well knows, foreign policy – like politics more broadly – is
based on relationships created not only at the negotiating table, but also
after hours, unwinding over an informal meal and finding common interests and
identities. These relationships are necessary to build actual trust and
convince senior government officials to drop their figurative masks and reveal
the real person.
When Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State, she forged a relationship with
Chinese State Councilor Dai Bingguo, based partly on their shared commitment to
their children and grandchildren. That relationship helped the US and China to
weather a major diplomatic crisis.
Today, building such relationships – essential to foster trust between high
officials – should be a top priority of US leaders, regardless of gender. Such
an effort could build on the ties being created through unofficial dialogues.
For example, as the Alaska summit was unfolding, women from the US, China,
and Europe gathered via Zoom for a private discussion about internet
censorship. This group – including multiple generations of government
officials, academics, business leaders, investors, and journalists – meets
regularly for candid, off-the-record conversations about some of today’s most
pressing topics, from artificial-intelligence start-ups to export controls and
biotechnology. These relationships could prove very useful to governments.
As Kerry has noted, the US will never
accept China’s violations of human rights and trade abuses in exchange for
climate cooperation. This is the right approach, particularly while the
atrocities in Xinjiang continue. But cooperation on climate change – as well as
pandemics, cybersecurity, and other shared threats – remains critical. Only
with a broad (or multi-pronged) dialogue, led by a different set of faces and
fortified by deeper personal relationships, can the US strike the right balance
between – to use Blinken’s words – the adversarial and cooperative aspects of
its relationship with China.
Update Apr 2, 2021 17:32UTC
This commentary was updated to include additional information from the
authors.
Writing for PS since 2006
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Anne-Marie Slaughter, a former director of policy planning in the US State
Department (2009-11), is CEO of the think tank New America, Professor Emerita
of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University, and the author
of Unfinished Business: Women Men Work
Family.
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Samm Sacks is Cyber Policy Fellow at New America and Senior Fellow at Yale
Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center. She also convenes the US-China Women's
Tech Summit.
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