By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
The Xi-Biden Meeting
As Chinese President
Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden will sit down for a rare face-to-face
during the G-20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, on November 14, both leaders are
confronting acute challenges at home. Despite his
newly confirmed third term as China’s top leader, Xi faces far-reaching
economic challenges. He is grappling with how and when to loosen the draconian
zero-COVID policies that have angered Chinese citizens and battered
investor confidence. The country’s flagging growth and ambitious modernization
targets are added to the pressure, further challenged by a new U.S. ban on
advanced semiconductor exports to China. For his part, Biden faces a
problematic domestic political environment, despite better-than-expected
results in the U.S. midterms. With high inflation and potential loss of control
of the House of Representatives, he now confronts the prospect of strengthened
opposition to his administration and its policies.
Yet these domestic
challenges should not distract from the strategic value of the Biden-Xi meeting
on the sidelines of the G-20 meeting, the first direct encounter between the
two leaders since Biden’s election in 2020. Even if they make it politically
more complex, each leader's domestic headwinds may offer further incentives to
stabilize the spiral of actions and reactions and establish new rules of fair
play and an affirmative vision to discipline the competition. In the meeting
and beyond, both leaders have a crucial opportunity to put a floor beneath the
relationship in ways that benefit both countries.
But like Mao, Xi has
emerged triumphant after his decade of relentless power consolidation, often
through violent internal conflict. And now he is preparing for China’s renewed
long-term struggle against the old enemy: the
separatists in Taiwan.
For one thing, amid
acute political and economic challenges on both sides of the Pacific, it is no
longer clear whether the time is on Washington’s or
Beijing’s side—whether the future will increasingly favor China or the
United States. That means both sides have every reason to seek greater
stability in the near term, even as they invest in their ability
to compete for the years to come. So long as this goal does not
require either side to make fundamental concessions or accept a subordinate status
to the other, the United States and China would benefit from a period of
détente. Moreover, bending the trajectory of competition away from enmity and
conflict will also free up the political space and resources on both sides to
drive forward an inclusive, affirmative vision of the future that measures
success in terms of positive achievements rather than by the extent to which
the other’s capabilities and initiatives can be downgraded or blocked.
Accordingly, in Bali
and in the weeks to come, Biden could make clear that the United States is
prepared to work with China through multilateral forums such as the G-20 to
address global challenges, including debt sustainability and food insecurity
while seeking a mutual understanding with Xi about what kinds of
actions are in and out of bounds. Efforts by the two leaders to establish a
modus vivendi will be more challenging, but no less important, by recent U.S.
actions to restrict China’s access to advanced semiconductors, combined with
growing congressional activism and Biden’s recent statements on Taiwan.
Although each side is likely to treat any assurances and diplomatic overtures
from the other with skepticism, both Biden and Xi should come prepared to test
the proposition that the two governments could begin a range of discussions in
areas of shared concern and explore potential terms of coexistence, including a
positive-sum vision of global governance that both sides can plausibly live
with. Such an approach would need to be backed up with meaningful actions to
demonstrate good faith and would likely take time to achieve tangible results.
But the alternative—an accelerating spiral toward a crisis or even conflict
without meaningful communication channels—would be far worse for the two
countries and the world.
An Avoidable Collision
The United States and
China have been on a collision course. Worse, the action-reaction dynamic has
increasingly pushed policymakers in both countries to define success in their
ability to thwart the other. If not checked, this escalatory spiral could lead
to a crisis in Taiwan, exacerbate the erosion of the “rules-based international
order,” and further constrict domestic space in both countries for pragmatic
policy discussions that focus on results rather than on sounding tough. In the
months since House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan
in August, this cycle has continued, despite efforts by both governments to
prevent demonstrations of resolve from precipitating a direct military
conflict.
Indeed, despite
fragile efforts to avoid a crisis, a growing chorus of commentators, and even
some U.S. officials, have warned that Russia’s war
in Ukraine is just a “warm-up” for a much more significant and
protracted conflict with China. Some analysts have even suggested that war with
China over Taiwan is unavoidable. Many of these comments refer to a supposed
deadline or window for China to use force to retake Taiwan within the next two
to five years. The theory is that Xi is looking for the earliest opportunity to attack Taiwan, whether
because he is becoming more confident in China’s military capabilities or
because he perceives that military and political trends are tilting
against China.
But although Xi has
previously linked the Party’s 2049 goal of “national rejuvenation” to
“reunification,” his address to the 20th Party Congress in October, Xi
emphasized that China "will continue to strive for peaceful reunification
with the greatest sincerity and the utmost effort.” Several former U.S.
officials have already called Washington to reconsider its “one China” policy
and recognize Taiwan as an independent state. Rather than dissuade Beijing,
such dramatic steps could hasten even more coercive measures against Taiwan and
ultimately provoke the attack the United States seeks to deter.
A war over Taiwan is no longer unthinkable. Still, it is by no means
inevitable, mainly if the United States acts to bolster the credibility of the
conditional threats and conditional assurances that have preserved the peace
for decades. The growing fatalism of some commentators neglects the interest
that the United States, China, Taiwan, and the world share in avoiding a
shooting war. Even if such a conflict were restricted to conventional weapons
and avoided nuclear escalation, it would likely involve casualties on a
scale not seen since the Vietnam or Korean Wars, the devastation of the global
economy, and the destruction of the lives and hard-won democratic freedoms of
24 million people in Taiwan. China is rapidly aging, and because of
growing geopolitical friction, this is not good
for productivity and growth.
But although there
may be bipartisan support in Washington for getting tough on China, polling
makes clear that there is no such consensus over whether the United States
should risk the lives of tens of thousands of U.S. troops to defend Taiwan.
Despite this uncertainty, many well-intentioned calls for change in U.S. policy
underestimate the possibility that change could worsen the situation. In a
September survey of U.S. experts and former government officials about China’s
approach to Taiwan, 77 percent said China
would immediately invade if Taiwan declared independence.
More Engagement, More Deterrence?
As the United States
and Taiwan pursue efforts to make the island harder to invade, the best
strategic bet is to play for time. This does not mean backing off or simply
acquiescing to Beijing’s demands. No unilateral concessions—either given or
demanded—would be wise, given fears on each side that such accommodations would
be pocketed or exploited by the other. But coordinated measures taken
reciprocally could enable Washington and Beijing to move back from the brink
without sacrificing defense preparedness or deterrence. Mutual,
proportional steps taken to reduce the frequency and proximity of military
operations near Taiwan, including finding ways to dial back the recent increase
in Chinese maneuvers across the centerline of the Taiwan Strait, would be
beneficial to the island’s defense.
Efforts to lower the
temperature should also be paired with efforts to jump-start discussions on
issues in which the United States and China could work both bilaterally and
multilaterally. Such steps would also go a long way toward reassuring allies
and partners that the United States shares their desire for a productive
relationship with China and that Washington’s recent unilateral export
controls do not herald a fundamental shift in U.S. policy aimed at containing
and isolating China.
The United
States and its partners can still shape a modus vivendi with Beijing by
making any rewards and punishments conditional on Chinese actions. This
requires clear that if China’s leaders change their behavior, they can expect
to be rewarded rather than exploited. As former U.S. National Security Council
official Mike Green recently noted, “The current U.S. approach has left allies
and partners wondering what the American endgame is for relations with China.
If they haven’t given up on shaping China, neither should the United States.”
Renewed efforts at
diplomatic engagement are unlikely to bear fruit immediately, given the deep
distrust on both sides and the challenge of establishing channels of
communication that transcend exchanges of talking points. But high-level
diplomatic engagement is valuable for empowering policy officials to begin a
process of working out potential terms of coexistence and competition that
would set expectations, reduce the risk of war, and make space for cooperation
on shared interests.
Conditional Might Be Better
Biden could also use
the rare meeting with Xi to address any misunderstanding created by
his comments about Taiwan to 60 Minutes in September, despite
his reassurance that the United States is “not encouraging” Taiwan's independence. (He said in the interview
that “Taiwan makes their judgments about their independence. . . . That’s their
decision,” raising concerns that the United States was making an unconditional
commitment to defend Taiwan, even if the island were to declare independence
and provoke a Chinese attack formally.) Biden could clarify, as he did at the
UN General Assembly, that the United States continues to oppose unilateral
changes in the status quo by either side and would act for opposing unilateral
steps toward formal independence, permanent separation, or U.S. diplomatic recognition
of Taiwan. The credibility of U.S. assurances to maintain the status quo is
essential to the success of U.S. deterrence efforts. Biden could also clarify
the conditions under which the U.S. would expand or relax restrictions and
sanctions against China to make clear that U.S. policies are a calibrated and
proportionate effort designed to shape Chinese policies and behavior rather
than unconditional efforts aimed at containment.
But the most critical
question for all is whether his plans will prevail or generate their political
antibodies, both at home and abroad, that begin to resist Xi’s vision for China
and the world actively. But then again, as a practicing Marxist dialectician,
Xi Jinping is probably already anticipating that response- and preparing
whatever countermeasures may be warranted.
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