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Commentary

Introducing the ICAS Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker

By Matt Geraci & Jessica L. Martin

Special News Focus

President Biden’s New Administration

February 1, 2021
Joseph R. Biden being inaugurated as the 47th President of the United States, January 20, 2021, with his wife, Dr. Jill Biden. Photo by the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies (Source: Public Domain, Wikipedia Commons)

Special News Focus: President Biden's New Administration

John Kerry promises US climate change diplomacy won’t lead to weaker China policy
By Alex Ward
Vox, January 28

John Kerry, President Joe Biden’s special envoy for climate change issues, said the White House will not make unsavory concessions to China in exchange for progress on climate issues. “Obviously we have serious differences with China,” the envoy said. “Those issues will never be traded for anything that has to do with climate. That’s not going to happen.”

Biden’s pick for UN post calls China ‘a strategic adversary’
By Edith M. Lederer
Associated Press, January 27

During her Senate confirmation hearing to become Ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield said that “China is a strategic adversary…and their actions threaten our security, they threaten our values and they threaten our way of life, and they are a threat to their neighbors and they are a threat across the globe.” The statement follows pressure from Senators who questioned previous questionable comments made by Thomas-Greenfield on China-US-Africa relations.

Biden bans linking Covid-19 to China in bid to quell racist backlash in US
By Teddy Ng
South China Morning Post, January 27 [Paywall]

US President Joe Biden has banned references to Covid-19 by geographical location, after labels like “China virus” and “Wuhan virus” led to a racist backlash. The ban covers official actions, documents and statements of executive departments and agencies.

Biden taps former aide as top Pentagon adviser on China
By Lara Seligman
Politico, January 19

President-elect Joe Biden has tapped former aide and longtime Asia expert Ely Ratner to be the incoming Pentagon chief’s principal adviser on China matters. Ratner is a longtime Biden aide and previously worked in the office of Chinese and Mongolian affairs at the State Department.

U.S. secretary of state nominee Blinken sees strong foundation for bipartisan China policy
By David Brunnstrom and Humeyra Pamuk
Reuters, January 19

Antony Blinken told his Senate confirmation hearing there was “no doubt” China posed the most significant challenge to the United States of any nation, and added he believed there was a very strong foundation to build a bipartisan policy to stand up to Beijing. Blinken also said that he agreed with Pompeo’s assessment that China was committing genocide in Xinjiang.

Pompeo Accuses China of ‘Genocide,’ With Support From Successor
By Nick Wadhams
Bloomberg, January 19

In an official press statement, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo designated China’s actions against Uighurs and other minorities in Xinjiang as genocide: “I believe this genocide is ongoing, and that we are witnessing the systematic attempt to destroy Uighurs by the Chinese party-state.” He said the country’s leaders “have made clear that they are engaged in the forced assimilation and eventual erasure of a vulnerable ethnic and religious minority group.” China has repeatedly denied that any acts of genocide have taken place in Xinjiang. [Pompeo Press Statement: Determination of the Secretary of State on Atrocities in Xinjiang]

Biden picks Clinton adviser Rosenberger as White House China director
By Reuters Staff
Reuters, January 14

Laura Rosenberger, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the United States think tank, will report to Kurt Campbell, who is to be the senior coordinator for Indo-Pacific policy at the White House National Security Council. Rosenberger formerly served as the National Security Council advisor for China and Korea under Obama among a variety of other positions at the State Department and NSC.

In the News

Chinese warplanes simulated attacking US carrier near Taiwan
By Kathrin Hille and Demetri Sevastopulo
Financial Times, January 29 [Paywall]

On January 23 and 24, the Chinese People’s Liberation Army sent 11 and 15 aircraft, respectively, into Taiwan’s air defence zone. According to US and allied intelligence, the bombers and other aircraft were ‘conducting an exercise that used a group of US Navy vessels…as a simulated target.’ Reports included cockpit conversations ‘confirming orders for simulated targeting and release of anti-ship missiles’ against the USS Roosevelt.

Xi Jinping warns against “new cold war” in Davos speech
By Dave Lawler
Axios, January 25

In his speech at the virtually-held World Economic Forum’s “Davos Agenda” conference, Chinese president Xi Jinping warned that a “new cold war” could turn hot and must be avoided. “We should respect and accommodate differences, avoid meddling in other countries’ internal affairs and resolve disagreements through consultation and dialogue,” said Xi.

Chinese Embassy pushes back on report that it wants meeting with US
By Tal Axelrod
The Hill, January 23

After a report by The Wall Street Journal was published claiming that Chinese officials, including Chinese Ambassador Cui Tiankai, were seeking a high-level meeting between the U.S. and China to ease tensions, the Chinese Embassy in Washington said they ‘never wrote such letters’ to their American counterparts and that the ‘report is not true to facts.’

China authorises coast guard to fire on foreign vessels if needed
By Yew Lun Tian
Reuters, January 22

China’s National People’s Congress Standing Committee has passed a law that, for the first time, explicitly allows its coast guard to use ‘all necessary means’ to stop or prevent threats from foreign vessels. The bill also allows for other activities, such as demolishing other countries’ structures built on Chinese-claimed reefs, boarding foreign vessels in waters claimed by China for inspection, and establishing temporary exclusion zones. Beijing spokeswoman Hua Chunying states that the law is in line with international practices.

Covid-19 Heightens U.S.-China Rivalry, New Report Says
By Stephen Filder
The Wall Street Journal, January 19 [Paywall]

A new report by the World Economic Forum states that the global coronavirus pandemic has intensified the U.S.-China rivalry and further destabilized international diplomatic relations. The report, which was written with the opinions of hundreds of experts and academics, says the pandemic ‘has entrenched state power and intensified rivalry,’ thereby forcing other countries to select sides.

China Names New Chief Trade Negotiator Before Biden Takes Office
By Bloomberg News, John Liu and Jing Li
Bloomberg, January 14

Beijing announced the appointment of Yu Jianhua to fill the long-vacant position of Vice Minister of Commerce. Yu, a veteran trade negotiator and former ambassador, was also named as the representative for international trade negotiations. The announcement came just before the first anniversary of the Phase One Trade Deal, which Biden has said would not undergo any immediate changes.

Trump administration blacklists Xiaomi as a ‘Communist Chinese military company’
By Sean Hollister
The Verge, January 14

The U.S. Department of Defense officially designated another Chinese electronics giant, Xiaomi, the world’s third largest phone manufacturer, as a ‘Chinese Communist military company.’ This designation makes Xiaomi susceptible to President Trump’s banning of US investments in such companies. In response, a spokesperson from Xiaomi stated that the company “is not owned, controlled or affiliated with the Chinese military, and is not a ‘Communist Chinese Military Company.’”

US diplomats scrap trips to Taiwan, Europe after Capitol invasion
By Jacob Fromer and Robert Delaney
South China Morning Post, January 13

On January 12, the State Department suddenly announced that it would cancel all travel for the last eight days of the Trump administration in order to better support the transition for the incoming Biden administration. Cancelled trips include one by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to the European Union and another by the UN ambassador to the UN Kelly Craft to Taiwan; the latter of which had been poorly received by Beijing.

Articles and Analysis

Working With the Biden Administration: Opportunities for the EU – Part 4: Realigning the Transatlantic Relationship on China
By Lizza Bomassi and Paul Haenle
Carnegie Europe, January 26

“With a new administration in the White House, there is renewed hope for transatlantic cooperation on China policy despite the sometimes-erratic nature of this relationship. For one, in stark contrast to his predecessor, U.S. President Joe Biden believes that the United States is strongest when it works with its allies. Brussels, for its part, is drafting new proposals to meet the “strategic challenge” posed by China. There is a sense that a revived emphasis on multilateralism presents opportunities for the European Union (EU) and the United States to manage their differences and work with China to resolve fundamental issues in the trilateral relationship.”

“The United States should avoid pressuring its partners in the EU and elsewhere into making binary choices on China. The global economy is too interconnected to revert to the Cold War system of bifurcation, and any attempt to decouple trade ties would risk exacerbating an already fraught trilateral relationship. As such, EU-U.S. efforts to coordinate on China policy should have an eye toward solving problems rather than punishing China or excluding it from international dialogues.”

“If Beijing seeks to manage its relations with Washington and Brussels in a productive manner, it should do so because of the benefits it sees for itself and the international community. Unless Washington, Brussels, and Beijing resolve many of their fundamental disagreements, there is a risk that trilateral ties will only deteriorate further and undermine coordination on the most pressing global challenges.”

China Wanted to Show Off Its Vaccines. It’s Backfiring.
By Sui-Lee Wee
The New York Times, January 25 [Paywall]

“Delays, inconsistent data, spotty disclosures and the country’s attacks on Western rivals have marred its ambitious effort to portray itself as a leader in global health.”

“China’s coronavirus vaccines were supposed to deliver a geopolitical win that showcased the country’s scientific prowess and generosity. Instead, in some places, they have set off a backlash.”

China’s Foreign Policy Weapons: Technology, Coercion, Corruption
By Hal Brands
Bloomberg, January 24

“China’s drive for dominance combines timeless ambitions with 21st-century methods. Look no further than Beijing’s growing quest for spheres of influence. Like countless great powers before it, China aims to shape and control its surroundings. It aspires to create geopolitical domains in which its interests are protected and its prerogatives heeded.”

The US and China Must Cooperate in Space
By Anne-Marie Slaughter and Emily Lawrence
Project Syndicate, January 22

“America and China should cooperate in space. Although the United States can no longer take its extraterrestrial dominance for granted, it remains the leading player, while China’s space capabilities are growing fast. Most important, both countries, along with the rest of the world, would benefit from a set of clear rules governing the exploration and commercialization of space.”

“If the US managed to coordinate with the Soviet Union on space policy during the Cold War, it can find a way to cooperate with China now. The two countries will likely remain at odds on many issues, including trade, cybersecurity, internet governance, democracy, and human rights. But President Joe Biden’s administration must also recognize those areas where cooperation is in America’s best interest. Global threats like pandemics and climate change are obvious examples; setting norms for commercial activities in space is another.”

“This will not be an easy task, given that US-China relations are at their lowest point in decades. But the alternative is bleak. Without an international framework that includes all major spacefaring countries, the Moon could become the next Wild West. China is unlikely to be a responsible partner in a space order that does not afford it the position it deserves. Isolating China could even lead to a territorial clash with the US over prime real estate at the Moon’s south pole, where precious ice reservoirs are thought to be located.”

Three Tensions in Biden’s International Economic Policy
By Matthew P. Goodman
Center for Strategic & International Studies, January 21

“[T]here are three aspects of international economic policy in which President Biden’s impulses appear to pull in conflicting directions. Unless these tensions are reconciled, there is a risk that this important area of policy will get bogged down in the new administration.

  1. The first tension is between domestic and international economic priorities.
  2. The second tension in Biden’s international economic policy is between the new administration’s aversion to traditional trade negotiations and its desire to reestablish U.S. leadership in the Indo-Pacific region.
  3. The third tension is between confronting and engaging with China. President Biden has made clear that he shares the Trump administration’s assessment of China as a strategic competitor of the United States.

To manage this tricky balancing act, the Biden administration should consider reestablishing the informal, high-level channel between senior foreign policy and economic officials in the White House and Zhongnanhai used occasionally during the Obama administration….With strategic perspective and process discipline, the Biden administration should be able to reconcile the three tensions identified here. Without them, there is a risk that international economic policy gets hamstrung by internal contradictions.”

A Complex Inheritance: Transitioning to a New Approach on China
By Scott Kennedy
Center for Strategic and International Studies, January 19

“The incoming Biden administration will inherit four major crises—the pandemic, climate change, racial injustice, and a fracturing political system. It will also face a U.S.-China relationship that is very different from the one President Obama and President-elect Biden bequeathed to the Trump administration four years ago. Figuring out how to manage this inheritance will be the chief foreign policy challenge of the new administration.”

“Although the Trump administration has tried to intentionally handcuff its successors, the Biden administration has substantial flexibility to reshape America’s China policy. Systematically working through this complex inheritance is the necessary first step to going beyond mere tinkering and reactive management. The incoming administration will be able to take some steps on its own, others primarily in consultation with allies, and still others as a process of negotiation with Beijing. There is a large legacy of issues to resolve, but the administration should take its time to consider each individual policy, how they relate to each other, and how retaining, modifying, or jettisoning these measures would dovetail with their own novel initiatives and the broader transition to a distinctive Biden administration approach to China and the world more generally.”

On 1st Anniversary, China Phase One Trade Deal Has Not Aged Well
By Tori K. Smith
The Heritage Foundation, January 15

“After a full year, and as a new administration and Congress assume power, it’s important to evaluate the effectiveness of the deal at achieving its goals. It’s not a pretty picture.”

“The dispute between the U.S. and China came with a hefty price tag. Americans have paid tens of billions in extra taxes to trade with China since 2018, as well as billions of dollars in subsidies to farmers. At the same time, it did nothing to further U.S. strategic objectives.”

“There’s no doubt that the U.S. and China are engaged in strategic competition. The use of punitive tariffs, however, has proven a poor instrument to effect change in China. Americans have been hurt by the trade war with China, and the price of that dispute grows each day. Cutting tariffs should be a key component of Biden’s strategy towards China.”

How Joe Biden’s America and China can turn the page on a rocky relationship
By Stephen Orlins
South China Morning Post, January 14

“US-China relations are at their worst since the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. There is plenty of blame to go around. In China, the centralisation of power under President Xi Jinping and the controversies over human rights in Xinjiang and democracy in Hong Kong have contributed to increasingly negative perceptions of China around the world.”

How America Can Shore Up Asian Order: A Strategy for Restoring Balance and Legitimacy
By Kurt M. Campbell and Rush Doshi
Foreign Affairs, January 12

“Throughout the half century of Asia’s unprecedented rise, Henry Kissinger has been a pivotal figure, orchestrating the United States’ opening to China in the early 1970s and then going on to author tomes on Chinese strategy and world order. But at this transitional moment in Asia, Kissinger’s most relevant observations may be found in a more surprising place: a doctoral dissertation on nineteenth-century Europe that struggled to find a publisher when Kissinger wrote it, years before his rise to prominence.”

Past Events

Passing the Baton 2021: Securing America’s Future Together
Event by the United States Institute of Peace, January 29

Hearing on “U.S.-China Relations at the Chinese Communist Party’s Centennial”
Hearing by the U.S. China Economic and Security Review Commission, January 28

The World Turned Upside Down: American, China, and the Struggle for Global Leadership
Event by The Wilson Center, January 28

US-China Engagement: Past Achievements & Future Adjustments – An Online Dialogue on US-China Relations
Event by the Chinese People’s Association for Peace and Disarmament (CPAPD) and The Carter Center, January 27

Engaging China on Nuclear Arms Control
Event by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, January 26

Online Event: Biden’s Blueprint on Beijing: Transitioning to a New Approach on China’s Economy
Event by Center for Strategic & International Studies, January 21

Carnegie Connects – The Biden Inheritance: U.S. Domestic and Foreign Policy in 2021
Event by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, January 19

Online Event: A Conversation with Former Senator Cory Gardner on the Asia Pacific
Event by Center for Strategic & International Studies, January 13

China’s Soft Power Strategy in the Mediterranean Region
Event by the German Marshall Fund of the United States, January 13

Online Event: Taiwan and Indo-Pacific Regional Security Architecture Conference
Event by Center for Strategic & International Studies, January 12-13

Upcoming Events

Webinar: Communist China’s Modern Intelligence Reforms
Event by The Institute of World Politics, February 10

Asian Interests and the Path Forward in the New Arctic
Event by Wilson Center Polar Institute, February 8-9

Taiwan in 2021
Event by Global Taiwan Institute, February 4

Online Event: Maritime Security Dialogue – USN: Setting the Theater in the Arctic
Event by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, February 2

Commentary

Introducing the ICAS Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker

By Matt Geraci & Jessica L. Martin

This Inauguration Day, the Institute for China-America Studies (ICAS) is excited to announce the launch of the first phase of its Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker. The objective of the Tracker is to identify and understand the official positions of key players in the Biden Administration who will directly or indirectly impact the trajectory of the U.S.-China relationship in various sectors. This allows our audience to monitor major actions and policy decisions enacted by these individuals, as well as track significant bilateral and multilateral interactions with their Chinese counterparts.

In this first phase of the tracker, ICAS researchers explore President Joseph R. Biden’s selections for key cabinet and senior-level positions that directly (such as Secretary of State) or indirectly (such as the Special Presidential Envoy for Climate) impact the U.S.-China relationship. In order to simplify the Tracker for our audience, the appointments have been organized into four categories:

  • Diplomacy & Foreign Policy,
  • Trade & Finance,
  • Defense & Security, and
  • Climate, Health & Technology.

These categorizations are meant to generalize and better organize the overall primary purpose of these positions; however, they should not be viewed as strict divisions. Positions, such as Secretary of Energy and U.S. Trade Representative, can pertain to more than one category as the personnel work together on a myriad of complex issues. Additionally, the Tracker will evolve and be updated on a rolling basis and may not necessarily reflect all appointments ICAS intends to track until subsequent phases are released. A second phase of the Tracker is planned for release in mid-February 2021. It is hoped that this Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker will serve as a lens into the rapidly evolving changes in Washington’s international affairs.

For instance, looking at the Diplomacy & Foreign Policy category reveals different aspects of President Biden’s approach to foreign affairs — and the U.S.-China relationship in particular. Biden’s nomination of Obama-era veterans Antony Blinken for Secretary of State and Jake Sullivan for National Security Advisor implies that he will draw heavily from many of the same principals – and principles – that guided American foreign policy prior to President Donald Trump’s election. Another Obama-era appointee, Kurt Campbell, who is best known for masterminding Obama’s “Pivot to Asia” strategy as Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific Affairs, will continue to shape policy on how America engages with China as Biden’s Coordinator for Indo-Pacific Affairs. In an essay that he published the day before his nomination announcement, he argued that two intertwining challenges threaten the balance in the Indo-Pacific region: 1) China’s increased assertiveness through its economic and military rise, and 2) a U.S. ambivalence through President Trump’s undermining of bilateral relations, multilateral processes and economic negotiations. To deter China’s increasingly aggressive pursuit of territorial and economic interests, Dr. Campbell believes it necessary for the United States to move away from seeking absolute primacy in the region, and instead invest in the relatively inexpensive and asymmetric capabilities of itself and regional actors across the Indo-Pacific.

In alignment with Dr. Campbell’s arguments, in the months leading up to the election all the way through his inauguration, President Biden has stressed the need for America to revitalize its presence in multilateral institutions. By nominating Linda Thomas-Greenfield as Ambassador to the United Nations, who is a career foreign service officer, and former Secretary of State John Kerry as a Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, Biden is attempting to express to America and that world that, in the words of Amb. Thomas-Greenfield, “America is back. Multilateralism is back. Diplomacy is back.” This is further exemplified by his re-elevation of Amb. Thomas-Greenfield’s position back to the Cabinet level.

At the time of publication, President Biden’s pick for Ambassador to China is noticeably absent from the Tracker. Conversations are likely occurring between Biden and the upper echelons of his foreign policy team, including Antony Blinken, Jake Sullivan, Kurt Campbell, and William Burns, among others. Regardless of the outcome, Biden selection will send not only a strong message to President Xi Jinping and his government, but to the American public as well. This appointment comes at a crucial time, particularly so as the position has been vacant, and the anniversary of the Phase One Trade Deal has just recently passed. The question that remains is: What is the message that Biden wishes to send to the American public and China? With Xi appointing Vice Minister of Commerce Yu Jianhua as his new representative for international trade negotiations, it is clear that the Chinese government is bolstering its forces in preparation for renewed trade talks as well.

Reports are still highly speculative as to who President Biden will select for this key position, with even Pete Buttigieg reportedly being considered at one point before he was later nominated for Secretary of Transportation. American businesses, especially the multilateral business community, are eager to revitalize the trade relationship with China. This has been exemplified by CEO of Starbucks Howard Schultz’s recent ‘love letters’ with President Xi, in which the two expressed hopes for the Biden Administration to promote a more business-friendly atmosphere between American and Chinese companies. Bob Iger, executive chairman of The Walt Disney Company has reportedly expressed interest to the Biden team that he would be interested in this role. Selecting a businessperson like Iger could give the wrong impression, however, given that Biden has indicated during his campaign that he will generally pursue a harder-line agenda on China relative to the Obama years. Rather, it is more likely that Biden will select someone with greater political experience under their belt as a display of strength to China and to the American public.

Although President Trump had nominated Terry Branstad prior to his inauguration in December 2016, there is no clear trend on how early or late within the first term a president typically nominates an Ambassador to China. For instance, Obama nominated Jon Huntsman Jr. in May 2009, well into his first term. Although the position has been vacant since September 2020 as a result of Branstad’s departure, this does not necessarily mean that deliberations over his successor will end anytime soon. One thing is clear, however: whoever President Biden selects as Ambassador to China will send a strong message to Xi Jinping’s government and to the American public, as well as provide further insights on his general approach to the U.S.-China relationship.


Matt Geraci is a Research Associate & Program Officer at ICAS; Jessica L. Martin is a Research Assistant at ICAS. This commentary was originally released on January 20, 2021.