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Top China Diplomat Warns of Decoupling Risk (bloomberg.com) 63

China's top diplomat warned the US that decoupling would be "self defeating" as the country set out to implement a recent agreement made between their leaders. From a report: Foreign Minister Wang Yi, speaking on Friday at an event to mark the 45th anniversary of US-China diplomatic relations, cited a slew of initiatives that reflect improved ties including streamlined visas for US travelers, a counternarcotics working group to battle the flow of the synthetic fentanyl to the US, and the sending of pandas to the US by the end of the year. "Any decoupling attempt to stem the tide will only be counterproductive and self defeating," Wang said.

David Meale, deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, joined Friday's event as charge d'affaires with Ambassador Nicholas Burns out of town. Tensions between China and the US started to ease after President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met in November. The talks resulted in a resumption of high-level military-to-military ties, a promise to collaborate on the fentanyl problem and a commitment to boost interactions between people in the two countries.

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Top China Diplomat Warns of Decoupling Risk

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  • Rightt.... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Because massively reducing the amount shipments from China and shifting toward more rigorous inspections for those items and people wont do way more the prevent Chinese narcotics from finding their way into the US market than any enforcement cooperation ever could.

    Also we are totally doomed, I mean how can function as a society without zoo animals...

    Its China and various well connected US political animals that have a decoupling risk. China's economy is probably screwed if it can't dump EV parts and electr

    • by Torodung ( 31985 )

      Regarding pandas: they are highly symbolic. Do some research. There was propaganda in China that we were starving their pandas to piss off the Chinese hoi polloi. You and I? We don't really think that way. A lot of people do. Don't discard other personality types like they're idiotic. We have to live with them, and at the very least I consider the possibility that I'm the idiot here.

      It is rare that you get both a symbolic gesture and meaningful policy changes like hotline contact between your Joint Chiefs (

    • by Anonymous Coward

      All we have to do to defeat China, is leave them out of the post-petroleum transition.

      Except China has already passed peak oil. Have way more EVs than America. More solar in one year than America has ever. And also more wind power than the rest of the world combined. Plush a bunch of nukes that weren't 1000% over budget and decades late.

      You may as well ban your buggy whips for China. That'll teach em just as much whose boss.

      • by sfcat ( 872532 )
        They import 80% of their energy and are the largest importers of oil. Without ME oil, they can't feed themselves inside of 18 months. You know you can look this stuff up on the Internet right?
  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Friday January 05, 2024 @01:09PM (#64134419) Homepage

    Start acting like the grown up world player you want to be rather than some oversized banana republic threatening your neighbours and committing miriad human rights violations.

    • Myriad.
    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by flink ( 18449 )

      Start acting like the grown up world player you want to be rather than some oversized banana republic threatening your neighbours and committing miriad human rights violations.

      Ok, but what about China?

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Outside of the implied slur, that's a real problem.
      In a lot of ways China and the US have very different ideas of what "proper civilized behavior" consists of. If we can't trust them, then why make an agreement that can't be enforced? If they can't trust us, then why make an agreement that can't be enforced? Both sides are guilty of multiple violations of what the other considers the "civilized norms". (And, admittedly, both are also frequently guilty of what they, themselves, consider the civilized nor

      • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

        What was implied about it?

        As for civilized norms - i think most people would agree that concentration camps for ethnic groups are morally obscene.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Hold on while we encircle them with hostile military treaties and warships then get mad if they push back.

  • China kills me (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Hey we’ve been acting in bad faith the whole time you built up our economy but let’s talk pandas and trips to the great wall.
    Whenever their government beaurocrats talks diplomacy it’s like watching a child try to piece together a justification to eat candy for lunch.

  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Friday January 05, 2024 @01:16PM (#64134441)

    China is a frenemy. They want commerce with one hand but they are doing diddly about the flow of drugs and precursor chemicals and they are doing jack squat about the TikTok Heat button. Meanwhile, they're buying up land conveniently located near domestic military bases, taking over international waters in the seven-dash line, and stealing US IP. China plays Go while the US is getting stoned and playing tiddly-winks.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      The problem is that the only alternative is cold war, because they sure as hell won't stop stealing and if you include them in the globalist kumbaya of porous borders it's far too hard to stop them.

      To revert to cold war now is dangerous. This combined with the fact that the globalists Davos crowd who still have immense political power, would rather China be allowed to steal without consequence than the west turning their backs on globalism ... what is left is praying that somewhere along the line of stealin

  • by rbrander ( 73222 ) on Friday January 05, 2024 @01:28PM (#64134479) Homepage

    Yes, we are cutting off our investor class from cheap labour options. Engagement with China for 50 years brought many lowers prices, larger markets, new products to improve our material wealth. But, that's the same period were most of us got no net improvement to our overall lives worth mentioning: it all went to the top. Cheaper prices on appliances and clothing had to be spent on housing and medicine instead.

    The real price of "Roger and Me" globalization was that the middle class lost any reason to care about the "benefits of trade".

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Friday January 05, 2024 @01:50PM (#64134549) Journal

      Globalization and national level specialization absolutely did deliver lifestyle improvements to just about everyone. We don't have to pretend otherwise; to recognize that

      1) most of the gains ended up at the top,
      2) the current dividends are all going to the top,
      3) it came a huge social costs, and moral bankruptcy.

      Finally it does not prevent us from 4) recognizing its time to change course now.

      • Globalization is great, it's more a matter of fine-tuning it to adjust for the problems that have come up.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by wyHunter ( 4241347 )
      And in actually, with overall decline in quality, our lives are worse. Today's cheaper products, especially for what is laughingly called 'durable goods' like appliances have quality significant less than older things. Case in point: my kitchen range is from the 1950s, still looks pretty darn new, and cooks very well. I don't think today's ranges will last 4 years. And don't get me started on washing machines and dishwashers. Add to this electronic items, small appliances, clothing - yeah, no. I was bet
      • And in actually, with overall decline in quality, our lives are worse. Today's cheaper products, especially for what is laughingly called 'durable goods' like appliances have quality significant less than older things. Case in point: my kitchen range is from the 1950s, still looks pretty darn new, and cooks very well. I don't think today's ranges will last 4 years. And don't get me started on washing machines and dishwashers. Add to this electronic items, small appliances, clothing - yeah, no. I was better

        • by rbrander ( 73222 )

          Glad to have kicked off this thread. By coincidence, we resolved the failing-appliance issue by eliminating the very idea of >$1000 kitchen "Range"; purchased what a range does modularly, so that no one failure can ruin dinner. Or the bank account:

          http://brander.ca/range/ [brander.ca]

          My mother-in-law is about to turn 92, but does downstairs to power-cycle the dryer (pulling the huge plug hard for arthritis) because it won't reset after a run, some chip fault. The mechanicals are fine the last 5 years of that, it's

          • But dumping the range really is because of bad quality. Though my wife and I do not have children at home, we still use a large oven for batch cooking. Ditto for 4 burners on the stove for canning, and yes, we do that. This is a symptom of the problem, really, though for some it is a fine solution.
    • by jonadab ( 583620 )
      Honestly, there are other countries with cheap labor.

      Granted, it takes time for businesses to rearrange their infrastructure to accommodate a major geographical transition. These things don't happen overnight.
    • Not really. We offloaded our industrial age manufacturing so we could retool the working class to be leaders in the information economy. China could never replicate our technological successes such as Facebook, Google, or Amazon.

      As a result, our middle class is better off now, more than ever! It's been a total win/win. The Chinese need us for our leadership in academics, research, and data chops just as much as we need them for making affordable goods. Well, at least that was the plan. Somehow it got bog
  • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Friday January 05, 2024 @01:47PM (#64134543)

    China can't be trusted as long as their current government is in power. Every country on Earth knows this. Vote the politicians out that ignore this simple fact because they have other/hidden agendas they wish to foster. As someone stated above China needs to start acting like a grown up world player to be taken seriously. Right now dealing with China is akin to sticking your arm into a basket of vipers .. you're going to get bit and will probably die or sent to a reeducation camp. The world needs to step up and stamp out those communist/totalitarian/dictatorship governments.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Look at the history of how the US honors treaties. China is no "good guy", but neither are we. Think of it as two mafia chiefs trying to divide a territory. (But the "acceptable behavior" beliefs between the US govt. and the Chinese govt. are a bit more at variance.)

      And, to be fair, a bit of China's "acceptable behavior" beliefs derives from prior experience with European powers. (More Britain than the US, but we probably look about the same to them.)

  • and move chip production to America or Singapore. No one is dying for small island the same way we are not dying for a Polish/Ukrainian/Russian conglomerate state made in 1920s.
  • by Thoth Ptolemy ( 110353 ) on Friday January 05, 2024 @04:52PM (#64135017)
    This reeks of desperation and insecure dependency.
  • by ZipNada ( 10152669 ) on Friday January 05, 2024 @06:51PM (#64135227)

    “We have no intention to displace or lord over anyone, still less to seek hegemony,” Wang Yi said.

    And yet China clearly does want to 'lord over' Taiwan and the South China Sea. The belt-and-road initiative is obviously intended to create a dependent hegemony. Statements that are obviously in contradiction to the facts erode what little is left of Chinese credibility.

Air pollution is really making us pay through the nose.

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