Saturday Dec 14, 2024
Wednesday, 25 January 2012 00:01 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Reuters: President Barack Obama will host China’s likely next leader, Vice President Xi Jinping, at the White House on February 14, in a visit set to boost Xi’s credentials as the man who will steer Beijing’s close but quarrelsome ties with Washington.
Obama and Xi will discuss “a broad range of bilateral, regional, and global issues,” the White House said in a statement on Monday announcing the visit, when Xi will be hosted by Vice President Joe Biden.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry has yet to confirm the date of the visit; it had no immediate comment on Tuesday, and did not answer faxed questions. This week is the Lunar New Year public holiday in China. The two sides will have plenty of strains to talk about, especially over trade, human rights, North Korea and Iran. Above all, the Obama administration will keen for clues about Xi’s worldview and how he intends to handle these thorny issues.
“The man Biden’s hosting, barring something no one forsees at this point, will become the head of China, head of the Communist Party, head of the government and head of the military,” said China expert Kenneth Lieberthal of the Brookings Institution in Washington.
“This is really a chance for the Obama administration to look forward to the succession and post-succession period in China and begin to establish critical personal relationships and a personal comfort level back and forth.” For Xi, the visit will be a valuable trophy that helps advertise his readiness for the top job.
His growing prominence indicates that he is virtually certain to replace Hu Jintao as Communist Party chief in late 2012 and then replace him as state president in early 2013.
The two powers have delicate issues to work through, ranging from currency policy to differences over how to halt the nuclear programmes of Iran and North Korea, to China’s recent crackdown on critics and activists that has drawn U.S. criticism.
Beijing has voiced misgivings about Obama’s plans to beef up the U.S. military presence in the Asia-Pacific region and remains unhappy about U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, the self-ruled island that China calls an illegitimate breakaway province.
China, Iran’s biggest oil customer, also bristles at U.S. efforts to tighten sanctions on that country in order to halt Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. Beijing recently rebuffed a U.S. official’s call to cut back oil purchases from Iran.
While the United States is in an election year that has seen Republican candidates fire harsh rhetoric at China, Beijing will this year begin the power transfer that will see Xi and other officials take over as President Hu and his generation retire.
Obama, facing a tough re-election in November, is expected to renew his call for China to allow its yuan currency to appreciate during his State of the Union address on Tuesday, as he highlights U.S. exports among his proposals to boost jobs.
In an interview in Time magazine last week, Obama said U.S.-China friction arose because China “sees itself as a developing or even poor country that should be able to pursue mercantilist policies that are for their benefit and where the rules applying to them shouldn’t be the same rules that apply to the United States or Europe or other major powers.”