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China -- again the villain in US election
by Staff Writers
Akron, Ohio (AFP) July 5, 2012

Ashton to attend EU-China Dialogue in Beijing
Beijing (AFP) July 7, 2012 - European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton will visit Beijing on Monday and Tuesday for talks aimed at boosting coordination on foreign affairs and security, a European diplomatic source said.

The third round of the high level EU-China Strategic Dialogue will see Ashton meet Premier Wen Jiabao, as well as State Councillor Dai Bingguo, who is in charge of foreign policy, and Defence Minister Liang Guanglie.

The first Strategic Dialogue was attended by Ashton and Dai in September 2010 in the southwestern Chinese province of Guizhou. The second meeting was held in Hungary in May 2011.

At the last EU-China summit, which was delayed from October 2011 to February this year because of the European sovereign debt crisis, China renewed its support for the euro.

The third Strategic Dialogue will help prepare the ground for the next EU-China summit in Brussels in the autumn.

The EU is the largest market for Chinese exporters, who are suffering the effects of the European economic crisis.

After Beijing, Ashton will visit Hong Kong on Wednesday before travelling to Cambodia for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) regional forum.


Barack Obama on Thursday played the anti-China card beloved of US presidential candidates, covering his flank against the more direct Beijing bashing of his Republican foe Mitt Romney.

Obama announced in Ohio, a swing state and an engine of the American auto industry, that his government had filed a World Trade Organization complaint against tariffs on $3 billion of US autos entering China.

"Just this morning, my administration took a new action to hold China accountable for unfair trade practices that harm American automakers," the president said near Toledo, home to General Motors and Daimler Chrysler plants.

Officials denied he was playing politics -- but criticizing the Asian giant is an easy applause line as voters chafe at the flight of US jobs abroad.

However, Obama's move was fairly tame, especially compared to the rhetoric of Romney who brands the president a "supplicant" to the communist giant.

In fact, Obama aired US grievances without hot rhetoric directed at Beijing and followed established practice for using the WTO to usher Beijing into a rule-based international system.

Obama has previously complained over China's subsidies for its auto parts sector, slapped tariffs on Chinese tire imports and lodged a case against Beijing's export restrictions on rare earth elements used in hi-tech products.

----------- Romney blasts, while Obama is constrained ---------

Hammering Obama on China makes sense for Romney, as he fans resentment over the president's management of the US economy with which Beijing is inextricably linked.

Romney is also seeking a window to skewer Obama on an area of perceived strength: foreign policy.

While Romney can vent at Beijing, Obama is constrained by his responsibility to steer perhaps the most important and complex diplomatic relationship in the world.

Still, the fanfare around his WTO move -- including a front page leak to an Ohio newspaper -- shows concern that China can make for dicey domestic politics.

China is also a campaign device for Obama, highlighting Romney's time as a venture capitalist when he reportedly helped firms "pioneer" the transfer of US jobs overseas.

"You've got to give Mitt Romney credit," Vice President Joe Biden said recently in Iowa. "He's a job creator -- in Singapore, China, India."

Romney has joined the long tradition of candidates, including Bill Clinton who lambasted the "Butchers of Beijing," who seek to exploit an incumbent president on China.

He has vowed to prevent a "Chinese century" pledged to brand Beijing a currency manipulator on Day One of his presidency and to throw obstacles in the way of China's rise to "regional hegemony."

"Candidate Obama may talk a tough game on standing up to China and fighting for American manufacturing -- but President Obama just hasn't delivered," said Romney campaign spokeswoman Andrea Saul on Thursday.

But just as there is a tradition of lashing Beijing on the stump, there is precedent for presidents to tone it down once elected.

------------ Normal service resumed after election? -----------

Top Chinese leaders, increasingly wise to the ways of US politics, are understood to have told Obama that they expect a measure of anti-Beijing rhetoric in the US election.

But Beijing seems interested in a return of managed stability after November -- evident in the negotiated exit from a crisis over blind dissident Chen Guangcheng, who took refuge in the US embassy in Beijing.

History would suggest things will smooth over next year.

For all of Clinton's raging against Beijing for instance, he was the president who steered China into the WTO, doing more than any other leader to assure its rise as an economic superpower.

In 2008, candidate Obama said president George W. Bush should boycott the Beijing Olympics.

But the next year, President Obama enjoyed a state dinner at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

Romney's rhetoric though may have made an eventual walk back more difficult.

"He is putting himself into a box," said Julian Zelizer, a professor of history at Princeton University, suggesting that Romney is playing a "dangerous game."

And Romney could be ridiculed as a flip flopper early in his presidency if he climbs down immediately, said Zelizer.

China bashing may also have greater consequences than in the past when China was merely a prospective power.

Beijing now has the capacity, and often the inclination to thwart US foreign policy -- a capability exemplified by the current diplomatic drive to force Syrian President Bashar al-Assad from power.

So Romney, who could take power in January needing China's help on issues including North Korea and Iran, may pay a price down the road.

And should Obama win in November, plain sailing for US-China ties is hardly a given.

At the APEC summit in Hawaii in November, Obama vented frustration at China's yuan policy, telling President Hu Jintao that Americans were "impatient."

And despite Obama's assurance that he does not want to "contain" China, his decision last year to deploy US Marines to Australia caused Beijing to bristle.

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Leader-in-waiting says no need to fear China
Beijing (AFP) July 7, 2012 - China's leader-in-waiting Xi Jinping insisted Saturday that Beijing would never impose its will on the rest of the world and instead wanted to "abandon the old mindset" and strive for global peace.

Speaking at a forum in Beijing, Vice President Xi sought to reassure other countries that the rise of China, which in 2010 became the world's second largest economy, was not something to be feared.

"Even when China becomes developed in the future, it will never seek hegemony," Xi told the World Peace Forum. "China is always committed to economic development, world peace and common development of mankind."

"We must abandon the old mindset and approach that has been rendered obsolete, we must keep pace with the times, forge ahead with innovation and foster a new security concept," he added.

China has been pushing for emerging powers to take a bigger role in international institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund where Beijing is playing a leading part, and Xi said this trend would continue.

"China will actively participate in the reform of the international system for governance with a view to move toward a more just and equitable international political and economic order."

Besides its growing economic power, China's increasing military might has also irked other countries, especially its regional neighbours and the United States, which has realigned its forces to address Beijing's buildup.

Xi is widely expected to be named head of the ruling Communist Party later this year and become president next March in the country's once-in-a-decade leadership transition, replacing Hu Jintao.



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China leader urges resistance against Western forces
Beijing (AFP) July 4, 2012
China's top security official has urged the ruling Communist Party to resist Western "attacks" on the country's political and legal systems, in comments timed ahead of a 10-yearly leadership change. Zhou Yongkang, one of China's top nine rulers and reputedly one of the most hardline, said the Communist Party must repel the "mistaken views" of Western political theorists. "We will never c ... read more


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