New Delhi: Acrimony is no stranger to diplomacy, but the first round of the US-China dialogue in Anchorage, Alaska, was redolent largely of that.
US Secretary of State Blinken in his opening remarks, underscored Washingtonโs โdeep concernsโ with Chinaโs actions in Xinjiang, Hong Kong, Taiwan which threatened โglobal stabilityโ. He warned that the alternative to the rules based international order would be one where โmight makes right and winner takes all, and that would be a far more violent and unstable world for all of us.โ
US National Security Adviser Sullivan rubbed salt into Chinese wounds lauding the โcan do spiritโ of the worldโs democracies and the virtues of a โfree and open Indo-Pacificโ. He said partnerships like the Quad โcan deliver progress and prosperity for our peopleโs, knowing full well Beijingโs antipathy for the grouping.
Yang Jiechi, Chinaโs topmost foreign policy official, gave as good as he got, underlining that Xinjiang, Tibet and Taiwan are an โinalienable part of Chinaโs territory,โ and called on the US to โchange its own image and to stop advancing its own democracy in the rest of the world.โ
He pointed to the โwars in this world launched by some countries which have resulted in massive casualtiesโ. He rejected US-style democracy, insisting that Chinese style democracy โare the same as the common values of humanity.โ
Then it was Foreign Minister Wang Yiโs turn, also speaking in Mandarin, who urged the US to โfully abandon the hegemonic practice of wilfully interfering in Chinaโs internal affairsโ and expressed his outrage over US sanctions over Hong Kong.
Since both Chinese leaders spoke in Mandarin, their remarks went on longer as translation into English took time.
At one point Wang Yi appeared to lose his composure, demanding to know from the US if this โIs the way that you had hoped to conduct this dialogue?โ
There was even disagreement on when the media should leave the briefing โ which did suggest that the offensive approach taken by the previous Trump administration vis a vis China is likely to continue with the Biden administration. Blinkenโs earlier statement given in a speech where he called the US-China relationship as the biggest โgeo-political test of the centuryโ had earlier left some wondering whether there was room for conciliation.
The US sanctioning of 24 Chinese officials on the eve of the talks follows the playbook of the Trump administration which had imposed visa and asset sanctions on Chinese politburo members for their โviolation of human rights in Xinjiang.โ
Chinaโs state-run Global Times newspaper faulted the US, saying imposition of the sanctions just ahead of the meeting was like โa host spitting on the table when inviting a guest for dinner.โ The article also quoted the Chinese Foreign Ministry as stating that Beijing would take counter-measures.
The dialogue will continue for another day where the two sides may make an effort to come to some sort of an understanding.