In the wake of the increasingly tense US-China economic dispute that has
spilled over into diplomatic and security dimensions, Europe silently
becomes the key player in the stalemate. Speaking of the online EU-China
summit, some observers even considered the possibility that China might
"play Nixon" to draw Brussels into favor Beijing in the US-China - a
Cold War-like analogy. This refers to the period when trans-Atlantic
relations witnessed a split on several issues. Actually, such point of
view has far overestimated the divergence of the trans-Atlantic alliance
and the EU-China relationship.
From many points of view, the
"Nixon moment" is ill in analogy. Before President Richard Nixon's
historic trip to China in 1972, the China-Soviet Union relations had
been bleak for about a decade. The two countries experienced
long-lasting ideological wrangles, economic isolation and deadly armed
conflict. Meanwhile, the US was at relatively low ebb in the
comprehensive competition with the Soviet Union. However, these factors
are not true in the case of the relations among the Washington, Beijing
and Brussels, whose economies are highly entangled. In addition, China
is neither willing nor capable to move Brussels to depart Washington and
sit on Beijing's side.
In terms of the trans-Atlantic relations,
although there are tiny quarrels, the foundation in every aspect is
solid: security, economy and the global order. The disagreements from
the European side are mostly targeted at US President Donald Trump's
policies, not the US as a whole. In addition, to dislike Trump does not
necessarily mean the EU stands against every Trumpist policy. The EU
rationally is pleased to see China making compromises in trade and
domestic regulatory rules under the Washington's pressure. Therefore,
the EU is too feeble to impose its will. In addition, the US is critical
for European security, considering the recent unease in Belarus and the
Novichok scandal. The above points even do not include the long-term
importance of trading with the US for the EU, making more than 152
billion euros ($180 billion) surplus in trade for the EU in 2019.
Read more at:
Anxiety over China-EU ties illustrates US hurting trans-Atlantic relations - Global Times
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