Showing posts with label Foreign Policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreign Policy. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

With eye on US, China to revamp top tier of diplomats-sources


BEIJING - China is expected to announce a reshuffle of its top diplomats at an annual meeting of parliament in March, aiming to deal with US President Donald Trump's growing suspicion of Beijing, several sources familiar with the plan said.

The sources, including foreign diplomats, told Reuters that Wang Qishan, a close ally of President Xi Jinping, will likely become vice president with a portfolio specifically focused on handling ties with Washington. He would report directly to Xi.

Current Foreign Minister Wang Yi will probably become a state councilor, replacing current top diplomat and State Councillor Yang Jiechi, who has been promoted to the Communist Party's 25-member politburo, the sources said.

State councilors, who report to the Cabinet, are more senior than the ministers responsible for the same portfolio.

Wang Yi could also keep the foreign minister portfolio, the sources said.

Another possibility was that Song Tao, head of the Communist Party's international affairs department and close to Xi, could become foreign minister, the sources said. Song is a career diplomat who has worked in India and the Philippines and speaks good English, diplomats who have met him say.

Yang, who joined the politburo in October, could become a vice premier with responsibility for foreign affairs, or become a deputy head of China's parliament, which would mean he could deal directly with the US Congress, the sources said.

Effectively Wang Qishan will be China's senior-most diplomat, then Yang and then Wang Yi.

"There will be three top diplomats," one of the sources told Reuters, referring to the three officials. "The United States will be a focus."

The sources cautioned that last minute changes are still possible and the positions won't become finalized until parliament nears the end of its annual session around mid-March.

All the sources spoke on condition of anonymity, either because they were not authorised to speak to foreign reporters or because of the sensitivity of discussing personnel appointments, considered secret until they are announced.

Neither the Communist Party's Organisation Department, which oversees personnel decisions, nor the State Council Information Office, which doubles as the party spokesman's office, responded to questions about the new diplomatic appointments.

TENSIONS WITH TRUMP

Despite a largely controversy-free visit by Trump to China in November, tensions, especially over trade, have worsened.

Trump has long sought a way to a more balanced trade relationship with China and threatened to impose a big "fine" against Beijing to protect American intellectual property. Trump has also been discussing imposing a tariff on imports of steel from China and other countries.

The role of Wang Qishan, who is not related to Foreign Minister Wang Yi, has been subject to intense speculation since he stepped down from the party's Standing Committee, the apex of power in China, in October.

Close to Xi and the man in charge of Xi's sweeping anti-corruption crackdown over the past five years, Wang Qishan, at 69, had reached the age at which top leaders technically have to step down.

As he's such an experienced politician, Xi is going to keep him on though, the sources said.

Known as "the firefighter" for his central role in tackling issues like corruption and domestic financial problems over the years, Wang also has experience dealing with the United States in his former role as a vice premier who led annual economic talks with Washington.

"Wang Qishan is a heavyweight. And the Americans respect him," a source with ties to the leadership told Reuters. "Hopefully he will be able to temper American hostility."

Diplomatic and US business sources say the United States has all but frozen a formal mechanism for talks on commercial disputes, because it is not satisfied with Beijing's efforts at opening its economy.

Any effort by China to elevate formal exchanges on trade issues, for example from a cabinet to vice presidential level, would require the White House's consent too.

State Councillor Yang is not seen to have achieved any breakthroughs in his unofficial role as China's special envoy to the Trump administration, despite speaking fluent English and being a former Chinese ambassador in Washington.

This is partly the reason Liu He, a top economic adviser of Xi's, is visiting Washington this week, said a senior Asian diplomat, citing conversations with Chinese officials.

"Yang will remain a senior diplomat but maybe with less of a United States role," said the diplomat.

DOUBLE ROLE

Wang Yi has been increasingly outspoken in his defence of Beijing's interests in recent years and is unusually media friendly for a Chinese official. The possibility he could take up two positions concurrently is unusual but not without precedent.

Defence Minister Chang Wanquan, for example, is also a state councilor.

There are currently 4 state councilors - 1 was sacked on Saturday for corruption - who have specific areas of responsibility, such as defense or foreign policy.

As a state councillor, Wang would also have responsibility for another tricky issue - self-ruled Taiwan, claimed by China as its own and which Beijing fears is on the road to formal independence.

Wang however has less experience dealing with the United States, and is a Japanese speaker rather than an expert in English.

"Promoting Wang would be a reward for him," said a Western diplomat, referring to Wang's spirited public defense of Chinese positions, ranging from the disputed South China Sea to rejecting accusations of Chinese spying on the African Union. 

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Friday, April 1, 2016

Obama says Trump doesn't know much about foreign policy


WASHINGTON, United States - President Barack Obama scathingly dismissed White House hopeful Donald Trump's foreign policy proposals on Friday and warned that the world was watching the upcoming US election.

At the end of a summit on nuclear security that Obama hosted in Washington, he was asked about Trump's suggestion that Japan and South Korea develop their own nuclear weapons.

"The statements you mentioned, what do they tell us?" Obama demanded, rhetorically.

"They tell us the person who made the statements doesn't know much about foreign policy or nuclear policy or the Korean peninsula or the world generally."

Trump, the Republican frontrunner, says he wants US allies to pay for more of their own defense and allow costly American forces to disengage from their regions.

Obama damned this as naive and an abdication of American leadership that would upset close allies and make the world a more dangerous place.

"I've said before that, you know, people pay attention to American elections. What we do is really important to the rest of the world," he said.

"Our alliance with Japan and the Republic of Korea is one of the foundations, one of the cornerstones of our presence in the Asia-Pacific region," he said.

"It has underwritten the peace and prosperity of that region. It has been an enormous boon to American commerce and American influence," he said.

The US alliance has brought peace to countries that had fought fierce wars in the past.

"So you don't mess with that. It's an investment that rests on the sacrifices that our men and women made back in World War II when they were fighting throughout the Pacific.

"And we don't want somebody in the Oval Office who doesn't recognize how important that is."

Obama added that concern about Trump's comments had come up on the sidelines of his summit meetings with world leaders.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com