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Balloon burst hopes for US-China trust-building. What now?

A rare opportunity for the United States and China to revive critical dialogues blew up this weekend as a U.S. Air Force jet downed a suspected Chinese spy balloon off the South Carolina coast.

Regardless of the balloon’s mission, the crisis was exacerbated by a failure of real-time communication and led Washington to postpone U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Beijing this week. Compounding the issue are starkly different Chinese and American understandings of crisis management, experts say, with China withholding communication during crises as a form of bargaining and the U.S. viewing it as a way to defuse potential conflicts. 

Why We Wrote This

The crisis over China’s weather or spy balloon has derailed a critical opportunity for restoring talks and building trust between Beijing and Washington – and also reveals why they are so important.

Both countries still have strong motivations to stabilize relations, but the balloon incursion underscores a glaring lack of crisis management mechanisms, communications channels, and, ultimately, trust between China and the U.S. The result is an ever-increasing risk that mistakes or miscalculations between the superpowers will spiral into conflict.

“It is a very dangerous reality that we’re dealing with,” says Yun Sun, director of the China Program at the Stimson Center. “This is just a balloon, right? If we’re talking about, say, a skirmish or incident in the Taiwan Strait, then it’s going to be much more severe.”

A rare opportunity for the United States and China to revive critical dialogues blew up in a plume of smoke this weekend as a U.S. Air Force jet downed a suspected Chinese spy balloon off the South Carolina coast.

Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin said China’s government was using the balloon, which had traversed American territory for seven days, “to surveil strategic sites in the continental United States.” Beijing, claiming the balloon was a civilian airship used primarily for meteorological research and blown off course and into the U.S. by “accident,” protested the U.S. strike as “a clear overreaction.”

Regardless of the balloon’s mission, the crisis was exacerbated by a failure of real-time communication and led Washington to postpone the Feb. 5-6 visit to Beijing of U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who would have been the most senior American official to visit China in more than four years.

Why We Wrote This

The crisis over China’s weather or spy balloon has derailed a critical opportunity for restoring talks and building trust between Beijing and Washington – and also reveals why they are so important.

“Why didn’t they [Chinese officials] tell the Americans, ‘Sorry, our balloon drifted into your territory?’” says Yun Sun, a senior fellow and co-director of the East Asia Program and director of the China Program at the Stimson Center. “Did they underestimate the severity of the situation?”

Indeed, the balloon incursion underscores a glaring lack of crisis management mechanisms, communications channels, and, ultimately, trust between China and the U.S., experts say. The result is an ever-increasing risk that mistakes or miscalculations between the superpowers will spiral into conflict.

Alex Brandon/AP

Pentagon spokesperson Air Force Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder speaks during a media briefing at the Pentagon in Washington, Feb. 3, 2023, the day before a U.S. Air Force jet downed a suspected Chinese spy balloon.

“It is a very dangerous reality that we’re dealing with,” says Ms. Sun. “This is just a balloon, right? If we’re talking about, say, a skirmish or incident in the Taiwan Strait, then it’s going to be much more severe than this.”

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