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For US, new challenge from China has unexpected source

China’s seemingly inexorable global economic rise is running into head winds: slowing growth, flagging consumer demand, and rising unemployment. Chinese leader Xi Jinping is facing some homegrown irritants as well, dismissing his foreign minister and replacing a top military commander.

And that’s posing a new conundrum for President Joe Biden, just as the world’s two main rival powers have appeared to be edging toward a kind of diplomatic reengagement.

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U.S.-China ties have been showing modest signs of improving. But sustaining that momentum may test both leaders’ ability to persevere in the face of challenging political and economic dynamics in Beijing.

Mr. Biden has centered his increasingly assertive posture toward China on the economy and security. He aims to ensure the United States can outpace China in cutting-edge technology, and, alongside U.S. allies, can constrain an increasingly assertive Chinese military posture.

But the deeper concern is how Mr. Xi – who has amassed greater personal authority than any Chinese leader since Mao Zedong – will respond politically to the array of homegrown difficulties he is confronting.

The worry is that Mr. Xi could be doubly keen to project China’s, and his own, strength abroad, and that he’ll view any move toward a diplomatic thaw as a sign of weakness.

Washington and its allies may have to convince Mr. Xi that renewed diplomatic engagement is, far from a reflection of weakness on either rival’s part, in the fundamental interests of both.

America is facing a new China conundrum.

And the latest challenge isn’t from an assertive show of strength by Beijing. It has come, instead, from an unexpected source, at a potentially critical moment – just as the world’s two main rival powers have appeared to be edging toward the kind of diplomatic
reengagement that U.S. President Joe Biden has been seeking, with little success, for the past few years.

It’s the growing signs in recent weeks that China’s seemingly inexorable economic rise is running into head winds: slowing growth, flagging consumer demand, debt problems in the troubled construction sector, and rising unemployment, especially among the young. And the signs, too, of some homegrown irritants for Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

U.S.-China ties have been showing modest signs of improving. But sustaining that momentum may test both leaders’ ability to persevere in the face of challenging political and economic dynamics in Beijing.

First, late last month, came the sudden dismissal of Foreign Minister Qin Gang, a Xi protégé appointed to the post only months earlier. Then, barely two weeks ago, Mr. Xi replaced the top commanders in China’s elite nuclear missile force.

On one level, none of that is necessarily bad news for Washington. Mr. Biden has centered his increasingly assertive posture toward China on those two areas: economy and security. More specifically, his policy has been aimed at ensuring the United States can outpace China in cutting-edge technology, and, alongside U.S. allies, can constrain an increasingly assertive Chinese military posture.

This week, Mr. Biden is welcoming the leaders of Japan and South Korea for summit talks at Camp David – the latest in a series of moves to strengthen economic, political, and security ties among allies on China’s Indo-Pacific doorstep.

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