Why the US-China relationship is more stable than you might think | Ian Bremmer | Quick Take

Описание к видео Why the US-China relationship is more stable than you might think | Ian Bremmer | Quick Take

US Secretary of State Tony Blinken just came from China, Beijing, and Shanghai, and the US-China relationship continues to be better managed and more stable than we've seen in a long time. Not clear that would necessarily be the case, given the number of issues and places where we have friction between these two countries.

Check the comments for more about Ian's insights, and let us know what you think!

Subscribe to GZERO on YouTube and turn on notifications (🔔):    / @gzeromedia  
Sign up for GZERO Daily (free newsletter on global politics): https://rebrand.ly/gzeronewsletter

Ian Bremmer's Quick Take: Hi everybody. Ian Bremmer here and a Quick Take to kick off your week. US Secretary of State Tony Blinken in the Middle East right now. But he just came from China, Beijing and Shanghai, and the US-China relationship is what I'm thinking about. Want to give you a state of play.

It continues to be better managed and more stable than we've seen in a long time. Now, not clear that would necessarily be the case, given the number of issues and places where we have friction between these two countries. Just over the course of the last couple weeks, you've got President Biden, putting new tariffs on Chinese steel, opening a new investigation into Chinese shipbuilding. You've got this anti TikTok policy that's coming down from US Congress. You've got $2 billion in additional military aid for Taiwan from the United States. You've also got lots of criticism from the Americans on ongoing Chinese support, dual use technologies for the Russians, allowing them to better fight the war in Ukraine.

Given all of that, is the relationship starting to become much more confrontational? And the answer is not really. It's true that the Chinese foreign minister said that the Americans need to choose between having a relationship of containment and a relationship of partnership, and it's certainly true that the Americans would rather have it both ways. They want to have partnership in areas where it suits the Americans, and containment in areas where it suits the Americans. The Americans getting away with more than that than other countries can because the US is the most powerful country in the world and ultimately the Chinese need Americans more than Americans need China. Still, there's a lot of interdependence, and there is an ability to push back. How much is China actually doing that? And the answer is there's been very little direct Chinese tit for tat, despite all of the policies I just mentioned. It is true that overnight, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said that there would be resolute and forceful measures if the supplemental support for Taiwan, which is a red line for the Chinese, is signed and Taiwanese assistance from the US moves ahead, and I suspect that means we're going to see some more sanctions from China against US defense contractors.

That is largely symbolic. It is a tit for tat. But on all the other policies I've mentioned that the Americans have just brought against China, we've seen Chinese focus on making their country and their economy more resilient against American efforts to contain, but not hitting the Americans back, not calibrated, moves of sanctions or reciprocal investigations. In fact, the Chinese have been pretty stable.

Read more: https://www.gzeromedia.com/quick-take...

Want to know more about global news and why it matters? Follow us on:
Instagram:   / gzeromedia  
Twitter:   / gzeromedia  
TikTok:   / gzeromedia  
Facebook:   / gzeromedia  
LinkedIn:   / gzeromedia  
Threads: https://threads.net/@gzeromedia

Subscribe to our YouTube channel and turn on notifications (🔔):    / @gzeromedia  
Sign up for GZERO Daily (free newsletter on global politics): https://rebrand.ly/gzeronewsletter
Subscribe to the GZERO podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...

GZERO Media is a multimedia publisher providing news, insights and commentary on the events shaping our world. Our properties include GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, our newsletter GZERO Daily, Puppet Regime, the GZERO World Podcast, In 60 Seconds and GZEROMedia.com

#QuickTake #US #China

Комментарии

Информация по комментариям в разработке