China’s state-controlled media are on the offensive after top Biden administration officials and their Chinese counterparts clashed during their first in-person talks in Alaska.
The two-day meeting, covering an array of issues that have strained relations between the two countries, got off to a rocky start on March 18, with Chinese officials reacting angrily to criticisms of the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) human rights abuses and economic coercion.
Lashing out over what they described as “unwarranted criticisms,” the Chinese diplomats aired bitter denunciations that veered off the usual diplomatic proceedings, extending the allotted two-minute opening remark for each speaker to a diatribe of roughly 20 minutes. With the translation, what was initially intended to be an eight-minute photo-op went on for more than an hour.
“The United States does not have the qualification to say that it wants to speak to China from a position of strength,” senior Chinese foreign policy official Yang Jiechi said after U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, apparently taken aback, followed up with a brief speech reiterating the U.S. position.
While President Joe Biden on March 19 expressed pride in his team for how they handled the matter, mainland-controlled media have uniformly cheered on their officials’ confrontational approach, while snickering at the United States.
Zhao Lijian, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson, insisted at a March 19 press conference that the U.S. side “failed to keep to the set time limit and provoked disagreements first,” thus bringing a strong “smell of gunpowder and drama” to the meeting—a narrative that other Chinese media soon amplified.
Posturing in Battle
U.S. State Department deputy spokesperson Jalina Porter told reporters on March 19 that the Biden administration is aware that Beijing’s “exaggerated diplomatic presentations in front of the media are aimed at a domestic audience.” She said the department will continue to “lay out our common interests and principles from the United States.”Some critics, however, believe that the heated comments should wake Americans up to the fundamental differences between the two political powers.
The public blowup in Alaska is a “serious provocation,” signaling that “in the future, the CCP will no longer abide by the rules set by the United States,” said Wang He, a Chinese political affairs commentator.
“[The] CCP is more cunning and evil than most people can imagine. This round of talks was the CCP’s way of testing the waters, and now, it has a clear picture of the United States’ intentions,” Wang said.
“The United States had plotted a ‘Hongmen Banquet’”—referring to a historical event where a Chinese warlord invited his rival to a feast with the purpose of killing him—but instead “messed up and led to its own ‘Waterloo,’” the article stated.
“This first-round battle made a good play and is the prelude to a new stage of China-U.S. relationship,” it said.
Hu Xijin, chief editor of the nationalist state-run tabloid Global Times, said the fallout should teach the United States and its allies to be more respectful toward the regime.
Gordon Chang, a U.S.-based China expert and the author of “The Coming Collapse of China,” challenged the approach of U.S. lawmakers who have so far remained supportive of maintaining good relations with Beijing.
“There is, after the Alaska Meeting, no longer any point talking to China’s regime. Beijing told us in no uncertain terms that we must accept its barbarism, aggression, and criminality. What more do we need to hear?”