A familiar face for the US as China’s Wang returns as foreign minister

Chinese President Xi Jinping at left walks near State Councillor Wang Yi at right during a welcome ceremony for the Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, unseen, held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Tuesday, July 18, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 26 July 2023
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A familiar face for the US as China’s Wang returns as foreign minister

  • Washington-based analysts say Wang’s return to the ministry should help China’s foreign ministry resume normal operations after weeks of international speculation about Qin’s fate

WASHINGTON: China’s decision to reappoint its top diplomat Wang Yi as foreign minister one month after former rising star Qin Gang disappeared from public view means Washington will be dealing with a familiar face in its bid to steady relations with its main strategic rival.
But Wang’s return to a post he held for most of the past decade is unlikely to alter the trajectory of a troubled bilateral relationship or dispel concerns about the opaque workings of President Xi Jinping’s government.
The removal of Qin, reputedly a Xi protege, on Tuesday came barely half a year after he assumed the role. The 57-year-old former ambassador to the United States and Xi aide took over the ministry in December but has not been seen in public since June 25 when he met visiting diplomats in Beijing.
The ministry has said he was off work for health reasons but has given no details.
Wang, known in Washington for his sharp intellect and his sometimes aggressive defense of China’s positions, has been a fixture in US-China relations for years.
Washington-based analysts say Wang’s return to the ministry should help China’s foreign ministry resume normal operations after weeks of international speculation about Qin’s fate.
But it is unlikely to yield any major improvement in tense US-China relations, which have hit their lowest point in decades.
“None of this changes the structural reasons for friction in the relationship,” said Joseph Torigian, an expert on China’s Communist leaders at American University in Washington.
China’s embassy in Washington did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.
At a briefing on Tuesday US State Department deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said it was up to China to choose its foreign minister and Blinken had met Wang multiple times.

A DIPLOMAT WITH SWAY
Wang’s second stint as foreign minister suggests an eagerness in Beijing for stable US relations ahead of Xi’s likely meetings with US President Joe Biden later this year on the sidelines of global summits, including the G20 in India in September and a gathering of APEC leaders in California in November.
“With a series of major international meetings coming up, Xi defaulted to someone who has relationships with many of his foreign counterparts,” said Rorry Daniels, Managing Director of Asia Society Policy Institute. “In times of uncertainty, China wants continuity and predictability in this position.”
US and Chinese diplomats are grappling with a range of contentious issues, including China’s increasingly aggressive actions over Taiwan, the self-governed island it claims as its own, and the United States’ export controls aimed at hobbling China’s ability to developed advanced semiconductors.
Given these challenges, Wang’s seniority in China’s ruling Communist Party could be helpful to the US
In the Chinese system, the top diplomat is not foreign minister but rather the director of the Chinese Communist Party’s foreign affairs commission, a role Wang will continue to hold.
Jude Blanchette, a China expert at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Wang’s concurrent perch atop the country’s two top foreign policy positions removed a layer of bureaucracy for US interlocutors.
And as a member of the Communist Party’s 24-man ruling Politburo, Wang is a diplomat with arguably more sway with China’s top leaders than his predecessor.
Even while Qin was foreign minister, Blinken had contacts with Wang, though exchanges had been frosty at times, particularly after an alleged Chinese spy balloon crossed US airspace and was shot down earlier this year, prompting Wang to scold Washington for its “hysterical” reaction.
Still, Wang’s reappointment is a sign of problems in China’s foreign policy establishment, said Blanchette.
“The bigger story here is the sheer unpredictability and opacity of the Chinese system, which can see a top foreign policy official be thrown into a black hole for a month with absolutely zero information from Beijing,” he said.
On Tuesday, content mentioning Qin was quickly removed from China’s foreign ministry website after Wang’s appointment. The tab on the website that typically holds the biography of the foreign minister simply read “Updating.”
The choice of Wang for the role also reflected a lack of good options for Beijing, said Craig Singleton, deputy director of the China program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
“Simply put, there remains a dearth of seasoned Chinese diplomats that are both trusted by Xi and possess the requisite US experience for this highly visible role,” he said.

 


Terrorism arrests in UK surged by 660% after Palestine Action ban

Updated 5 sec ago
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Terrorism arrests in UK surged by 660% after Palestine Action ban

  • Support for proscribed group was made a terror offense by govt in July
  • Extreme’ ban decision renders UK ‘an international outlier,’ says barrister

LONDON: Arrests for terrorism offenses in the UK have spiked by a massive 660 percent year-on-year due to support for Palestine Action, new government figures show.

The pro-Palestine group was listed as a terrorist organization and banned in July. Now any public demonstration of support for the group is outlawed, and hundreds of protesters — who have used the slogan “I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action” — opposing the ban have been arrested in recent months, with the act now an offense under UK anti-terrorism legislation.

Of the 1,886 arrests in the year up to September for terrorism-related activity, 1,630 — or 86 percent — were linked to support for Palestine Action, government data released on Thursday shows.

In the previous year, 248 arrests were made in relation to incidents falling under anti-terrorism laws.

Among those arrested for supporting Palestine Action, protesters were 4.4 times more likely to be female, and were remarkably older, on average, than people typically arrested for alleged terror offenses.

The average age of those arrested in relation to Palestine Action was 57, compared to 30 among those arrested for all unrelated terror offenses.

Before the banning of Palestine Action, there were 63 arrests for terror-related activity between April and June this year.

Following the ban, the number of arrests within the category surged by 2,608 percent, with 1,706 arrests recorded from July to September.

The group’s proscription has been challenged in the High Court by co-founder Huda Ammori, whose barristers have argued that the ban’s impact was “dramatic, severe, widespread and potentially lifelong.”

Then-Home Secretary Yvette Cooper’s decision to ban the group was “novel and unprecedented,” Raza Husain KC told judges, adding: “This is the first direct action civil disobedience organization that does not advocate for violence ever to be proscribed as terrorism.”

The government’s decision in July was “so extreme as to render the UK an international outlier,” he said.

Cooper’s government body, the Home Office, was advised by the Foreign Office that Palestine Action’s “activity is largely viewed by international partners as activism and not extremism or terrorism.”

Representing the government, Sir James Eadie KC argued that Parliament reserved the right to decide what constitutes terrorism.