Biden’s China thaw goes deeper than rhetoric
In recent months, the Biden administration has indicated a thaw in US-China relations. The easing of tensions is, according to the White House and the State Department, simply responsible statesmanship: high-level channels of communication must be maintained to avoid disaster, the temperature should be lowered to avoid an ill-considered confrontation; better jaw-jaw than war-war. As part of this softening, Antony Blinken is set to visit China later this month. That trip was supposed to take place in February, but was cancelled at the last minute after a Chinese spy balloon drifted across the continental United States. (Blinken has reportedly told Chinese officials he wants to “move past” the incursion.) CIA chief William Burns was in Beijing in May.