“North Korea Factor”in the U.S.-China Trade Negotiation
LEE Seong-hyon (Director, Center for Chinese Studies) sunnybbsfs@gmail.com
In the wake of Kim Jong-un’s fourth visit to China, a debate has been underway among experts whether China used the "North Korea card" against Washington in their trade negotiation, capitalizing on Kim Jong-un’s visit. The two international headline-grabbing events happened the same week in Beijing.
Both Beijing and Washington flatly
deny the linkage. Yet analysts are divided. It warrants a discussion, as it
would offer an insight into how the two superpowers strategize the North Korean
issue in their dealings with each other.
Trump has already openly complained,
at least three times, that "China was behind" North Korea's defiant
attitude that led to the negotiations being stalled last year. For instance, Trump
on August 29, 2018, twitted that he "feels strongly that North Korea is
under tremendous pressure from China because of our major trade disputes with
the Chinese Government."[1]
A second summit meeting between
Trump and Kim is expected to be held soon. As such, Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s
meeting with Kim is bound to make Washington anxious.
In theory, the North Korean nuclear
issue and the U.S.-China trade war should be separate issues. But the idea that
China may use “North Korea” as leverage in the trade war keeps popping up.
When the question was raised to U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Jan. 6, Pompeo said[2]:
“The Chinese have been very clear to us that these are separate issues,”
labeling China “a good partner” in Washington’s effort to disarm Pyongyang’s
nuclear arsenal.
China also denies it is playing the
“North Korea card” in its trade war with Washington. Chinese foreign ministry
spokesmen Lu Kang on Jan. 8 brushed aside the view. He said, “China doesn’t
need any ‘ji qiao (maneuvers)’ to send a signal to the United States.”[3]
Some analysts in Washington also
agree. They also think that the trade war in itself is so complex and intricate
that there is no room for the North Korean nuclear issue to get involved. They
also contend that the U.S. government also treats them as separate matters.
But others think that it makes sense
for China to use “Kim’s visit” to leverage against Washington. China is seen as
the country that wields the largest influence over Pyongyang. Over 90% of North
Korea’s economy depends on China. With Kim’s four visits in less than one year,
China seems confident in its thinking that Washington alone cannot solve the
North Korean issue; it needs China’s help.
Aware of the debate, China’s Global
Times also chipped in to knock down the allegation that China might be using the
North Korea card. In an editorial, it said[4]:
"Hardly any serious Chinese strategist would consider this method,” as if
it would be beneath the dignity of a rising superpower to mix the two; one is a
trade issue, the other is a security issue. One is an apple, the other an
orange. In a gentlemen’s world, one is not supposed to mix the two.
However, when the THAAD dispute
erupted between China and South Korea, there was also a strong expectation in
South Korea that China would not launch an economic retaliation because they
are “separate” issues. Even then a South Korean cabinet minister, who was in
charge of nation’s economy, famously advocated this view, rationalizing that China’s
economic retaliation would also hurt the Chinese economy, given the interdependence
of the two nations’ economies.
Yet, against such a wishful thinking,
China took economic revenge against South Korea to send a political signal –
not just to Seoul but also to other neighboring countries: when you side with
Washington in U.S.-China disputes, you will pay the price.
Trump is also well-known for mixing
apples and oranges. He publicly said China's stance on North Korea influences
his trade policy.[5]
Specially, he suggested he'd go softer on trade if China was being helpful on
North Korea. It is safe to assume that Beijing knows how to play that game too.
When the Chinese foreign ministry
spokesman Lu Kang was inundated with repeated questions from journalists
regarding Kim’s meetings and itineraries in Beijing, he assured them four times:
“I will let you know immediately.”[6]
He didn’t.
After Kim arrived in Beijing,
China's media outlets suddenly switched gears from a celebratory mode to a
low-key mode. There was no immediate TV footage about Xi’s meeting with Kim,
including the much-anticipated Kim’s “birthday cake” scene. Kim had his 35th
birthday during his visit to Beijing. This came as a great contrast to Kim’s
previous visits when the Chinese media made big headlines about Kim’s
activities in China, accentuating the “friendship” between the two
nations.
The media blackout heightened
curiosity, if not anxiety, in Washington, regarding what Xi and Kim talked
about. Interestingly, it occasioned with the time when the U.S. and China announced
that they would extend their trade negotiation one more day.
China continued to keep mum about
Kim’s activities in Beijing. Only when the U.S. trade negotiators left, China
aired TV footages of Xi’s meeting with Kim.
Why would China initially trumpet
Kim's visit, but then once he was in Beijing, it kept mum, holding Washington
in an anxious guessing game?
Even if “North Korea” may have not
been part of the calculus among those U.S. trade negotiators in Beijing, the
presence of North Korean leader in the same city must have been keenly watched
by those decision-makers in Washington. It’s reasonable to think that it served
as an “unspoken” psychological factor in the trade negotiation.
It’s similar to the arrest of Huawei
CFO Meng Wanzhou, who is the daughter of the founder of Chinese telecoms giant.
The U.S. maintained that her arrest and the U.S.-China trade war were unrelated.
But it made China quite jumpy.
Taken together, it can be argued
that China’s withholding information about Kim’s visit by selective media blackout, while its trade
negotiation with the U.S. was unfolding at a critical time, was a premediated
act. It was a “measured” display of China’s influence over North Korea.
[1] Earlier in May 2018, Trump also expressed disappointment with Chinese leader Xi Jinping for his alleged interference with Trump's negotiation with Kim. He said, "I will say I’m a little disappointed, because when Kim Jong-un had the meeting with President Xi, in China, the second meeting — the first meeting we knew about — the second meeting — I think there was a little change in attitude from Kim Jong-un. So I don’t like that." The White House. "Remarks by President Trump and President Moon of the Republic of Korea Before Bilateral Meeting." May 22, 2018. https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-president-moon-republic-korea-bilateral-meeting-2/
[2] https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/08/cnbc-exclusive-cnbc-transcript-secretary-of-state-mike-pompeo-speaks-with-cnbcs-wilfred-frost-today.html
[3] 外交部. "2019年1月8日外交部发言人陆慷主持例行记者会." January 8, 2018. https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/web/fyrbt_673021/t1627853.shtml l
[4] 环球时报. "社评:金正恩访华是半岛局势新年好开头". January 8, 2019. http://opinion.huanqiu.com/editorial/2019-01/14010950.html
[5] David Brunnstrom and Susan Heavey. "Trump says China's stance on North Korea influences his trade policy." Reuters. December 29, 2017. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-missiles-china-trump/trump-says-chinas-stance-on-north-korea-influences-his-trade-policy-idUSKBN1EM1IY
[6] Ibid. 外交部.