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China warns Donald Trump ‘stay out of our backyard’ – and he’ll be fine with that

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Seeing the limits of American power exposed by Donald Trump’s war against Iran, China has issued an unusually blunt warning that it could end up in conflict with the US over Taiwan.

For a peevish and fragile US president on a visit to Beijing, this is a humiliation. That is not something Trump will feel. But it will be disastrous for the region, where China is already engaged in another land grab.

Already puffed up by hordes of flower and flag-waving children, honour guards and meetings in China’s Great Hall of the People, Trump is unlikely to be offended by the offensive because he doesn’t care about Taiwan, is irritated by past commitments to protect the island, and sees the entire region as part of China’s legitimate sphere of influence.

“You’re a great leader. Sometimes, people don’t like me saying it, but I say it anyway. There are those who say this may be the biggest summit ever,” said the US president.

Donald Trump is on a two-day state visit to China to meet with Xi Jinping
Donald Trump is on a two-day state visit to China to meet with Xi Jinping (AFP/Getty)

Later, briefings from Xi Jinping’s office said that the Chinese leader had warned his guest that Taiwan “was the most important issue they faced, and if handled poorly could push the entire US-China relationship into an extremely dangerous situation and cause the countries to collide or even enter conflict”.

The White House did not mention Taiwan in its readout of the two-hour meeting between Xi and Trump. A squabble during the “biggest summit ever” would shift the coverage of Trump away from the smiles and diminish his place in the world as a Big Man. On top of that, Trump has repeatedly said that the US is the natural leader of the western hemisphere, Russia of central Asia, and China of most of the rest.

The US and China established a truce in their recent economic conflict, when America suspended triple-digit tariffs in light of China’s threat to cut the supply of the rare earth minerals the technology sector relies upon.

Since then, the Iran war has sent oil prices soaring. This has affected both nations, but China continues to import sanctioned Russian oil and hopes to renew its use of Iranian oil at a discount.

Trump says he and Xi are ‘friends’ in a speech during the state banquet
Trump says he and Xi are ‘friends’ in a speech during the state banquet (Reuters)

Trump is facing midterm elections for his Republican Party, is plunging in the polls, and still has not figured out how to get out of the Iran conflict, having achieved none of his aims for the war.

The US has maintained a policy of “strategic ambiguity” towards Taiwan since it separated from the mainland when the communists took over mainland China in 1949.

Washington maintains its influence as the biggest arms supplier for Taiwan, and supports the island’s right to self-defence while also “recognising” the Communist Party of China’s “One China” policy, which demands the reunification of the two entities.

This leaves Trump room to manoeuvre, or to wriggle out of longstanding systems of support for Taiwan.

Implicit in the “stay out of our backyard” message from Xi is a wider demand. China’s backyard includes the South China Sea, where China is rapidly and aggressively changing the geography in its favour.

The US president arrived in Beijing with Iran looming large
The US president arrived in Beijing with Iran looming large (AFP/Getty)

To the horror of the Indonesians, as well as Australia, Japan, and the 11 countries that comprise the Asean block, China has been building manmade islands in the sea to extend its territorial waters and dominate a chokepoint that controls about a third of all global trade.

Warships from around the world patrol the sea and “buzz” China’s artificial islands, in a demonstration of the international right of passage and to undermine China’s territorial claims to more and more water around the tiny military atolls it has built between its south coast and Indonesia.

China insists it has sovereignty over all, or most, of the region. It further demands that the Asean countries, which trade most heavily through the South China Sea, agree to “resist disruptions”, which is code for other nations like the US participating in arguments over the international laws that govern the seas.

China also wants Asean to sign a code of conduct that is not binding on China but ends military cooperation between its members and outside powers.

Last week, the Philippines agreed to set up the Asean Maritime Centre in its Cebu province to monitor the South China Sea.

In warning the US to stay out of Taiwan, which is not yet under assault, China is also telling a diminished Donald Trump to look away from its other ongoing land grab – of the sea.



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