Trump taunts North Korea as China urges calm
A summary of the top news in Chinese politics and current affairs for August 9, 2017. Part of the daily The China Project newsletter, a convenient package of Chinaโs business, political, and cultural news delivered to your inbox for free. Subscribe here.
What happened, per the New York Timesย (links paywalled):
- For once, it was not a tweet, but a regular old off-the-cuff remark to the press from President Trump that started an international outcry. Trump said, โNorth Korea best not make any more threats to the United States,โ before warning, โThey will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen.โ
- The remark was improvised, apparently in reaction to a Washington Postย storyย on how the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency assesses North Korea as having achieved a miniaturized nuclear warhead that can fit on the long-range missiles it is testing. Officials immediately went to work to downplayย the heated rhetoric, though within hours, North Korea retaliated with a threatย to โobliterate an American air base on Guam.โ
- The spectacle raised alarm throughout East Asia, as security analysts from China, Japan, and South Korea all expressed deep concernย about what the war of words meant for the preparation and execution of American strategy in the region.
Chinaโs response, given directlyย to Reuters:
- โChina calls on all parties to avoid any words or actions that might escalate the situationย and make even greater efforts to resolve the issue via talks.โ
Analysis on the situation:
- Max Fisher at the New York Times points out five reasons not to panicย (paywall), including that โcurrent American action, or lack thereof, sends a message of calm and caution, rather than โfire and fury.โโ
- On Twitter, investment strategist and old China hand Patrick Chovanec gives an intelligent takeย on how the U.S. might convince Chinaย to work even closer with America on containing North Korea: He points out the U.S. first needs to convince China that โa) the alternatives are worse, and b) the U.S. appreciates Chinaโs security concernsโฆ[but] U.S. chest-pounding (like yesterday) might convince the Chinese of the former, but it undermines the latter.โ
- Jeffrey A. Bader at the Brookings Institute arguesย that โdeterring and containing North Korea is our least bad option.โ He lists seven strategies โthat wonโt workโ โ Trump has leaned most heavily on these two: โA U.S. preemptive strikeโ and โTreating North Korea as a problem for China to solve.โ
- Environment
UN environment chief urges China to do more on climateย / SCMP
Inspectors expose pollution problems in North Chinaย / China Daily
โChina’s environmental inspectors have found that more than half of the nearly 40,000 enterprises checked have violated environmental rules.โ - South China Sea
Vietnam wins U.S. defense pledges as tension with China growsย / Reuters
China leaning on Singapore to keep ASEAN calm over South China Sea: sourcesย / Reuters - India, Bhutan, Nepal
Diplomacy fails to defuse India, China border crisis: sourcesย / Reuters
Talks are only way for India, China to end standoff, Dalai Lama saysย / Reuters
Nepal torn both ways as stand-off between India and China continuesย / SCMP - Taiwan
Taiwan president urges Beijing to work with her to break deadlockย / SCMP - Guo Wengui
Voice of America distances itself from Guo Wengui claimsย / SCMP - Military
Chinaโs first home-grown aircraft carrier could join the navy ahead of scheduleย / SCMP
Advanced tech outfits give Chinese military the cutting edgeย / FT (paywall)