News roundup: The phone call: Trump acquiesces on One China Policy

Top China news for February 10, 2017. Get this daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up atย supchina.com/subscribe.

President Donald Trump speaks on the phone with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Saturday, Jan. 28, 2017, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Trump reassures Xi U.S. will honor One China Policy

On Wednesday a letter, on Thursday a phone call: American President Donald Trump has ended the freeze in top level contacts between the U.S. and China that began when then-president-elect Trump accepted a phone callย from Taiwanese president Tsai Ing-wen in early December. The White House saysย Trump and President Xi Jinping โ€œhad a lengthy telephone conversation,โ€ in which Trump agreed, โ€œat the request of President Xi, to honor our โ€˜one Chinaโ€™ policy.โ€ The two leaders also โ€œextended invitations to meet in their respective countries,โ€ and made pleasant-sounding noises about โ€œsuccessful outcomesโ€ and โ€œmutual interest.โ€ The Xinhua News Agencyย reportย on the call is similar to the White House statement, if a little longer; the Chinese version of the report was the top headline on the websites of both Xinhuaย and the Peopleโ€™s Daily.

The New York Timesย points outย (paywall)ย that earlier on Thursday, Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson met with officials at the White House to discuss a statement about relations with China. In January, after his Senate confirmation hearing, Tillerson had affirmed his support for the One China Policy in written testimonyย (see on page 47).

Given Trumpโ€™s long record of bellicose rhetoric on China, and history of threatsย to use Taiwan and the One China Policy as a bargaining chip, the phone call was a remarkable flip-flop. There is a sense that the phone call was a victory for Xi: The New York Timesย headlined one storyย (paywall) on the call, โ€œTrump, changing course on Taiwan, gives China an upper hand,โ€ while The Wall Street Journalย titled a storyย (paywall), โ€œBeijingโ€™s patience pays off with Trumpโ€™s reaffirmation of โ€˜One-Chinaโ€™ policy.โ€

ChinaFileย has published roundup of opinionsย on the question, โ€œDid Xi just outmaneuver Trump?โ€ One respondent, the noted scholar of Chinese politics and U.S.-China relations Susan Shirk, contends that the call โ€œput the U.S. in the humiliating position of appearing to succumb to Chinese demands instead of doing the right thing from the beginning.โ€ She concludes that the result is that โ€œXi looks like a hero to the Chinese public, and Americaโ€™s stature is seriously diminished.โ€


Mari-Cha Lion exhibition

Sponsored by Asia Society in Hong Kong

Asia Society, our featured partner this week, has a fascinating cross-cultural art exhibition in Hong Kong running until February 19. The centerpiece is the Mari-Cha Lion, a rare mid-11th- to mid-12th-century South Italian bronze sculpture bearing Arabic decorations, on show together with a selection of Asian objects from the Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection and other private collections, as well as contemporary artworks by seven Asian artists. Click hereย for details.


Worries of a trade war persist

The Trump-Xi phone call has not completely reassured the markets. Bloomberg quotesย an analyst who tempers his optimism on Chinese exports because of the โ€œpotential risk of a Sino-U.S. trade war,โ€ while MarketWatch reportsย that โ€œeconomists at Goldman Sachs this week predicted that a U.S.-China standoff is a near certainty.โ€

LAST NOTICE: Live Sinicaย tapings in Beijing

If youโ€™re in Beijing on February 11 or 14, please come to a live taping of the Sinica Podcastย โ€” see details here.

Happy Lantern Festival

Lantern Festivalย (ๅ…ƒๅฎต่Š‚ yuรกnxiฤo jiรฉ), the last day of the Chinese New year celebrations, falls on February 11 this year. All of us at The China Projectย wish you a year of prosperity and happiness. ย 

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor in Chief


This issue of the The China Projectย newsletter was produced by Sky Canaves, Lucas Niewenhuis, and Jiayun Feng. More China stories worth your time are curated below, with the most important ones at the top of each section.


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

  • Bitcoin trading shrivels under Chinese governmentโ€™s glareย / Reuters
    As a result of Chinaโ€™s determination to regulate the Bitcoin exchange market, the number of Bitcoins traded on BTCC, Huobi, and OKCoin โ€” the three main exchange platforms for the digital currency in China โ€” dropped significantly from 13.6 million on January 6 to around 120,000 on February 9. In January, the Peopleโ€™s Bank of China (PBoC) announced that it has started a wider and deeper scrutiny into major Bitcoin exchanges and held meetingsย with nine of them. This led to a temporary month-long suspension of Bitcoin withdrawal on major exchange platforms. China has been the worldโ€™s leading venue for Bitcoin trading and mining, with the big three taking up more than 90 percent of the global Bitcoin market as of January 11. For more on the status of Bitcoin in China, see this The China Projectย Q&A with Eric Mu, a Chinese entrepreneur who runs a Bitcoin mining facility and believes that โ€œBitcoin has outgrown the stage where a single government can profoundly affect its development.โ€
  • Chinaโ€™s stock market regulator vows to โ€˜captureโ€™ more tycoonsย / SCMP
    Liu Shiyu, chairman of China Securities Regulatory Commission, said in an annual work meeting on Friday that China wonโ€™t tolerate any โ€œcapital market crocodilesโ€ฆskinning or sucking the blood of retail investorsโ€ and vowed to bring them back to the mainland to face justice. Liuโ€™s comments highlighted a prolonged efforts by Chinese authorities to crack down on market manipulators and more tightly regulate the stock markets. Last month, Xu Xiang ๅพ็ฟ”, once considered Chinaโ€™s top hedge fund manager, was sentenced to prisonย for five and and a half years for stock manipulation and insider trading. A week later, billionaire Xiao Jianhua ่‚–ๅปบๅŽ, the chairman of Tomorrow Group, went missingย in his apartment in Hong Kong, apparently in connection with corruption investigations by mainland authorities.


POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:



SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

  • Wang Lin, disgraced Chinese ‘spiritual guru’ to the stars, dies in custodyย / The Straits Times
    Wang Lin, a self-proclaimed qigong master who was facing several criminal charges including the kidnapping and murderย of one of his former disciples, died on Friday at the age of 64 at a hospital in east China’s Jiangxi Province. The Fuzhou City Intermediate People’s Court said his death was due to multiple organ failure resulting from an autoimmune disorder. Qigong is a set of beliefs and practices based on traditional Chinese medicine, martial arts, meditation and philosophy.
    Wang came to public attention in 2003 when videos and images of him performing acts such as conjuring live snakes from thin air were widely circulated on the internet. He also claimed to have supernatural powers to cure cancer. Over the years, Wang cultivated relationships with celebrities, businessmen and top officials, including Alibabaโ€™s Jack Ma, the pop star Faye Wong (็Ž‹่ฒ Wรกng Fฤ“i), and Liu Zhijun, Chinaโ€™s ex-railway minister, who was sentenced to deathย in 2013 for bribe taking and abuse of power. An investigative articleย (in Chinese) from the Beijing Timesย in 2013 showed that most of his fortune was made from connecting wealthy businessmen to government officials through his circle of friends, rather than from his magic skills or healing powers. Internet users have been speculating on the real cause of his death, and much of the social media commentary on the news has been censored.


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