• Keir Starmer played the China card in Rio =?UTF-8?B?4oCTIGFuZCBzZW50IGE

    From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Sat Nov 23 17:44:41 2024
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/nov/23/keir-starmer-played-china-card-in-rio-and-sent-message-to-a-hawkish-donald-trump

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    Keir Starmer played the China card in Rio – and sent a message to a
    hawkish Donald Trump
    Simon Tisdall

    The PM and other western leaders are cosying up to Beijing. If the president-elect imposes punitive tariffs on Chinese imports, he will
    give Xi the upper hand

    Both were lawyers before they became politicians, but that’s where the similarities between Keir Starmer and Richard Nixon end. The former US president resigned in disgrace at the height of the Watergate corruption scandal exactly 50 years ago. Britain’s prime minister may have been
    unwise to accept free tickets from Arsenal FC – but he’s not in Nixon’s league.

    Except, perhaps, was there just a touch of Tricky Dicky about Starmer’s meeting with China’s president, Xi Jinping, at last week’s G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro? Watergate aside, Nixon is famous for his groundbreaking
    1972 visit to Beijing, which opened the way to normalised relations
    between the US and Red China.

    Nixon’s surprise démarche had another purpose: to show the Soviet Union, America’s cold war adversary, that the US and China could act in
    alliance against Moscow, which broke with Beijing in 1961. Nixon’s move, known as “playing the China card”, had significant geopolitical consequences. Starmer, dealt a weaker hand, had no aces up his sleeve.

    All the same, the prime minister’s eagerness to reset what, under
    previous governments, became a very rocky relationship was striking.
    Starmer said he sought “consistent, durable, respectful, predictable”
    ties. “A strong relationship is important for both of our countries and
    for the broader international community,” he said.

    It was a pointed statement. Doubtless Starmer was thinking primarily
    about boosting UK trade, investment and growth. But were his words also designed, Nixon-style, to send a message to a third party – namely,
    Donald Trump?
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