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Joe Biden

Joe Biden
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USA: Biden blocks future oil production

Shortly before the end of his term in office, outgoing POTUS Joe Biden pushed through far-reaching protection of US waters from oil and gas extraction. Trump's transition team describes this as "disgraceful".

By Redaktion Table

Feature

Chevron Doctrine: Supreme Court's decision crucial for climate

By June, the US Supreme Court will decide on the Chevron Doctrine. If the justices overturn this decision, numerous disputes will no longer be resolved by Congress, potentially complicating future climate and environmental regulations.

By Andreas Seidl

Biden Xi
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Xi and Biden discuss red line on Taiwan issue

For over a year, there was silence between the presidents of the two most powerful countries in the world. Last November, Joe Biden and Xi Jinping met and agreed to speak regularly on the phone. They are now honoring that agreement.

By Felix Lee

Joe Biden und Xi Jinping
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Xi has told Biden about the annexation of Taiwan

At the latest US-China summit in San Francisco, Chinese President Xi reiterated to US President Biden that China is planning to annex Taiwan. He did not specify a timeframe for this.

By Redaktion Table

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Feature

Is it okay to call Xi a dictator?

Xi Jinping is outraged because Biden and Baerbock publicly call him a dictator. China has different terms and a different understanding of what defines an autocrat. And yet, the controversy is about more than words – it is about the intellectual interpretation of political narratives and who can disseminate them internally and externally.

By Fabian Peltsch

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (L), British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak (C), and U.S. President Joe Biden (R), at
Feature

NATO summit: Zelenskiy is almost satisfied

Would a concrete roadmap for Ukraine's NATO membership deter Russia or drive it to escalation? When it came to the answer, the more reticent members of the alliance prevailed in Vilnius and offered Kyiv a perspective without a date. Volodymyr Zelenskiy nevertheless thanks them profusely – not least for large arms packages and possible security guarantees.

By Stephan Israel

Feature

'Germany is important as a leader of world opinion'

Top US diplomat James Cunningham has always been present when Asia's difficult relationship with the US and Europe has been negotiated. In our interview with Finn Mayer-Kuckuk, Felix Lee and Markus Bickel he explains the international view of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's China policy, the importance of military strength in the Pacific and his assessment of the dangers for Taiwan.Teaser

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Joe Biden's China policy is designed to slow down the People's Republic. He wants to prevent China's rise to become a world power. The Table.Media editorial team provides all the news on the topic.   

Geopolitics news: What is Joe Biden’s China policy?   

U.S. President Joe Biden continues the hard course against China. Sanctions and the search for new political allies serve to protect "core U.S. national security interests and democratic values," according to a White House statement. The statement was prompted by Biden's executive order that blacklisted 59 Chinese companies.       Joe Biden thus continues the China policy that his predecessor in office Donald Trump had initiated. Albeit somewhat more diplomatically and with fewer nationalistic undertones. The goal, according to the unanimous opinion of observers, is to prevent China's rise to become a world power and technology leader in future key technology.       

What is the U.S. blacklist?     

The U.S. blacklist goes back to former President Donald Trump. During his term in office, he had a total of forty Chinese companies put on it, which he accused of having ties to the People's Republic's military. Joe Biden added 59 more companies to this list as part of his China policy. According to the U.S., the companies are said to be those whose technologies "facilitate repression or serious human rights abuses."      Since former President Donald Trump, the blacklist has become a common tool in sanctions, economic and foreign policy. It is also an important part of Joe Biden's China policy. If a company is blacklisted, it is denied access to American technologies. If a U.S. company wants to trade them, it needs an exemption.       

Is Xiaomi on the blacklist?    

Xiaomi is not on the US blacklist. Although U.S. President Joe Biden had the smartphone provider put on it as part of his China policy, it sued in a court in Washington and was proven right. The government had to remove the Chinese company from the list. Other companies, such as telecommunications provider Huawei and oil company CNOOC, remained on the list.      Nevertheless, it is clear that Joe Biden's China policy follows the principle of decoupling. A policy that has already been initiated by former President Donald Trump. By this, the U.S. understands the "decoupling" of the American and Chinese economies. Imports and exports are to be cut back. Politics is also affected by this. Both the U.S. and the People's Republic are working hard to establish new partnerships with other countries.       

What are the consequences of decoupling?  

The consequences of decoupling are complex. On a technical level, this tactic of Joe Biden's China policy leads to the emergence of different standards. For example, in artificial intelligence, cloud computing, or 5G. Countries like Germany, which trade with both China and the U.S., have to put a lot of money into research and development to be able to serve both standards.       Originally, former President Donald Trump coined the term. But Joe Biden's China policy follows the general direction. Biden, like Trump before him, uses it to justify various sanctions against blacklisted companies. China itself opposes decoupling with the concept of dual circulation. The current five-year plan stipulates that the domestic economy is to be strengthened. This should make China less dependent on exports and imports.       

What was the origin of the tensions between the U.S. and China?    

Tensions between the USA and China began in 2018, when then-U.S. President Donald Trump ordered punitive tariffs on imports from the People's Republic. The sanctions affected $50 billion worth of goods. Just one year later, Trump had ordered punitive tariffs on goods worth $500 billion. These are virtually all imports of the United States from China.       Trump justified the sanctions against China with alleged unfair trade methods of the People's Republic. The punitive tariffs served to reduce the trade deficit. Of course, there were also geostrategic goals behind this. China's rise as a technology leader was to be slowed down or stopped altogether.    

Joe Biden's China policy: escalation of the trade dispute?   

The U.S.-China trade dispute escalated when Meng Wanzhou was arrested in Canada on Dec. 1, 2018. Huawei's chief financial officer and daughter of Ren Zhengfei, Huawei's founder, was accused of circumventing U.S. sanctions on Iran. In addition, Huawei is alleged to be using 5G technology to spy for the Chinese Communist Party.       Tensions between China and the U.S. intensified in late 2019 due to the coronavirus crisis. Both the People's Republic and the US were looking for a scapegoat for the pandemic and problems at home. For then-U.S. President Trump, China was to blame for everything. He called COVID-19 the "China virus" and spoke of an attack.      

Why do Joe Biden and Donald Trump have a tough stance against China?    

During the election campaign, both then-U.S. President Donald Trump and Joe Biden made China policy a central issue. Both attacked the Communist Party harshly for its global world power aspirations and human rights abuses. Among U.S. voters, opinions on China changed significantly during the campaign and turned negative.       

What is the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act of 21 (USICA)?    

Joe Biden's China policy gets a framework with the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act of 21 (USICA). The law sets the course toward the People's Republic. Republicans and Democrats passed the bill together in rare unity. Among other things, the law frees up larger subsidies to build technology centers and increase scholarships.      The U.S. Innovation and Competition Act of 21 (USICA) includes $250 billion. $52 billion of that is earmarked for semiconductor manufacturing. It is intended to reduce dependence on China. Both Democrats and Republicans speak of a "threat" from China in connection with the USICA. A choice of words that offends diplomats.       "We call on the U.S. Congress to look objectively and rationally at China's development and Sino-American relations, immediately stop considering the bill, and stop interfering in China's internal affairs," Wang Wenbin, spokesman for China's Foreign Ministry, assesses this part of Joe Biden's China policy.       

Reaction to Joe Biden's China policy: will there be a anti-sanctions act? 

The People's Republic has already reacted to Joe Biden's tough China policy. For example, the Communist Party passed the Anti-Sanctions Act in June 2021. Or: Anti-Foreign Sanctions Law. China's Anti-Sanctions Act is a legal framework to respond to U.S. sanctions on their part.       China's Anti-Sanctions Act specifies when and in what form Chinese authorities can intervene should sanctions be imposed against the People's Republic. All of China's other sanctions against the United States or Europe, however, remain in place. The Anti-Sanctions Act, however, allows for the punishment of individuals involved in "discriminatory measures against Chinese citizens" or "interference in China's internal affairs." They are blacklisted.      

What's in China's anti-sanctions act?    

Central to China's Anti-Sanctions Act as a replica of Joe Biden's China policy is Article Three. This states that individuals and organizations involved in "interference in China's internal affairs" can be punished. For them, the Communist Party has created a blacklist.       Article five of the Anti-Sanctions Act also states that the spouses and family members of the accused are also affected. If a person is on the blacklist, he or she can be expelled from the country. Article twelve additionally grants Chinese citizens and organizations the right to sue for damages.      

Who is on China's blacklist?  

In response to Joe Biden's China policy, the Communist Party has also already placed some individuals and organizations on its own blacklist. Among them are US politicians Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley and Tom Cotton. They are joined by European academics and non-governmental organizations such as the National Endowment for Democracy, Human Rights Watch, Freedom House and Merics.       In addition, Reinhard Bütikofer (Greens) and Michael Gahler (CDU) of the EU Commission are on the blacklist. Canadian politician Michael Chong and members of the European Parliament's Human Rights Committee are also affected.      

News on Joe Biden's China policy  

Joe Biden's China policy will shape the global politics of the USA, but also of China, for years to come. Accordingly, the Table.Media editorial team will bring you all the relevant news on this.