Republicans demand Biden challenge China’s Xi on fentanyl, prisoners at Apec meeting

Republicans in the US Congress asked US President Joe Biden to present Chinese President Xi Jinping with a list of 10 demands to improve relations. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON - Republicans in the US Congress urged President Joe Biden to make demands of Chinese leader Xi Jinping over detained Americans and other issues when they meet next week in San Francisco, arguing that Washington’s push to engage Beijing had “negligible benefit”.

The Biden-Xi meeting around events at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum will follow a series of largely unreciprocated US Cabinet-level visits to China, as the US seeks to recover from a diplomatic crisis over its downing of a suspected Chinese spy balloon flying over the United States in February.

Republicans and Democrats in Congress have offered sometimes different approaches for countering China’s growing economic and military might, despite bipartisan consensus on the need to do so.

The 13 Republicans on the House of Representative’s bipartisan select committee on China, led by chairman Mike Gallagher, credited the Biden administration in a letter made public on Thursday for strengthened semiconductor export controls and restrictions on outbound investment towards China.

But they asked Mr Biden to present Mr Xi with a list of 10 demands to improve relations, much like Beijing did to US officials in 2021.

Their demands included that China release all Americans the US considers wrongfully detained, take measures over the flow of chemicals used in the opioid fentanyl, cease unsafe intercepts of US ships and aircraft in international waters, and stop the harassment of Philippine ships around a disputed shoal in the South China Sea.

The lawmakers said they shared Mr Biden’s desire to deter a conflict, but that his engagement push had come at an “unacceptable cost” to competitive or defensive actions that have been “delayed, scuttled, or otherwise dropped”.

"So far, these very real trade-offs have led to negligible benefit," they said.

Meanwhile, the letter said Beijing had taken no steps to stop military provocations in the South China Sea or towards the democratically governed island of Taiwan, which China claims as its own.

The US also had taken few recent actions towards China specifically regarding human rights issues, the lawmakers wrote, adding that for nearly two years the US had not imposed sanctions on Chinese officials over the erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy or for allegations of rights abuses in China’s Xinjiang region, and had not expanded trade restrictions under the Treasury Department’s Chinese Military-Industrial Complex Companies List.

“It is clear that competitive actions have been sacrificed to advance aimless, zombie-like engagement,” they said.

The White House did not respond immediately to a request for comment on the letter.

China denies allegations by Western governments that it abuses human rights.

Families of Americans the US government has classified as wrongfully detained in China, including Texas-based businessman Mark Swidan, Chinese-American Kai Li and pastor David Lin, have repeatedly urged the government to prioritise the release of their loved ones in talks with Chinese officials.

China says such cases are handled according to the law. REUTERS

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