German Foreign Minister embarks on post-Macron 'damage control' visit to China

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Even without Mr Macron’s remarks, the trip would have been delicate for Ms Baerbock, who is hawkish on China.

Even without French President Emmanuel Macron’s remarks, the trip would have been delicate for German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, who is hawkish on China.

PHOTO: AFP

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- Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock arrived in China on Thursday aiming to reassert a common European Union policy on Beijing, days after remarks by French President Emmanuel Macron suggested disarray in the continent’s approach to the rising superpower.

Mr Macron provoked a backlash in the United States and Europe when

he called on the EU to reduce its dependence on the US

and cautioned against being drawn into a crisis over Taiwan driven by an “American rhythm and a Chinese over-reaction”.

Many European politicians, diplomats and analysts saw Mr Macron’s comments in an interview with Politico and French daily Les Echos as a gift to what they called Beijing’s goal of dismantling transatlantic unity.

As a result, the stakes of the inaugural trip by Ms Baerbock have risen, with many EU members hoping that Berlin will use this opportunity to set out a clear and united EU line on China, analysts said.

Mr Macron was widely seen as taking a weak line on Taiwan by warning that Europe should not get “caught up in crises that are not ours” – although his office insisted this was not his intended meaning and

his position on Taiwan and China had not changed.

“Now it is about damage control to a large degree... But the cloud of Macron’s visit is very big and still it’s very unclear how this balance will play out in the end,” Ms Alicja Bachulska, a China-EU relations researcher at the European Council on Foreign Relations in Warsaw, told Reuters.

Even without Mr Macron’s remarks, the trip would have been delicate for Ms Baerbock, who has been more hawkish on Beijing than Chancellor Olaf Scholz and is drafting a policy aimed at reducing Germany’s economic dependence on China.

Mr Tim Ruehlig, a China expert at the German Council on Foreign Relations, told Reuters: “She was sort of perceived as being a troublemaker. I’d be surprised if this does not play a role at all in her visit.”

Ms Baerbock must now make Germany’s position on Taiwan clear during her visit, German foreign policy parliamentarian Nils Schmid told Reuters, adding that Mr Macron’s remarks had destroyed a hoped-for impetus for a common European China policy.

The German Foreign Minister is due to meet her Chinese counterpart Qin Gang and China’s top diplomat Wang Yi on the two-day trip.

Speaking ahead of her visit, Ms Baerbock said top of her agenda would be reminding China of its responsibility to influence Russia to end

its invasion of Ukraine,

and underlining a common European conviction that a unilateral change in the status quo in the Taiwan Strait would be unacceptable.

Europe’s view of China as partner, competitor and systemic rival is the compass of its policy, she added.

“It is clear to me that we have no interest in economic decoupling... but we must take a more systematic look at the risks of one-sided dependencies and reduce them,” Ms Baerbock said.

French President Emmanuel Macron provoked a backlash in the US and Europe when he called on the EU to reduce its dependence on the US.

PHOTO: AFP

Some EU capitals – particularly those in Central and Eastern Europe, which cherish their ties with the US – will be hoping that Ms Baerbock’s stance is closer to the one expressed by European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, who was in Beijing together with Mr Macron.

Many analysts drew a contrast between Mr Macron’s remarks and those of Dr von der Leyen that were seen as more critical of Beijing. Just days before the visit, she said Europe must “de-risk” diplomatically and economically with a hardening China.

Conservative foreign policy lawmaker Johann Wadephul, who is part of Ms Baerbock’s delegation on her China trip, told Reuters: “More von der Leyen than Macron should be her guideline.” REUTERS

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