Amid US-China rivalry, a landmark science deal faces new scrutiny
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The agreement between Beijing and Washington laid the foundation for a boom in academic and commercial exchanges.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON – For over 40 years, a landmark agreement between the United States and China has yielded cooperation across a range of scientific and technical fields, a powerful sign that the rivals could set aside their disputes and work together.
Now, with bilateral relations in their worst state in decades,
With Mr Antony Blinken in Beijing expectations low for any bilateral breakthrough,
The agreement, signed when Beijing and Washington established diplomatic ties in 1979 and renewed about every five years since, has been hailed as a stabilising force for the countries’ relations, with collaboration in areas ranging from atmospheric and agricultural science to basic research in physics and chemistry. It laid the foundation for a boom in academic and commercial exchanges.
Those exchanges helped China grow into a technology and military powerhouse, but concerns about Beijing’s theft of US scientific and commercial achievements have prompted questions about whether the agreement – set to expire on Aug 27 – should continue.
Proponents of renewing the STA argue that ending it would stifle academic and commercial cooperation.
While the dominant US view appears to be in favour of renewal, a growing contingent of officials and lawmakers believe cooperating on science and technology makes less sense
“Extending the Science and Technology Agreement between the US and China would only further jeopardise our research and intellectual property,” said Representative Mike Gallagher, the Republican chair of a congressional select committee on China. “The administration must let this outdated agreement expire.”
The State Department declined to comment on “internal deliberations on negotiations”. The National Security Council also declined to comment.
China’s embassy in Washington said Chinese officials had approached the US a year ago to talk about the deal, which it said formed the basis for 40 years of “fruitful” cooperation.
“As far as we know, the US side is still conducting an internal review on the renewal of the agreement,” embassy spokesman Liu Pengyu said, adding that both sides could consider adjustments to the original deal.
“It is hoped that the US side will expedite the internal review before the expiration of the agreement,” he said.
Renew, expire or renegotiate?
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arriving in Bejing, China, on June 18.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Inside the US government, including the State Department, which leads the negotiations, there are competing views about whether to renew the pact, let it expire or renegotiate to add safeguards against industrial espionage and require reciprocity in data exchanges, the officials said.
Given the state of US-China ties, trying to renegotiate could derail the agreement, they said.
US businesses have long complained about Chinese government policies that require technology transfer, and experts warn about state-sponsored theft of everything from Monsanto crop seeds to data about National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s space shuttle designs.
The administration of President Joe Biden has sharpened the focus on technological competition.
“Technology will be the cutting-edge arena of global competition in the period ahead in the way nuclear missiles were the defining feature of the Cold War,” US Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell told a Hudson Institute forum in June, adding that the US “will not cede the high ground”.
Proponents of renewing the deal argue that without it, the US would lose valuable insight into China’s technical advances.
“China friend or China foe, the US needs access to China to understand what’s happening on the ground,” said Dr Denis Simon, a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who studies technology strategy in China, adding that it was important for the US to negotiate a fundamentally new agreement.
“The advocates for renewal are trying to keep this (issue) a little bit under the radar because they don’t want the China bashers to get a piece of this and try to rip it apart,” he said.
Ms Anna Puglisi, a former US counter-intelligence official focused on East Asia and now a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Centre for Security and Emerging Technology, said science and technology cooperation had at one time been the “feel good” part of relations, but that has changed.
She said there are questions about what renewed cooperation could achieve at a time when China’s national security laws now cover the export of data and the country is taking steps to limit foreign access to its domestic academic databases.
“There has to be transparency and there has to be reciprocity,” said Ms Puglisi. “And the US government needs to do a full accounting of what have we got out of this besides a couple of meetings.” REUTERS

