German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock is in China for three days this week, her first official trip to the country. Her main aim is to nudge Xi Jinping into putting pressure on Russia to end the war in Ukraine. Probably mission impossible, considering China has not uttered a word of criticism towards Vladimir Putin. Another priority is to pick up the pieces following Emmanuel Macron’s visit to Beijing last week. Days afterwards, he said that Europe should stay out of the Taiwan conflict and concentrate its efforts on becoming a superpower rather than be a “vassal” of the United States.
Baerbock yesterday went some way to distancing Germany from Macron’s position. Today, she went so far as to warn China against using military force on Taiwan, describing such action as a “horror scenario”.
Macron’s comments have been criticised by a number of senior politicians in Germany. Only far-Right or far-Left politicians, united in their anti-Americanism, publicly nod their heads in agreement, though one veteran Green, Jürgen Trittin, pointed out this week that Macron’s utterances were a reminder that Trump or another isolationist might soon return to the White House, once again kicking the legs from under the transatlantic alliance.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz, a social democrat who still fundamentally believes in the mantra of “peace through trade”, would never be so outspoken, though his track record has indicated some sympathy to China. In his previous job as mayor of Hamburg, Scholz pushed for Chinese involvement in the city’s harbour before, last year, Chinese state-owned shipping company Cosco announced plans to buy a 35% stake in a cargo terminal, a deal the Chancellor endorsed. After some grumbling from within his SPD-Green-liberal coalition, Scholz’s cabinet agreed on an acquisition of no more than 24.9%.
But as China has become more aggressive towards Taiwan this year, the German cybersecurity agency, housed in the SPD-run Ministry for the Interior, has classified the harbour as ‘critical infrastructure’. A Chinese stake could pose a security threat. This triggered Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck to take another look at the controversial deal, which is still unfinished.
Right now, it appears that the Greens’ “value-based” foreign and economic policies are taking centre stage, despite corporate Germany’s enduring hunger for trade with China, as well as a plea from a group of pro-business Social Democrats in parliament to tone down the rhetoric on China.
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SubscribeThis is laughable, the American security establishment has been working on decoupling Germany from both Russia and China for decades in order to eliminate it as a potential rival power center. Merkel had an opportunity to actually lead Europe during the Trump years (and before) and wasted them (any way you look at it) by walking the vanishingly thin middle ground (between the US, China and Russia) like a tight rope – which has now snapped.
Now Germany (and by extension Europe) will be poorer, weaker and even more subservient to American interests (to their own detriment) – which is meant by the claim: “Germany understands that this isn’t the time to question relations with the US”.
This is laughable, the American security establishment has been working on decoupling Germany from both Russia and China for decades in order to eliminate it as a potential rival power center. Merkel had an opportunity to actually lead Europe during the Trump years (and before) and wasted them (any way you look at it) by walking the vanishingly thin middle ground (between the US, China and Russia) like a tight rope – which has now snapped.
Now Germany (and by extension Europe) will be poorer, weaker and even more subservient to American interests (to their own detriment) – which is meant by the claim: “Germany understands that this isn’t the time to question relations with the US”.