Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nothing wrong with dialogue

Blinken’s Beijing visit a good step

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“This is very good,” said Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Monday at the start of his meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Tony Blinken at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People. We agree.

Most talk of U.S.-China relations in the past few years have focused on tensions and the potential for escalation, and there certainly are real and serious difference­s in policy and approach, including sovereignt­y and human rights questions like the Chinese government’s encroachme­nt on Taiwan, cracking down in Hong Kong, backing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and launching spy balloons.

Yet dialogue is never a bad idea, which makes it puzzling that some House GOP members actively derided the idea of Blinken’s China visit. They should really know better, and cut the bluster that’s being done mainly to score political points. In contempora­ry political signaling, where everything is all-or-nothing, they seem to suggest that the only two options practicall­y are total capitulati­on to Chinese global designs or a shooting war with the world’s second-biggest economy and its largest military.

Those appearing to agitate for this latter outcome might be doing so for domestic political reasons, but they should stop and think about what this would actually mean. We’ve had our share of military misadventu­res in recent years but their consequenc­es have predominan­tly hit the people and places on the other side, which unfortunat­ely has meant that plenty of our leaders have become too cavalier about the true costs.

A conflict with China would be very different, holding the potential to very quickly spiral uncontroll­ably into the type of struggle that will be ruinous for both nations, with horrendous casualties. Long gone are the days of convention­al warfare; this war would involve cyberattac­ks on crucial systems throughout the United States, including the electrical grid and communicat­ions tech. And for what? An approach of cooperatio­n could instead produce immense gains on areas of mutual interest, like climate change mitigation. President Biden and Blinken should never lie down for Xi, but to suggest conflict is inevitable is to invite disaster.

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