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Pelosi’s Taiwan Trip a Wake-Up Call for the U.S. and China

U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan this week only lasted 24 hours, but the trip will pose long-term challenges for the already tense relationship between Beijing and Washington and pose significant problems for Taipei, which looks set to suffer the worst of Beijing’s ire.

“Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan has plunged U.S.-China relations to a new low,” says Yu Jie, a senior research fellow on China at the Chatham House think tank in London. “The reservoir of trust forged between the two sides over the last 40 years appears to be almost exhausted.”

According to the Chinese leadership, this is what they have said. The topic of Taiwan dominated a call between U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in late July, in which Xi warned Biden against “playing with fire” over the island, which China regards as a renegade province. On Tuesday, China’s foreign ministry said Pelosi’s stopover will have “a severe impact on the political foundation of China-U.S. relations.”

Learn More Pelosi Leaves Taiwan With the Island—and World—in a More Precarious Position

Biden tried to distance himself form the trip. He earlier revealed that the Pentagon thought the trip by Pelosi—a long-time critic of the Chinese government—was “not a good idea.” The White House has also underscored that U.S. policy has not changed and that Washington “strongly opposes unilateral efforts to change the status quo or undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.”

It could also help to mitigate the harm. “While Congress has a foreign policy role, it is the executive branch that runs U.S. foreign relations,” says Zhang Baohui, a professor of political science at Hong Kong’s Lingnan University. “I think the Chinese [government] understands this and that should also limit the impact of Pelosi’s visit on the broader U.S.-China relations.”


During a virtual summit in Washington DC’s Roosevelt Room, President Joe Biden met with President Xi Jinping.

Mandel Ngan—AFP/Getty Images

That doesn’t mean that it will be smooth sailing. Former U.S. President Donald Trump labelled China a strategic “competitor” in his first national security strategy, and an acrimonious trade war propelled the relationship to a decades-low nadir. Relations under the Biden administration haven’t warmed much.

“The trajectory of this relationship has been set already,” says Zhang. “U.S.-China strategic rivalry has been in the making for quite a few years.”

Pelosi’s stopover could scupper U.S.-China cooperation

Despite their differences, the countries have been working together on some of the world’s biggest problems. Washington and Beijing announced cooperation at the COP26 climate summit. They said they will work together to reduce methane emissions. A COVID-19-related pandemic is another example of how crucial it is that these two countries collaborate in health security. It could make the world even worse if these efforts fail.

“When you strip away all the fiery rhetoric, what Beijing seeks is an ability to reestablish trust with the U.S.,” says Andrew Mertha, the director of the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) China Global Research Center at the Johns Hopkins University. He says the visit could hurt China’s ability to establish that trust, and “scuttle opportunities for potential cooperation on bilateral issues that only the U.S. and China working together can manage.”

Learn More Column: A Pelosi visit to Taiwan has no benefits

Zhang claims that the incident may highlight the collaborative side of U.S. – China relations. While the two countries may be at loggerheads systemically, they both desire to work together. Biden said in a virtual meeting with Xi in late 2021 that he wanted to ensure there were “common-sense guardrails” in place to keep lines of communication open and prevent competition from veering “into conflict.”

“The outcome of Pelosi’s visit indeed confirmed that this mechanism is in place and successfully prevented scenarios that could lead to inadvertent military conflicts in the Taiwan Strait,” says Zhang.


Chinese military helicopters flew past Pingtan Island, one of the closest points to Taiwan in mainland China, on August 4, 2022. This was ahead of large military drills off Taiwan after Nancy Pelosi, US House Speaker, visited the island.

Hector Retamal—AFP/Getty Images

Beijing’s military drills, which started after Pelosi left the island, are expected to continue for several days. The G7 says the exercises are “increasing tensions and destabilizing the region” and it is certainly possible that they could lead to unintended consequences.

But Yu, of Chatham House, says that despite “a chorus of nationalistic rhetoric,” China will “be careful not to stumble into an accidental conflict with the U.S. which risks colossal damage on all fronts.”

Bonnie Glaser is the Asia Program director at the German Marshall Fund. She agrees. “Both sides have an enormous stake in stopping the downward spiral,” she says. “Perhaps this will be a wake-up call that they need to do so.”

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To Amy Gunia can be reached at amy.gunia@time.com

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