Current:Home > MarketsBiden and Xi are to meet next week. There is no detail too small to sweat -FutureFinance
Biden and Xi are to meet next week. There is no detail too small to sweat
View
Date:2025-04-14 21:04:26
WASHINGTON (AP) — When President Joe Biden meets Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Wednesday, there will be no such thing as a small detail.
How they greet? If they eat? Where they sit? Will there be flowers? Bottled water or in a glass? “Pretty intense,” senior administration officials say of navigating delicate protocols.
Any encounter involving the president and a foreign leader means managing tricky logistics, political and cultural, and every occurrence or utterance can potentially jolt the world order. But few nations are more attuned to etiquette than the Chinese, and Washington and Beijing’s often-conflicting interests might mean the seemingly trivial becomes meaningful.
There’s probably “very detailed planning of the actual choreography of who enters a room where, if there will be pictures taken and all of that,” said Bonny Lin, senior fellow for Asian security and director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Biden and Xi will meet while both attend next week’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in San Francisco, but even basic information has remained closely guarded. Statements Friday by China’s government didn’t mention the day or location, and the White House says only that the face-to-face will be held “in the Bay area,” citing security concerns.
That could only increase the pressure as both sides potentially haggle over everything from meeting time and length to who enters the room first. Will they use a table or easy chairs? What about security presence and interpreter access?
Then there is the more obviously substantive: whether there will be a post-meeting joint statement and how much of the session will be in public view.
The plan is to set aside enough time for in-depth conversations on issues that will be divided into different sessions, senior administration officials say. That recalls Biden’s nearly three-hour meeting with Xi before the start of last year’s G-20 summit in Bali.
The officials also noted that this will be Xi’s first trip to the U.S. in six years, and his first to San Francisco since he was a provincial Communist Party secretary.
Victor Cha, former Director for Asian Affairs on the White House’s National Security Council, said organizing such meetings at APEC is easier than at a formal location. But, he said, hammering out talks on summit sidelines is still “a logistics nightmare.”
“China, normally, if they come to United States, they want everything. They want all the pomp and circumstance. They want the highest possible respect that can be paid to them,” Cha said. “That is politically not possible. And so, having APEC in San Francisco solves that problem in the sense that it’s not the official White House that’s hosting the meeting.”
Even informal settings can bring high stakes.
When President Richard Nixon visited China in 1972, aiming to ease decades of animosity, he brought a new pair of shoes with rubber soles to climb the Great Wall.
President Barack Obama and Xi didn’t wear ties during their 2013 meeting at Sunnylands, a sumptuous, modernist mansion in Rancho Mirage near Palm Springs, California. It was news then that Obama stayed overnight there while the Chinese delegation returned to a nearby hotel.
Donald Trump and Xi wore dark suits for dinner at Mar-a-Lago four years later, and the meal featured what the then-president called “the most beautiful piece of chocolate cake.”
Bonnie Glaser, managing director of the Indo-Pacific program at the German Marshall Fund, said that, for the upcoming meeting, Xi’s team likely pushed for a venue away from the APEC site and talks lasting longer than Bali’s.
“The Chinese want a separate summit,” she said.
The Chinese attach importance to the location, which this time may be more like Sunnylands than Anchorage, where top U.S. and Chinese officials held rather tense 2021 talks. Chinese state media might fixate on the weather as a barometer for bilateral relations. Early forecasts are calling for rain with a high in the mid-60s for San Francisco.
Even on-site flowers could be important, as certain choices can symbolize harmony in Chinese culture. Plum blossom is a well-liked flower known in China for persevering amid harshness, while lotuses convey peace in the Chinese language. Chrysanthemums, by contrast, are associated with death.
Xi may expect Biden to greet him upon arrival. His team could also want him and Biden photographed together without staff to convey a personal relationship.
“Chinese officials will want to project to their domestic audience that Xi is received by Biden with dignity and respect,” said Ryan Hass, director of the John L. Thornton China Center at the Brookings Institute. He suggested that required “imagery of both leaders interacting on a personal basis, beyond the customary handshake in front of a bank of flags in a hotel conference room.”
That could be as simple as a short walk together, Hass said. The Chinese also tend to emphasize food and might push for a meal.
During Nixon’s 1971 visit, a military honor guard greeted him at the airport, but the much-watched series of toasts from both sides came later, only after a shark fin banquet dish was served. China offered a Texas-style barbecue at a luxury Beijing hotel to fete President George H.W. Bush in 1989, but blocked his invitation of Fang Lizhi, then the country’s best-known dissident.
The APEC setting precludes a formal dinner. But lunch is possible. That’s despite Xi scheduling his trips down to the minute and often packing in so much that there’s no time to eat, according to a documentary on its diplomatic principles China released in 2017.
Both sides also always have security concerns. Obama wrote in his memoir of his 2009 China trip that his team was “instructed to leave any non-governmental electronic devices on the plane” and to operate assuming “that our communications were being monitored” and hotel rooms had hidden cameras.
Hillary Clinton’s 1995 Beijing visit turned heads for a different reason when she declared that “human rights are women’s rights, and women’s rights are human rights.” So did Laura Bush’s 2008 trip to the Olympics in Beijing after she stopped in Thailand and visited a refugee camp for people fleeing the government of China-backed Myanmar.
But protocols around U.S.-China leader interactions don’t always have to address espionage threats or human rights matters.
Sasha Obama was 9 and studying Mandarin in grade school when she practiced a few phrases during a 2011 White House welcome ceremony for Chinese President Hu Jintao. When she and her sister, Malia, visited China with their mother, Michelle, on a goodwill tour three years later, the Chinese press dubbed the then-first lady “Mrs. Diplomatic.”
That trip featured a toboggan ride away from the press after a Great Wall visit, and a game of table tennis where Michelle Obama joked that her husband played the game and “thinks he’s better than he really is.” Yet what unfolded felt stiff to some. The write-up in The New York Times carried the headline: “Even With Ping-Pong, a Formal Meeting in China.”
__
Associated Press writer Colleen Long contributed to this report.
veryGood! (297)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Teen Mom 2's Nathan Griffith Arrested for Battery By Strangulation
- Gov. Moore Commits Funding for 67 Hires in Maryland’s Embattled Environment Department, Hoping to Fix Wastewater Treatment Woes
- Activists Slam Biden Administration for Reversing Climate and Equity Guidance on Highway Expansions
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Treat Williams’ Daughter Pens Gut-Wrenching Tribute to Everwood Actor One Month After His Death
- How artificial intelligence is helping ALS patients preserve their voices
- Mono Lake Tribe Seeks to Assert Its Water Rights in Call For Emergency Halt of Water Diversions to Los Angeles
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Star player Zhang Shuai quits tennis match after her opponent rubs out ball mark in disputed call
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Renewables Projected to Soon Be One-Fourth of US Electricity Generation. Really Soon
- Peacock hikes streaming prices for first time since launch in 2020
- Pittsburgh Selects Sustainable Startups Among a New Crop of Innovative Businesses
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Nikki and Brie Garcia Share the Story Behind Their Name Change
- Confronting California’s Water Crisis
- What’s the Future of Gas Stations in an EV World?
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Tiffany Chen Shares How Partner Robert De Niro Supported Her Amid Bell's Palsy Diagnosis
Loose lion that triggered alarm near Berlin was likely a boar, officials say
Twice as Much Land in Developing Nations Will be Swamped by Rising Seas than Previously Projected, New Research Shows
Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
Sister Wives Janelle Brown Says F--k You to Kody Brown in Season 18 Trailer
Frustrated by Outdated Grids, Consumers Are Lobbying for Control of Their Electricity
US Emissions of the World’s Most Potent Greenhouse Gas Are 56 Percent Higher Than EPA Estimates, a New Study Shows