Published: 11:13, May 3, 2020 | Updated: 03:20, June 6, 2023
Experts caution against US being 'more aggressive' on China
By Xinhua

The White House is seen in a rainy day in Washington D.C., the United States on April 30, 2020. (TING SHEN / XINHUA)

NEW YORK – A more aggressive stand adopted by some top US administration officials against China on economic, diplomatic and scientific issues at the heart of the relationship between the world's first and second largest economies may backfire, reported The New York Times Saturday. 

"Along with lost opportunities to fight the (COVID-19) pandemic, climate change and other transnational threats, US efforts to punish China could backfire badly," Jessica Chen Weiss, a professor of government at Cornell University, was quoted by the newspaper as saying.  

"Weakening sovereign immunity to sue China could boomerang back," she said. 

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China is likely to emerge from the recession caused by the pandemic faster than other nations, said The New York Times

China controls a vast supply of the masks and protective gear needed by American hospitals. "And if China develops a vaccine first, it will wield a powerful card, one that will bolster its global standing and give it leverage over the health of hundreds of millions of Americans," it reported. 

China is likely to emerge from the recession caused by the pandemic faster than other nations, said the paper. "The United States – still reeling from the virus, with more than 1 million infected and more than 64,000 dead – will probably rely on economic activity in Asia to help prop up its own economy." 

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A staff member displays samples of the COVID-19 inactivated vaccine at Sinovac Biotech Ltd, in Beijing, China, March 16, 2020. (ZHANG YUWEI)

The newspaper listed the executive order signed by President Donald Trump to stop the import of foreign equipment for power plants and transmission systems, the request by several agencies for the Federal Communication Commission to ban China Telecom Americas from domestic networks, the support of some White House aides this week for Trump to issue another executive order to block a government pension fund from investing in Chinese firms as the recent actions or tendencies that have dampened the Sino-US bilateral ties. 

With COVID-19 lingering in the US, "the Trump administration may feel cornered into taking enforcement actions against China, even on dubious grounds, to show how tough they are," explained Wendy Cutler, a vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute.