US President Joe Biden’s plan for a Summit for Democracy, announced shortly before he took office, looked certain to become a thorn in Beijing’s side.
The announcement was one of the first signals that he would keep hard-line policies against Beijing introduced by the administration of his predecessor Donald Trump.
Soon after, Washington suffered setbacks at home and abroad that allowed Beijing to treat the summit more as farce than threat.
Just two weeks before Biden took office, Trump’s supporters ransacked the US Capitol building, incited by a fiery speech from the then-president which was full of unsubstantiated claims about election fraud that few in his Republican Party have disavowed.
The fall of Kabul to the Taliban in Afghanistan in August as well as humanitarian crises in countries including Lebanon, Ethiopia and Sudan further underscored Washington’s uphill battle against what the US Secretary of State has called the world’s “democratic recession”.
However, news that Taipei would be at the virtual summit table crossed a red line that raised the stakes for Biden’s event. The move enraged Beijing after a long-awaited summit between Biden and his counterpart Xi Jinping that appeared to have at least stabilized a bilateral relationship strained by a trade war, export restrictions and defence posturing in the South and East China Sea.
The online gathering of more than 100 heads of state, which pointedly excluded China and Russia, was billed as an allied effort to counter the rise of authoritarians and convened at a time when Beijing was dispatching record numbers of military jets to Taiwan’s airspace and a build-up of Russian troops on the country’s border with Ukraine.
While criticizing Biden’s summit, Chinese Foreign Minister
Wang Yi promised to work with Iran, another country not invited to the
forum, “to oppose any unilateralism and bullying acts, and uphold the principle
of non-interference in internal affairs”.
Washington isn’t the only Western country expressing such explicit support for
Taipei. Lithuania’s decision to host the first de facto Taiwanese embassy
in Europe to bear the name “Taiwan” has also deepened the ideological
rift between Beijing and the West.
Investigating reports of an embargo on Lithuania’s exports
to and imports from China, apparently as a result of the representative
office’s name, the European Union confirmed that it was looking into the
accusations and warned that Lithuania’s relationship with China “has an
impact on overall EU-China relations”.
Digging in, Beijing rejected a request by the EU to discuss the alleged
trade block on Lithuanian firms, claiming it is too preoccupied with the
coronavirus pandemic.
Days later, Vilnius pulled its Beijing embassy staff from the country and,
almost simultaneously, Xi pledged to support efforts by Lithuania’s historical
rival Russia to protect its long-term security amid rising international
pressure over Moscow’s attitude to Ukraine.
Xi made the pledge in a video call with his Russian counterpart Vladimir
Putin, where the Chinese leader also said China and Russia opposed attempts to
divide the two nations and called for more joint actions to safeguard their
security interests.
As if to underscore the growing divide between the democratic world that Biden is trying to solidify into a more determined and closely aligned bloc and nations on Beijing’s side, Xi said “China and Russia are both major nations with global influence”.