China to Send Its V.P. to Washington for Donald Trump’s Inauguration

China has in a statement revealed that it’s willingly to strengthen its relationship with the U.S. and thus will sending its Vice President Han Zheng to represident President Xi Jinping at Donald Trump’s inauguration Washington.
The Chinese Foreign Affair Ministry announced its V.P’s trip stating: “We are willing to strengthen dialogue and communication with the new U.S. government, properly manage differences, expand mutually beneficial cooperation, jointly promote the stable, healthy and sustainable development of China-U.S. relations, and find a way for China and the U.S. to get along correctly.”
Foreign heads of state do not typically attend U.S. presidential inaugurations, sending diplomats or other top-level officials, instead.
Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, confirmed that Han is planning to attend as “President Xi Jinping’s special representative” and said the invitation was extended by “the U.S. side.”
Liu’s statement largely echoed the comments from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, saying the country hopes to achieve “win-win cooperation in viewing and growing its relationship with the United States.”
U.S. relations with China, its top geopolitical rival, have been turbulent in recent years as the two countries clashed over a variety of issues, including technology, trade, human rights and the status of Taiwan.
But in the estimation of President Joe Biden’s outgoing U.S. envoy to China, those relations have stabilized during his administration after having reached their lowest point in decades.
Trump has long boasted of his relationship with Xi, calling him “brilliant” and praising him as a strong leader. China has become more authoritarian since Xi came to power more than a decade ago, and he is serving a rare third consecutive term.
“I think we will probably get along very well, I predict. But you know, it’s got to be a two-way street,” Trump told the conservative talk show host Hugh Hewitt this month, accusing China of “ripping off” the United States economically.
Trump told Hewitt that he and Xi had a “great relationship” until the last year of his first term, when he criticized Beijing over its handling of the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Trump also said he and Xi had been speaking through representatives. The Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry did not confirm any exchanges through Trump’s and Xi’s aides but said China and the United States had been in contact in various ways.
Trump has named a number of China hard-liners among his Cabinet picks, including Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., his nominee for secretary of state, who is under Chinese government sanctions over his criticism of the crackdown on dissent in the Chinese territory of Hong Kong.
In Trump’s first term, Beijing and Washington imposed a series of retaliatory tariffs on each other in a “trade war” that may worsen in his new administration, economic experts have said.
During the presidential campaign, Trump vowed to impose tariffs of 60% or more on all Chinese goods imports, and after his election he said he would slap an additional 10% tariff on China unless it stops the international flow of precursor chemicals for the deadly opioid fentanyl.
Trump has also expressed opposition to a looming ban on TikTok after earlier having supported a law requiring its Chinese parent company to divest its U.S. operations over national security concerns. TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew is among the tech leaders expected to attend the inauguration Monday, a day after the ban is set to take effect. 

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