Von der Leyen’s subtext: It’s all about China
From a ban on goods produced by forced labor to an
Indo-Pacific strategy, the EU is signaling concerns about China.
BY STUART
LAU
September
15, 2021 3:35 pm
U.S.
President Joe Biden didn't get a namecheck in European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen's State of the Union speech on Wednesday. China's Xi
Jinping did.
That tells
you which country is looming largest behind the EU's core priorities.
Von der
Leyen's speech promised a European counterblast to China's Belt and Road
infrastructure projects, a scheme to keep the Continent in the global microchip
race and legislation to ban the import of goods produced with forced labor.
Beijing
will be watching all of these files with a close eye.
When it
came to referencing China's leader by name, von der Leyen was initially complimentary,
saying "the [climate] goals that President Xi has set for China are
encouraging."
But it
didn't take long for the German politician to branch into the EU's growing
unease about the rise of China, with many in the audience in the European
Parliament still smarting over Beijing's sanctions on their colleagues.
Her tone
immediately started to toughen. "We call for that same leadership on
setting out how China will get there. The world would be relieved if they
showed they could peak emissions by mid-decade — and move away from coal at
home and abroad," she continued.
This was a
direct criticism. China has been cautious about increased pledges on climate,
amid worries about supply insecurity should coal be phased out too rapidly. In
fact, Xi visited a coal plant only a day before her speech, focusing not on
eliminating coal but on "upgrading" the use of what China calls green
coal.
Climate is
far from von der Leyen's only concern with regards to China, and the overall
tenor of Wednesday's speech marked a stark contrast from just nine months ago
when the EU was celebrating the political conclusion of a landmark investment
deal with Xi.
The
Commission chief also unveiled the "Global Gateway" scheme to take on
Beijing's Belt and Road Initiative — in which Beijing flexes its geostrategic
muscle by investing in transport infrastructure to link its mighty exports to
Western markets.
Von der
Leyen said the EU needed its own vision and had to stop doing China's work for
it.
"We
are good at financing roads. But it does not make sense for Europe to build a
perfect road between a Chinese-owned copper mine and a Chinese-owned
harbor," she said.
On forced
labor, von der Leyen said it's time for the EU to have a ban on import goods
produced by prisoners and camp inmates — a step up from her trade
commissioner's preference for a less restrictive "due diligence"
scheme. This is of major importance to China as it would be likely to target
goods from the western region of Xinjiang, where there is a large-scale
crackdown against the Muslim minorities.
“We will
propose a ban on products on our market that have been made with forced labor
because human rights are not for sale, at any price,” von der Leyen told
Parliament.
It remains
unclear how the Commission can establish whether or not goods are produced by
forced labor as Xinjiang is largely off-limit to Western diplomats and
international human rights groups.
She also
vowed to turbocharge the EU microchip industry to catch up with rivals like the
U.S. and China via a new “Chips Act,” a move that tech-minded geopolitical
policymakers say would be necessary to prevent EU reliance on Chinese 5G mobile
technology.
Reaching
out to corral a wider anti-China alliance, von der Leyen also announced the
Indo-Pacific strategy on Wednesday, a geopolitical concept that the U.S. and
some Asian countries have deployed to muster a stronger bloc to confront China.
"If
Europe is to become a more active global player, it also needs to focus on the
next generation of partnerships," she said. "In this spirit, today's
new EU-Indo Pacific strategy is a milestone. It reflects the growing importance
of the region to our prosperity and security. But also the fact that autocratic
regimes use it to try to expand their influence."

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