China Finds Itself With Limited Options After
U.S. Shoots Down Balloon
Beijing registered “strong discontent and protest.”
But there may be little it can do to retaliate.
Chris
Buckley
By Chris
Buckley
Feb. 5,
2023, 3:41 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/05/world/asia/china-balloon-united-states.html
After an
American fighter jet shot down the Chinese balloon that had floated across the
United States, the reaction from Beijing — defensive, angered, yet hedging its
options — illustrated the challenges facing China’s leader, Xi Jinping, as he
tries to stabilize relations while giving little, if any, ground.
Hours after
the balloon was struck by a Sidewinder missile and crumpled into the waters off
South Carolina, the Chinese foreign ministry declared its “strong discontent
and protest” and doubled down on its position that the balloon was a civilian
research airship blown way off course by fierce winds. Washington, not Beijing,
had broken the rules, the ministry said.
“The
Chinese side clearly requested that the U.S. appropriately deal with this in a
calm, professional and restrained manner,” said the statement from the Chinese
ministry on Sunday. “For the United States to insist on using armed force is
clearly an excessive reaction.”
Chinese
officials had been preparing to host the U.S. secretary of state, Antony J.
Blinken, for talks this week in Beijing aimed at containing tensions over a
glut of issues: technology barriers and bans, Western opposition to hard-line
Chinese policies in Hong Kong and Xinjiang, and American support for Taiwan,
the self-ruled island that Beijing has demanded must accept unification. Mr.
Blinken pulled out of his trip to China, citing anger over the balloon.
Beijing’s
reaction to the bipartisan furor in the United States over the high-altitude
balloon suggested that Chinese leaders were baffled that those planned talks in
Beijing had been upstaged by what they described as an innocent mistake. But
China also suggested that it could somehow retaliate against the American
military’s action: the foreign ministry noted that it “retains the right to
respond further.”
China’s
Ministry of National Defense, which speaks for the military, also called the
shooting down of the balloon an “excessive reaction.”
Calibrating
China’s reaction will be tricky for Mr. Xi.
“China is
in a very tight geopolitical spot,” said Evan S. Medeiros, a professor of
international politics at Georgetown University who served as President Barack
Obama’s top adviser on Asia-Pacific affairs. “They were caught red handed with
no place to go. And during a moment when they want to improve relations with
many big powers, principally the U.S.”
China’s
internet — often an echo chamber for nationalist emotions — resounded with
calls for Beijing to stand up to the United States over shooting down of the
balloon. And even if Mr. Xi and other Chinese Communist Party leaders can brush
off public pressure, their own prickly pride may demand some symbolic
countermeasure to save face.
But Mr. Xi
has his hands full with domestic strains and may want to avoid another round of
tit-for-tat antagonism with the Biden administration. China’s economy is anemic
after the abrupt abandonment of Mr. Xi’s strict “zero Covid” policies, and the
government is also trying to defuse a longer-term real-estate crisis. The
United States’ tightening restrictions on sales of advanced technology to
China, especially cutting-edge semiconductors, could hurt Chinese companies and
Mr. Xi’s innovation plans.
Since
beginning a third five-year term as party leader in October, Mr. Xi has tried
to ease tensions with Western countries — including the United States,
Australia and European powers — worried that they are coalescing into a firmer
alliance committed to containing Chinese power.
“It would
be a very poor strategic move on the part of China to really make a big deal
out of this,” Oriana Skylar Mastro, a fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute
for International Studies at Stanford University, said of the downing of the
balloon. “The more they huff and puff, the more it reduces the credibility of
their story that this was a civilian weather balloon blown off course.”
Despite its
mention of possible further actions, the Chinese government’s response to the
balloon’s downing also hinted that it does not want to drag out the dispute.
Wording choices in the foreign ministry statement hinted that Beijing may keep
defending its actions, and denying that the balloon was a vehicle for spying,
while holding back from reactions that could escalate the dispute.
Notably,
the Chinese statement accused the United States of violating international
norms by shooting down the balloon, but did not mention any claimed violation
of international law. China also said that it would “defend the legitimate
rights and interests of the enterprise involved” with the balloon, which could
help it make a case that the government was not directly involved in launching
the balloon.
The wording
“reflects that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs does not believe downing the
balloon is a clear legal violation,” Julian Ku, a professor of law at Hofstra
University who studies China’s role in international law, wrote in emailed
answers to questions.
“The
ministry will say if something is a violation of international law, so it is
significant they did not say so here,” he said.
“Moreover,
they need to think about their own rights in case the U.S. starts sending
balloons or drones into China,” he added. “If they push too hard here, it would
undermine a future legal argument they might need to make.”
Some in
China are calling for a tougher response. After Nancy Pelosi, then the speaker
of the U.S. House of Representatives, visited Taiwan last year, many on the
Chinese internet said they were angry that the Chinese air force had not — as
one well-known commentator had said was possible — tried to force away her
plane. This time, too, some voices on Weibo, a popular Chinese social media
site, said that their leaders should get tougher; maybe, one bellicose
commenter said, by shooting down an American plane.
Chinese
leaders have enormous power to channel, or suppress, nationalist rancor, and
Mr. Xi in particular has erased the space for spontaneous protests, so there is
little chance of such anger pushing them into provocative action. That Mr.
Blinken had called Wang Yi, China’s top foreign policy official, about
canceling his visit to Beijing, indicated that both sides wanted to keep
communication going, said Zhu Feng, a professor of international relations at
Nanjing University in eastern China.
But the
fraying ties between Beijing and Washington may come under much heavier stress
if Kevin McCarthy, the new House speaker, visits Taiwan. Mr. McCarthy had said
earlier that he might visit the island on taking up his role, seeking to
demonstrate Washington’s support for Taiwan against threats from China, but he
has not announced any firm plans.
“China’s
never going to tell me where I can and can’t go,” Mr. McCarthy told reporters
last week. “But I have nothing scheduled right now.”
Still even
if the balloon crisis dies down quickly, it has shown how low trust has fallen
from the thaw that began when “Ping-Pong diplomacy” helped pave the way for
relations in the early 1970s, said Professor Zhu. Back then, American table
tennis players visited China for a series of matches that helped eased decades
of animosity.
“Over 50
years ago, the ice-melting of our relations began with Ping-Pong diplomacy,”
Professor Zhu said, echoing a quip that has spread on the Chinese internet. “It
was a small ball that started it, and now our relations are in trouble over a
big ball or balloon. I never expected this metaphor could happen.”
Chris
Buckley is chief China correspondent and has lived in China for most of the
past 30 years after growing up in Sydney, Australia. Before joining The Times
in 2012, he was a correspondent in Beijing for Reuters. @ChuBailiang




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