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Iowa Governor Terry Branstad testifies before a Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing on his nomination to be US ambassador to China where he pledged to raise difficult issues with Beijing. Photo: Reuters

Trump’s choice for China envoy vows to raise tough issues with Beijing from North Korea to trade

The Midwestern governor President Donald Trump picked to be his ambassador to China pledged on Tuesday to confront Beijing on a range of contentious issues, including human rights and trade, and assured lawmakers he’ll push the Chinese to act more aggressively to defuse North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme.

During his confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Iowa Governor Terry Branstad said he hopes to leverage his decades-long relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping to advance US and international interests.

“As an old friend, I’d tell him where he’s falling short,” Branstad said, telling senators he won’t be bashful about raising uncomfortable topics. The two met in 1985 when Xi, at the time a provincial official, led an agricultural trade delegation to Iowa.

Chinese President Xi Jinping speaks during a meeting with the Southern Theatre Command of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) last monht. Photo: Xinhua

Asked by Democratic Senator Bob Menendez if he considers China to be an enemy or an ally, Branstad paused and said it was a tough question. The relationship between the two economic powers fluctuates between those two extremes, Branstad said, and the US should strive to be partners with Beijing instead of adversaries. But China also has an obligation to play by the rules, he said.

Branstad said he won’t hesitate to meet with Chinese dissidents and activists and would even welcome them to the US embassy in Beijing. He also said he intends to travel to every province in China just as he’s travelled to every county in Iowa.

Branstad called North Korea’s push for a weapon of mass destruction a “threat to all of humankind.”

Although senators pressed Branstad for specifics on how he would address North Korea with Xi and other Chinese leaders, he stuck to broad themes. He said recent events, which include missile tests by Pyongyang, should prompt China to take the threat more seriously. He also said he expects China to become more engaged because of concerns that North Korean refugees may flood China if the crisis on the Korean Peninsula escalates further.

“They are the ones who have the potential to influence the regime in North Korea more than anyone else,” Branstad said of China. “It is probably the most pressing issue we have right now.” He said he envisioned his role as a “go between” to find a resolution.

Trump has sought better relations with China as the threat from North Korea has escalated. Trump recently hosted Xi at Trump’s Florida resort.

But for years prior, Trump said that China was “eating our lunch,” and he promised during the presidential campaign to label China a currency manipulator as one of his first acts. He even threatened to start a trade war, arguing that China’s trade surplus was the major reason for America’s economic woes.

But Trump has since abandoned that pledge, his thinking changed by the growing focus on the threat from North Korea and fears Pyongyang will succeed in developing a nuclear-tipped missile capable of hitting the United States. Trump wants help from China, which is North Korea’s primary trading partner.

Branstad said China had manipulated its currency to lower the cost of its exported products and to raise the price of US imports. “I think that has changed in the last year or so,” Branstad told the committee. But he said that’s an issue that remains a concern and needs to be monitored closely.

US President Donald Trump addresses a rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The US leader has backed away from campaign rhetoric to label China a currency manipulator. Photo: Kyodo

Trump also backed away from a threat to jettison America’s “One China” policy that sees Taiwan as part of China.

Trump angered China by speaking to Taiwan’s president before his inauguration in a breach of diplomatic protocol. China still regards the island as part of its territory and would consider it unacceptable for the US to recognise Taiwan’s leader as a head of state.

Branstad, 70, is in the midst of his sixth non-consecutive term as governor. He served from 1983 to 1999 before entering the private sector. He was re-elected in 2010. With nearly 22 years at the helm of Iowa government, Branstad is the country’s longest serving governor.

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