Easier, peasier, Albanese-er
Beijing wants to patch things up with Canberra.
On Monday, Xi Jinping met with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Beijing.
- It's just the second time the two have met, and the first visit by an Australian PM to China in over seven years.
- Albanese kicked off his landmark trip to China over the weekend.
Since meeting Albanese on the sidelines of the G20 in Bali, last November, China has:
- Dropped trade barriers on various Australian imports
- Initiated a review of its punitive tariffs on Aussie wine
- Released Australian journalist Cheng Lei after more than two years of detention
China's meeting readout hinted at what's behind the rapid reset (Gov.cn):
- "China does not engage in exclusive cliques, or bloc politics and confrontation in the Asia Pacific region."
- "We must be vigilant and oppose such attempts to sow chaos in the Asia Pacific."
Get smart: By freezing out Australia, Beijing eroded a crucial trade relationship and pushed Canberra even closer to Washington.
- It also spooked other advanced economies that rely heavily on trade with China.
- That was a major own goal.
Get smarter: Beijing needs an approach that allows it to maintain key trade relationships even when stark diplomatic differences emerge.