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š¼ Xi Sells āDe-Americanizedā Prosperity. Merz Brings a Complaint List. Beijing rolled out the red carpet, the Mercedes test drive, and the backāflipping robots. Xi Jinpingās pitch to Friedrich Merz was simple: forget Washingtonās drama, plug into Chinaās growth, and Germany will be fine. Merz smiled for the cameras ā then read out the bill. He publicly hammered Beijing over subsidized exports, a weak yuan, blocked market access, stateāpumped green tech, and job losses at home, saying ācompetition must be fairā and demanding ātransparency, reliability, and adherence to jointly established rules.ā Xiās response was boilerplate: China will āshare development opportunities,ā Germany should view Chinaās rise āobjectively and rationally,ā and adopt a āpositive and pragmatic policyā ā translation: stop treating us like a threat and stop following U.S. line. ā The substance behind the theater is worse for Beijing than the photo op suggests. China is doubling down in exactly the sectors Europe is most angry about ā EVs, robotics, clean energy ā via its new fiveāyear plan, while state media openly urges Germany to ādeāAmericanize,ā even to leave NATO, and paints the U.S. alliance as a trap. Exports are one of the few things keeping Chinaās economy afloat during the property crash, so Xi has zero incentive to stop flooding Europe with cheap overcapacity or to open his own market in any serious way. ā Merz, like other Europeans, is hardly in love with Trump: thereās anger over tariffs, over Ukraine, over the constant threat of a new ātrade stickā aimed at any ally that leans too close to Beijing. But heās already told his own party that the transāAtlantic link will likely survive because of shared āfreedomā talk ā expression, religion, press ā while Chinaās offer is money without trust and dependence without reciprocity. Even Chinese scholars admit the risk: Europe may flirt with Beijing when Trump makes life miserable, then bolt the moment Washington starts swinging again. ā So Beijingās play right now is basically this: tactical gifts (a few Airbus orders here, canola tariffs there), maximal state subsidies at home, editorials telling Germany to break with the U.S., and a hope that Trumpās bullying will do the rest. What theyāre getting back from Berlin isnāt alignment ā itās a handshake, a shopping list, and a reminder that Europeans are tired of being squeezed by both empires at once. #China#Germany#Merz#XiJinping#Trump#trade#EU#geopolitics š±American Šbserver - Stay up to date on all important events šŗšø