KEY POINTS
  • China's growing largess among distressed European nations like Hungary and Greece is giving it growing leverage over EU decision making. 
  • As trade tensions play out, the unanticipated shocks of greater U.S. unpredictability and greater Chinese assertiveness are creating deeper European divisions about how to navigate it all.
  • With its efforts to influence, China weakens Western unity (and U.S. attraction) and improves its image as an alternative to liberal democracy.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) shakes hands with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban on the sidelines of the China International Import Expo (CIIE) on November 5, 2018 in Shanghai, China. 

SCHLOSS ELMAU, GERMANY – Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban recently shared some history with a friend, explaining why he reached out to China's then-Premier Wen Jiabao in 2011, seeking urgent financial support and providing Beijing one of several European inroads in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.

Orban's reason was a simple one: survival. Facing a potential debt crisis and unwilling to accept austere loan conditions from Western institutions, Beijing offered a lifeline. For his part, Orban convened some Central European leaders with Beijing, and they laid the groundwork for the "16-plus-one" initiative based in Budapest that since then has provided China unprecedented regional influence.