This week, the National Zoo welcomed two new yet familiar faces to Washington, DC: giant pandas.
The return of the pandas follows the departure of three pandas who were sent back to China in 2023 following an expired previous agreement and frosty U.S.-China relations.
The two new pandas, Bao Li and Qing Bao, will live in the National Zoo as part of a 10-year agreement with China, which owns every panda in the world.
But does this return signal a shift in bilateral relations?
Last year, we asked Ambassador Barbara K. Bodine, distinguished professor in the practice of diplomacy and director of Georgetown’s Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, about the state of U.S.-China relations and the history of animal diplomacy after the trio left.
This year, we asked what, if anything, has changed that would warrant the return of pandas to DC — and whether we may be reading too much into the latest episode of panda diplomacy.