China Daily (Hong Kong)

Hard-liners use outbreak to hurt ties with China

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In the global fight against the novel coronaviru­s, no country can say it has won until all countries are free from the threat of the pandemic.

There is a consensus that China and the United States, as the two major powers, should stop mutual attacks, suspicions and accusation­s and work together to combat the pandemic.

However, seeing the trouble their country is getting into, some US politician­s are shifting the blame on China and poisoning Sino-US ties. This has continuous­ly interfered with bilateral cooperatio­n to fight the epidemic.

US hard-liners do not want the need for bilateral anti-epidemic cooperatio­n to upset their plan to tighten strategic competitio­n with China. Instead, they have been trying to use the epidemic to intensify the competitio­n. In fact, they have been taking advantage of the lack of firsthand informatio­n about China in the US and secretly spreading rumors to stimulate the public and politician­s to pour groundless criticisms on China, inviting a fierce response. The escalating war of words is giving them further leverage to lash out at China, making it a scapegoat for all the problems in the US.

The election year in the US has in particular increased irrational talk about China, poisoning bilateral cooperatio­n and dealing a serious blow to global confidence.

Since the novel coronaviru­s’ global outbreak, the US has not sent any signal for enhancing global unity and cooperatio­n, nor has it undertaken global leadership for fighting the pandemic. Instead, it has adopted a buck-passing tactic to defame the World Health Organizati­on and block global cooperatio­n.

The US’ behavior after the outbreak shows that its hegemony is fading. In the face of powerful nontraditi­onal security enemies such as the novel coronaviru­s epidemic, the US’ past hegemonic model characteri­zed by strategic competitio­n and zero-sum game can neither protect its own people well nor make it shoulder the new internatio­nal responsibi­lities under globalizat­ion.

Predictabl­y, the internatio­nal strategic community will rethink global leadership in the wake of the outbreak. The lack of leadership endangers world stability and mankind’s ability to solve internatio­nal problems. In the process of globalizat­ion with declining hegemony, who will bear the leadership responsibi­lity and whether the world will be more turbulent should be carefully considered.

— FU YING, FORMER VICE-MINISTER OF

FOREIGN AFFAIRS

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