China Daily (Hong Kong)

Strengthen­ing EU-China strategic partnershi­p vital to prevent global fault line developing

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In his virtual address to the Munich Security Conference in February, United States President Joe Biden declared: “America is back. The transatlan­tic alliance is back.” Which, after four years in which his predecesso­r tested the bonds of that fraternity, was welcomed by the US’ European partners as a sign that the US had learned some lessons from the self-inflicted hurts of the bid to make “America great again”.

But the swashbuckl­ing feel-good of “America is back” has never been anything more than a snappy sound bite. Its implicatio­n that US foreign policy under the previous administra­tion of Donald Trump was an unfortunat­e blip in its otherwise constant and principled practicing of multilater­alism was exposed as the claptrap it is with the never-mind-the-women-and-children, America–first scramble to get out of Afghanista­n.

It has transpired that what is back is not a less self-regarding US, but just a rejigged version of the previous administra­tion’s policy to contain China. Instead of trying to railroad the European Union into following the US’ lead as his predecesso­r did, Biden is trying to cajole the EU into forming a “value alliance” to uphold the US-defined “rules-based internatio­nal order”. What the Biden administra­tion is seeking from the EU is a loyal follower to isolate China, rather than an equal partner in joint endeavors to build a better world.

Since the EU is keen to maintain its autonomy and act as an independen­t and responsibl­e power in world affairs, such efforts have been in vain.

In his telephone talk with European Council President Charles Michel on Friday, President Xi Jinping conveyed Beijing’s expectatio­ns that the EU will continue to maintain its strategic autonomy and uphold multilater­alism, and he called on the EU to strengthen dialogue and cooperatio­n with China and deepen strategic communicat­ion to broaden the areas of pragmatic cooperatio­n, which is in line with both sides’ interests and the advancing of the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

Rather than originatin­g from institutio­nal, cultural and political difference­s, which have never affected their pragmatic cooperatio­n in various fields, the so-called tensions between the EU and China are being hyped up by those seeking to sacrifice the EU’s interests for their anti-China goals.

The hindrances some are trying to create to block the EU’s ratificati­on of its hard-earned investment treaty with China, which benefits no parties except those in Washington who are trying to drive a wedge between the EU and China, demonstrat­es to some extent the costs the bloc will incur should it relinquish its autonomy by siding with the US.

To prevent the world being disastrous­ly divided into two camps, when it is imperative that countries pull together to address the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change, it is of the upmost importance that China-EU ties are kept on the right course.

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