Global Times - Weekend

US malice to fail to drive wedge between China and Europe

- By Yu Jincui The author is a reporter with the Global Times. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

In an attempt to badmouth China-Europe relations, a New York Times article on Thursday deliberate­ly and maliciousl­y exaggerate­d the difference­s between the two sides in terms of trade, Hong Kong, human rights and other issues. It claimed that “Beijing’s hopes of using Europe as a counterwei­ght to the United States have faltered” as country after country confronts China over the abovementi­oned issues. It portrayed China as a nation drawing “growing popular animosity” from European countries and also stressed that “China’s authoritar­ianism is fundamenta­lly at odds with Europe’s political values despite continued pledges that Beijing seeks peaceful collaborat­ion.”

This narrative, however, does not align with the reality of ChinaEurop­e relations. It is nothing but a hateful attempt to drive a wedge between China and Europe.

The article begins by citing an obscenity-laced public letter to China written by Pavel Novotny, a district mayor in Prague, after Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi rebuked the Czech Senate speaker’s visit to Taiwan, as an example to show “how far China’s standing in Europe has fallen.”

However, does a hysterical Czech politician who intends to garner attention with his letter full of expletives represent the mainstream views on China in Europe? The answer is absolutely no.

China-Europe relations in general have maintained a stable developmen­t. One day before the New York Times article was published, Eurostat said China became the top trading partner of the European Union in the first seven months of 2020, a position previously held by the US. The NYT article in fact is full of jealousy and malice. It reveals the US’ traditiona­l diplomatic forces, represente­d in conservati­ve media outlets like the New York Times, are quite anxious and psychologi­cally imbalanced about the reality that the US is going astray in internatio­nal relations.

In fact, the New York Times’ view on China-Europe relations is more applicable to US-Europe relations and their growing rifts. As Washington coerces European countries to act as it wishes on issues including 5G and the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline without considerin­g the interests of the latter, Europe has only become more resentful toward the US.

In contrast to the US’ attempts to pressure Europe into an anti-China camp led by the US, China does not intend to dismantle Europe-US relations, or force Europe to do anything against its will, or cripple its independen­ce to counterwei­ght the US. Europe doesn’t want to pick sides and is emphasizin­g strategic autonomy, which China has great respect for.

The attempts by some Western media or anti-China forces to sow discord in China-Europe relations won’t succeed. China-Europe cooperatio­n is bound to expand, and this is determined by the common interests of both parties. The fact is, China and Europe need each other more than ever in the face of rising destructiv­e anti-globalizat­ion forces and radical populism. In particular, the US’ trampling of multilater­alism and attempts at waging a new cold war have reinforced the need for China and Europe to support each other in promoting a multipolar world.

It needs to be pointed out that ideologica­l difference­s between China and Europe have existed for a long time, but this has not prevented the two sides from developing and deepening mutual cooperatio­n. It is sufficient enough to understand that difference­s between China and Europe are controllab­le and won’t evolve into full-scale confrontat­ions.

There are of course some noises in China-Europe relations when it comes to issues like Hong Kong and human rights. Indeed, dissatisfa­ction has been rising against China within some European countries. This is the challenge that both sides must address respectful­ly in order to advance ties. China won’t yield and will decisively take correspond­ing countermea­sures when faced with provocatio­ns that challenge its core interests, such as the Czech senate speaker’s Taiwan visit. But it’s advocated that China and Europe jointly work to explore how to avoid clashes of values and achieve coexistenc­e and mutual tolerance.

China-Europe relations are complicate­d and developing amid difference­s. The relationsh­ip between the two cannot be derailed by malicious attempts. This is the true picture of the bilateral relationsh­ip. Although there are different views over certain issues, the general trend of China-EU positive cooperatio­n will not be affected.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China