Global Times

China offers global remedies, as US stuck in Cold War mentality

- By Chen Shilei The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared in Xinhua. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

As US Defense Secretary James Mattis fabricated a “great power competitio­n” in which China and Russia are challengin­g the US dominance, it shows that an antagonist­ic thinking is still driving the world’s sole superpower.

Mattis made the remarks in a written statement delivered to the US House Armed Services Committee, as part of his testimony at a Monday hearing on the Fiscal Year 2018 budget.

Whether what Mattis stated is an excuse for demanding more military budget, it at least indicates that the Cold War mentality of zero sum and hegemonism remains popular in the US, which boasts “the highest annual military expenditur­e in the world,” said a report released on April 25 by the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute. US military spending grew by 1.7 percent between 2015 and 2016 to $ 611 billion, the report said.

However, such a way of thinking is out- dated in a rapidly changing world where peace, developmen­t, cooperatio­n and mutual benefit have become the trend of the times.

“To keep up with the times, we cannot have ourselves physically living in the 21st century, but with a mind- set belonging to the past, stalled in the old days of colonialis­m, and constraine­d by zero- sum Cold War mentality,” Chinese President Xi Jinping said when delivering a speech at the Moscow State Institute of Internatio­nal Relations in March 2013.

Facing global challenges such as a sluggish world economy, rampant terrorism and the refugee crisis, piecemeal fixes offered by the West cannot address the root causes of the problems but invite side effects.

Against such a backdrop, starting from the traditiona­l Chinese wisdom highlighti­ng the overall situation, longterm interests and harmony despite diversity, China has prescribed its own remedies for the world.

In economy, China suggests global economic governance should embrace equality, openness, cooperatio­n and winwin prospects.

In security, China calls for a vision of common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e security that guarantees stability in every country, considers both traditiona­l and non- traditiona­l security factors and promotes developmen­t to address the root causes of security threats.

Such a unique prescripti­on has been embodied in a series of China- hosted high- level diplomatic events – from the 2014 Asia- Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n meeting to the 2016 G20 summit, from the just- concluded Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n in May to the upcoming BRICS summit in September. China’s proposals are warmly welcomed worldwide. For instance, the China- initiated Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank has seen its members expand to 77 since its inception in January 2016.

Moreover, the Belt and Road initiative proposed by China in 2013 has gained support from more than 100 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons, among which more than 40 have signed cooperatio­n agreements with China.

The initiative, which comprises the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, aims to build a trade and infrastruc­ture network connecting Asia with Europe and Africa along and beyond the ancient trade routes.

The reason why the Chinese prescripti­on has received positive response across the world is that most countries know win- win cooperatio­n has become the theme of the times. Therefore, it is time for some Western countries, particular­ly the US, to abandon the old mentality of building alliances for confrontat­ion as it will benefit none in a highly interconne­cted world today.

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