Global Times

‘China threat’ bogey won’t work in S.Pacific

- By Yu Lei

The Australian, the biggest media outlet in Australia, recently reported that China is negotiatin­g to fund the redevelopm­ent of a coralchoke­d port in Samoa. The article was apprehensi­ve that China may build a military base there. Military officials, analysts and scholars from the US and Australia warned that the port could lead to a “salient right through the heart” of American, Japanese and Australian defenses in the South Pacific or threaten Australia’s east coast trade routes to the US, potentiall­y putting Canberra under pressure and projecting power to the north up to Micronesia, Guam and even Hawaii.

The report is another instance of hyping up the “China threat” theory that has been long played up by Australia and other countries which are former colonizers of the South Pacific region. But anyone with common sense will not believe that China has the capability or the need to militarily threaten a more powerful alliance of Australia, Japan and the United States, especially in a faraway place.

Media outlets from these countries hype up the “China threat” theory repeatedly, periodical­ly and intentiona­lly due to the following three reasons:

First, these media outlets are part of interest groups. Exaggerati­ng the threat from China will help the US and its allies, who are behind the scenes, obtain more benefits.

After the end of the

Cold War, these countries have increased their military expenditur­e instead of reducing it. The “China threat” theory is exploited by their government­s and military establishm­ent as a ruse to explain the increased defense spending to the public.

Second, hyping up the “China threat” theory is the simplest and the most morally deceptive method to demonize China’s assistance and infrastruc­ture building activity in other developing countries.

The assistance that China offers to Pacific island nations and other regions is always widely welcomed because it comes with no political strings attached. For example, Pacific countries and their citizens usually refuse assistance from countries tagging it with political riders. It is China that broke the aid monopoly of Western countries which deprives them of the political privileges and vested interests they were so used to enjoying in the Pacific region.

In return, these Western countries try to use public discourse as propaganda to parade the “China threat” theory to skew opinion against Beijing in the South Pacific. However, their plan is not going to succeed.

Finally, a bogey of “China threat” is created to prevent Beijing from constructi­ng military bases in the Pacific Ocean.

According to some Western journalist­s, there is neither solid evidence nor an iota of credibilit­y to the claim that China poses military threat to some other countries in the Pacific region. The purpose of repeating the same claim is to prevent China from setting up a military base in the Pacific islands.

In fact, Beijing builds its foreign relations on a foundation of peace and amity. It is futile for media outlets to keep targeting China as their understand­ing of “big power” has long become obsolete.

The author is a chief research fellow at the Research Center for Pacific Island Countries, Liaocheng University and a research fellow at the Australian Studies Center at Beijing Foreign Studies University. opinion@globaltime­s.

com.cn

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT

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