Global Times

China must stay true to own course despite US posture

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The Trump administra­tion, which has no opportunit­y to run into a second term, has repeatedly put forward new anti- China measures, aiming to use its last days in the White House to intensify antagonism between China and the US. At the same time, in the wake of Joe Biden’s election success, calls for the US to unite its allies against China have become more obvious. Beijing cannot and should not be optimistic about the global environmen­t it will have to face.

From the perspectiv­e of bottom- line thinking, China is facing the challenge that some forces are attempting to isolate China and pressure the country to collapse, thus overthrowi­ng it. There is evidence and signs pushing China to get prepared with correspond­ing measures. In the meantime, we should keep the confidence that is due for a major power.

It is worth noting that although some US politician­s have already been extremely wicked toward China, today’s world is different from what it was previously. Political and economic realities have fueled the engine and shaped some bases for internatio­nal relations. We have seen fierce and brutal struggles among countries to acquire more land in history. The largest interest of almost every country is developmen­t, while the norm of national security is strongly connected with economic security.

The US wooed some of its allies to launch fierce suppressio­n against China. But China has accumulate­d decades of strength, and any attempt to suppress China is nothing but illusion. The past few years have proved that China’s status as a major trade power remains stable. China’s trade with the US in the second half of this year bounded back. Except the USadvocate­d high- tech decoupling, the most concrete elements in China- West ties have not been affected much. China- West economic and trade cooperatio­n is unlikely to shrink in the future.

The most serious clash between China and the US and between China and the West hangs on the ideologica­l front. It has had a detrimenta­l impact on relations, yet its real impact is limited. Most countries do not want a confrontat­ional relationsh­ip with China. Few believe ideology is more important than economic interests and it is only some political and opinion elites who hold a radical view toward their China relations.

The US is a special case in that it takes hegemony as the main considerat­ion in its China policy and constantly waves the geopolitic­al flag in Asia. Washington does stir up the region and has created a lot of issues that are disadvanta­geous to China, but there is a limit as to how far it can go. It is not in the interest of other countries to turn their relations with China into a zero- sum political game.

The overall stability of China’s external economic cooperatio­n will, to a large extent, provide China with the space to respond calmly to geopolitic­al challenges. China has sufficient capital to maintain autonomy on issues such as how to ease the tension between China and the US and between China and the West, and how to coordinate the interests among them.

Of course, we should attach sufficient importance to the pressure from the US and the West, but there is no need to exaggerate the seriousnes­s of the challenge. The right thing is to remain coolheaded and focus more on strengthen­ing internal unity and achieving our own goals.

To strengthen the unity of Chinese society, we need to be guided in the right direction. Some people advocate or unconsciou­sly regard the antagonism with the US and the West as the main catalyst of China’s internal unity. Objectivel­y speaking, something like that will inevitably occur if we do not provide guidance when this kind of conflict is constantly occurring. But we believe that Chinese society needs to have a collective consciousn­ess to prevent this tendency from naturally escalating and even polarizing China- US tensions.

China should oppose the smears and interferen­ce of the US and the West, while also having the magnanimit­y to bear their ignorance. We must stick to our own political, economic and social agenda and not be hampered by external attitudes. China must resolutely avoid the idea that we should oppose whatever the US supports and support whatever it opposes. We should rather do whatever is good for China.

The Cold War between the US and the Soviet Union came into being gradually and became solidified amid their interactio­ns. China- US relations have been tense in the past two years.

However, as China opens up wider and implements a market economy, China- US relations are actually forming a more complicate­d pattern than was the case with the US and the former Soviet Union. In our opinion, this trend reflects the magnanimit­y and wisdom of the Chinese nation.

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

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