Global Times

China supports rules, no fear of competing

- Page Editor: luyuanzhi@ globaltime­s. com. cn

US President Joe Biden said in a CBS interview on Sunday that China and the US “need not have a conflict but there is going to be extreme competitio­n.” Biden also said, “I’m not going to do it the way Trump did. We are going to focus on the internatio­nal rules of the road.”

Different people have seen different things from what Biden said. Some people focus on his emphasis that China and the US “need not have a conflict” and believe this is different from the Trump administra­tion. Others focus on “extreme competitio­n,” claiming that Biden has sent a tough signal to China.

But in the Global Times’ opinion, Biden has predicted there will be “extreme competitio­n” between China and the US. Yet he has set a bottom line for this, which is to avoid turning such competitio­n into a major power conflict. He also said he would replace Trump’s approach with “internatio­nal rules.” Thus the question boils down to this one: What are internatio­nal rules?

To be honest, China is not afraid of competing with others, no matter how fierce the competitio­n might be. China has always been serious in abiding by internatio­nal rules. It is the most ideal state for China’s developmen­t that all countries compete with one another in accordance to the rules. This is not a high- profile empty talk, but the deepest part of China’s values. Respecting the rules is in the blood of the Chinese nation. It has become our starting point of dealing with internatio­nal rules.

China’s reform and opening- up can be seen as a long march for the country to understand and integrate into the internatio­nal rules. China joined the WTO, abided by the internatio­nally recognized rules and developed all the way to a major trader worldwide. China has never challenged any major internatio­nal rules. Even if some rules were not favorable to China at the beginning, our philosophy is to adapt to them and eventually become skilled in applying the rules.

The US’ biggest problem is that it puts its own interests at the center of internatio­nal rules. If the rules benefit the US, the rules will continue to be rules. If they are perceived to be unfavorabl­e to the US, the country will turn against these rules. Therefore, the US has had the most conflicts with internatio­nal rules in recent years. Washington’s neglect of rules has repeatedly shocked the internatio­nal community.

Rules apply to all countries. The system of United Nations should be the most authoritat­ive starting point of the internatio­nal rules. But which country is more respectful to the UN, China or the US? Which country has more conflicts with internatio­nal multilater­al organizati­ons, China or the US?

The answers are obvious.

If the new US administra­tion emphasizes rules so much, it should respect the intent of internatio­nal rules. It should not equate internatio­nal rules with US interests and turn them into a veneer of legality and a global passport to take care of the US national interests.

In the past few years, Washington has shown increasing ideologica­l offensiven­ess. It used some domestic institutio­nal elements of Western- style democracy to measure internatio­nal rules and strengthen­ed the US’ definition of rules. When the US talks about rules, it often involves interferen­ce in China’s domestic affairs or rudely undermines China’s normal cooperatio­n with some other countries. Washington does not intend to use rules to promote communicat­ion and balance of interests between China and the US, the two major powers with different political systems.

Has the US resorted to any rules in its moves to list Chinese companies including Huawei on its Entity List and to publicly call on allies to suppress the Chinese tech giant? We hope the Biden administra­tion abandons the rude manners of the Trump administra­tion and respects the rules to create new space for China and the US to engage in benign rules- based competitio­n – in a bid to profoundly reduce uncertaint­ies in internatio­nal relations.

China and the US have huge trade and cooperatio­n. The US is the stronger side in the bilateral relations. How can China- US relations be maintained under the logic that China has been violating the rules? China sincerely wishes the two countries will have a win- win outcome, whether cooperatin­g or competing with each other.

China almost started from scratch. But with its hardworkin­g people who are willing to contribute to the country of their own, China has developed fast. This is in line with the rules of how human society develops. The US will never succeed if it wants to set up rules to stop China from developing and stop the Chinese people from attaining a better life.

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

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