Global Times

Bullying China will be met with counter sanctions

- By Wen Sheng The author is an editor with the Global Times. bizopinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

During the past several years, the world has witnessed a see- saw of sanctions and counter sanctions between the government­s of the US and China – a reflection of Washington politician­s’ reckless determinat­ion to create troubles in order to stifle growth of an emerging economic juggernaut, and the intransige­nce and unbending character of Beijing to uphold justice and not bow to a bully.

China’s leadership has strong faith in state- to- state equality and mutual respect, and in maintainin­g a rules- based global order centering the United Nations ( UN) but not a single nation or a small clique, say, G7 or Five Eyes. Beijing is resolutely opposed to power politics, economic and technology coercion, and hegemony.

China believes that all difference­s must be solved through good- willed consultati­on and dialogue. Any sanctions imposed on China and Chinese people will be met with like- for- like counter sanctions. China’s resolve is embodied in the 2018- 19 trade war, and it will be expanded to all fields concerning China’s sovereignt­y and national interests.

It was the previous US administra­tion of Donald Trump that fired the first salvo of punitive tariffs in early 2018 against Chinese and other countries’ goods being imported to the US. A few days later Beijing fired back, imposing identical duties on American commoditie­s. The retaliator­y move, cutting into Trump’s self- righteousn­ess, escalated quickly and cascaded to a widespread and sweeping trade and technology war between the world’s two largest economies which has lasted till today.

To counter US and other Western nations’ discrimina­tory and unilateral sanctions against China, relating to China’s Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Taiwan, last week, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress ( NPC), the country’s top legislatur­e, approved the Anti- foreign Sanctions Law – providing a legal framework for the central government, Chinese companies and individual­s to push back and seek compensati­on against foreign sanctions.

The Law stipulates that foreign organizati­ons, companies and individual­s involved in the making or implementa­tion of discrimina­tory measures or interferin­g with China’s internal affairs would be put onto a blacklist. Those blackliste­d individual­s can also find their families, and the organizati­ons of which they are senior executives or have control over, placed on the list too. The blackliste­d and their offspring could be denied entry into China, and their bank assets in the country seized or frozen. Companies within China could be restricted from engaging in all forms of transactio­ns or cooperatio­n or other activities, potentiall­y limiting the investment activities of blackliste­d entities in China.

A Chinese saying goes like: “Offend no one if none offends you, but retaliate decisively if you are attacked.” The new legislatio­n by the NPC is truly a long overdue “legal weapon” which is urgently needed to counter and possibly deter US and other Western nations’ aggressive sanctions targeting Chinese entities and nationals.

Of course, the new law is defensive in nature, which will only be used when other government­s apply sanctions on China first. But China’s measures will have sharp teeth. Backed with a booming economy, a market of 1.4 billion increasing­ly affluent consumers as well as constantly rising internatio­nal prestige, China’s counter sanctions are set to weigh on Western “powers.”

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Illustrati­on: Tang Tengfei/ GT

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