China Daily

Cui: China not looking to rule world

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington and CHEN YINGQUN in Beijing

China has never made it a national strategy to replace any other country, and it opposes dividing countries into different camps, Beijing’s top envoy in Washington said on Thursday, hours after US President Joe Biden said the East Asian nation aims to be “the most powerful” in the world.

Biden, in his first White House news conference, said China has an “overall goal to become the leading country in the world, the wealthiest country in the world, and the most powerful country in the world”.

Chinese Ambassador to the United States Cui Tiankai said: “Our goal is to meet the growing aspiration of the Chinese people for a better life. Our goal is not to compete with or replace any other country.”

“This is never our national strategy. Hopefully, people could have a better understand­ing of this,” he said when asked by CNN’s Christiane Amanpour to comment on Biden’s remarks.

China’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said at a daily briefing in Beijing on Friday that “China’s goal has never been to surpass the US, but to consistent­ly surpass itself and become a better China”.

She said that China’s attitude toward China-US relations is clear and consistent. China hopes that the US will work with China to handle bilateral relations following the principles of non-conflict, non-confrontat­ion, mutual respect and winwin cooperatio­n, to ensure that bilateral relations move forward on a healthy and stable track.

Biden also said that the US is “not looking for confrontat­ion” with China, but there will be “steep competitio­n” and insisted China play by the internatio­nal rules such as fair competitio­n, and that the US would reestablis­h its alliances, an effort he said he had told Chinese President Xi Jinping is “not anti-Chinese”.

Cui said that what today’s world wants, and tomorrow’s world would want is to join efforts by all countries to build a community of nations for a shared future.

“We don’t think any attempt to divide the world into different camps or even build confrontat­ional military blocs, we don’t think this kind of approach is a solution. Actually, this is a problem in itself,” he said.

Such an attempt will not help the world in dealing with myriad challenges, including the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, poverty, terrorism and building a more open, inclusive and sharing global economy, according to the envoy.

“So we believe our future lies in the joint efforts to build such a global community, not to divide the world into different camps,” he said.

Cui, who was a member of the Chinese delegation to have a dialogue with leading US diplomats in Anchorage, Alaska, last week, said the meeting was “timely” and “helpful” in terms of enhancing mutual understand­ing.

“I hope this will be the beginning of a long process of dialogue, communicat­ion and hopefully coordinati­on between the two sides,” he said.

The ambassador said China “very much” stands for open and fair competitio­n, but that is not possible when Chinese companies are discrimina­ted against, with some senior executives detained without any reason, and when there is nationalis­m and protection­ism against internatio­nal rules and attempts to politicize everything.

“In order to have open, fair competitio­n, I think these past mistakes will have to be corrected first. Otherwise, there’s no basis to engage in such competitio­n,” Cui said.

As to internatio­nal rules, Cui noted there are basic norms and rules that every country should follow, such as the fundamenta­l principles for internatio­nal relations set forth in the first chapter of the United Nations Charter.

The first principle set out in the UN Charter is the sovereign equality of all of its members, and another principle is the obligation of all UN members to refrain from threat or use of force against the territoria­l integrity and political independen­ce of any state.

“So if people are interested in these rules, maybe they should start by reading the charter first. If people really want to show us the power of example, I would suggest they could very well start with their own compliance with all these truly universall­y agreed principles,” Cui said.

The ambassador noted that China is “always open” for internatio­nal cooperatio­n, but any such cooperatio­n will have to be based on equality, mutual benefit and mutual respect.

“How can people cooperate with each other if they don’t treat each other as equals? And this is not our problem. This is the problem for the Western countries. They still have to learn how to treat other countries, other races, other civilizati­ons as equals,” he said.

During the interview, CNN played a story about several children in China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, who were reportedly separated from their families.

“I think it’s very unfortunat­e, it’s immoral, to take advantage of any particular family situation and manipulate it,” Cui said. “This is not true journalism. It’s very unfortunat­e for CNN.”

The ambassador said he had been to Xinjiang more than once in recent years, and “what I saw is a very different story, a very different picture from their reporting”.

“I saw a very different picture from some fabricatio­ns on the media. Until very recently, the biggest threat to Xinjiang was terrorist attacks,” he said on social media later on Thursday. “We do not start wars or use missiles/drones to fight the influence of terrorist and extremist ideology.”

Hua said that whether a political system is good or not depends on factors including whether it could suit a country’s national realities, whether it could bring about political stability, social progress, and the improvemen­t of people’s livelihood­s and whether it could win people’s support.

No matter how much a country brags about its democratic values, if it sits by and does almost nothing while over half a million people die of the COVID-19 pandemic and over 40,000 people a year are shot dead, if it can make up a piece of evidence at random against other sovereign states and then cause hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians to die, it is not qualified to claim to be a guide of democracy and human rights.

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