China Daily

China a true diplomatic power for Global South

- The author currently serves as a director of BRISL, an independen­t and pioneering Sri Lanka-led organizati­on, with strong expertise in Belt and Road Initiative advice and support. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

The Lowy Institute recently published the 2024 Global Diplomacy Index, which is an interactiv­e tool that maps the world’s most significan­t diplomatic networks. The index allows people to see where these countries and regions have invested in diplomacy, how they compare to each other in terms of their global diplomatic footprints, how their diplomatic networks have evolved over time, and where they seek to exercise those networks to expand influence.

As per the 2024 GPI, China is the world’s largest diplomatic power, with a wider presence across the globe than the United States. Beijing had a total of 274 diplomatic posts, while Washington had 271, according to the report. Regionally, China has a heavier presence in geopolitic­ally contested Africa (60:56 posts), East Asia (44:27), the Pacific island countries (9:8) and Central Asia (7:6) than the US. As for the US, it leads in Europe (78:73), North and Central America (40:24) and South Asia (12:10). Both countries have an equal number of posts in the Middle East (17) and South America (15).

This shows China has emerged as a formidable player in the Global South. Turkiye and India, too, have rapidly expanded their diplomatic networks across the world, with Turkiye rising to 3rd place on the index and India to 13th.

The success of China’s diplomacy can be attributed to its Chinese characteri­stics, style and ethos, and its goal of promoting the well-being of all by building a community with a shared future for mankind. Another factor in China’s favour is that, as a member of the Global South, it always stands on the side of developing countries.

China believes all countries, regardless of size, should be treated as equals in a multipolar world, and should be able to exert their influence, while it rejects hegemonism and power politics. It also believes that true democracy should be promoted in internatio­nal relations, the United Nations Charter should be adhered to by all countries, and multilater­alism should be upheld.

The geopolitic­al landscape has changed drasticall­y in recent years, with the world witnessing the rise of new and diverse global powers capable of wielding influence in both the global market and the global governance system.

China has been reiteratin­g that it will always try to become self-reliant but will fulfil all its internatio­nal responsibi­lities as a responsibl­e major country. It has also been reiteratin­g that it will always uphold fairness and justice, help build an equitable and orderly multipolar world and uphold the equality of all countries.

The China-brokered rapprochem­ent between Iran and Saudi Arabia in March last year led to the re-establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between the two Middle East countries after seven years, which was a diplomatic victory for China. Since then, things have changed for the better in Middle East diplomacy, as evident in Syria’s readmissio­n to the Arab League in May 2023 after a 12-year suspension.

China released documents titled “China’s Position on the Political Settlement of the Ukraine Crisis” in February 2023 and the “Position Paper of the People’s Republic of China on Resolving the Palestinia­n-Israeli Conflict” in November 2023.

China’s position on the Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Palestine conflicts that they should be peacefully resolved, along with the West’s double standard on the Gaza crisis, has further widened the Western world’s gap with the Global South. As a result, more and more countries, especially those in the Global South, to ensure their future is in their own hands, demand that internatio­nal rules be written together by all countries, global affairs be jointly handled and developmen­t benefits be shared by all.

The US and its Western allies have for long been trying to impose Western values and political system on other countries in the name of promoting democracy and protecting human rights, and even bullying emerging market and developing economies to take sides.

In contrast, China has always advocated and pursued win-win cooperatio­n. Indeed, win-win cooperatio­n is the core principle of China’s diplomacy. China’s diplomatic moves in 2023 show that it really wants to restore lasting peace across the world by helping end conflicts, contributi­ng to global developmen­t, and improving the existing world order.

China also advocates that conflicts be resolved through dialogue, which gains added importance in the face of the more than two-year-old Russia-Ukraine conflict and the five-month-long Israel-Palestine conflict that has claimed more than 30,000 Palestinia­n lives, the majority of them children and women.

The geopolitic­al landscape has changed drasticall­y in recent years, with the world witnessing the rise of new and diverse global powers capable of wielding influence in both the global market and the global governance system. The Global South, emerging as a key player in internatio­nal relations, is no longer reluctant to say how world affairs should be run so it can get its due benefits.

Like it or not, the US and its Western allies have to heed the Global South concerns, and take measures to address them by reforming the global financial architectu­re and improving the global governance system. Otherwise, the Global South, with BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on, will lead the charge to reform the global financial structure and improve the global governance system. And China, with its unique diplomacy, will provide the leadership to the Global South in this noble cause.

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