The Manila Times

World braces for blowback from Xi lifetime power play in China

- AFP

BEIJING - ward lifelong rule has largely been met by guarded silence in world capitals as government­s try to predict how China’s formidable leader will wield his newfound power on the global stage.

The Communist Party’s move to lift supreme as he pushes through an ambitious agenda to turn China into a military and economic superpower by mid-century.

really know what he wants to use it for,” said Kerry Brown, the director of the Lau China Institute at King’s College London.

“If it’s to address the challenges that need sorting out in China then that will be a good thing. If not, then it will be deeply problemati­c.”

China is already causing global jitters with its growing assertiven­ess, from its territoria­l claims in the South overseas military base in the Horn across the Western world.

internatio­nal infrastruc­ture projects in history, the $1 trillion Belt and Road initiative, which has drawn both interest and suspicion about China’s intentions.

At the same time, it is teetering on the brink of a trade war with the world’s largest economy, the United States.

At home, the move has been hailed by state media as a necessary measure to usher in an era of “stability” that will provide a reassuring beacon of hope to countries spooked by the turmoil of American politics.

country for a very long time, it’s guaranteed that foreign relations will be stable - tics expert at Fudan University, told AFP.

‘Autocrat for life’

The Communist Party’s constituti­onal amendment is certain to be approved by the rubber-stamp National People’s Congress when it begins its annual session next week, which will enable

Where countries stand on the move largely depends on where they sit.

In Russia, whose President Vladimir Putin’s unyielding grasp on power is often cited as a model for was largely positive, according to Alexander Gabuev, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Moscow Center.

Although some China-watchers expressed concern that China could slip back into Mao-style authoritar­ianism, in power beyond 2023 is a good thing,” especially as “relations with the West are hitting new lows every month.”

growing suspicions about China in Western countries.

After the election of Donald Trump in the US, China tried to step into the vacuum created by his rapid withdrawal from internatio­nal trade pacts and environmen­tal agreements.

- ing the importance of globalizat­ion earned rapturous reviews from liberal politician­s.

But “getting permission from a rubber stamp legislativ­e branch to become autocrat-for-life only undermines the ability of democratic leaders to afford such respect,” said Orville Schell, director of the Center on US-China Relations at the Asia Society in New York.

It will look particular­ly bad in Aus States, where concerns about China’s growing power and how it chooses to exercise it have increasing­ly preoccupie­d lawmakers.

The White House has avoided criticism of the move, saying the decision was “up to China.”

But “there’s been a lot more concern about China and what it wants abroad,” said Eric Hundman, an internatio­nal relations expert at NYU Shanghai.

“Everybody’s going to read this as he’s going to become a dictator, which makes China look much more threatenin­g.”

Surrounded by sycophants

that China’s own foreign policy will likely become more assertive, said Bonnie Glaser, a China expert at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

If the term limit repeal is a sign of increasing­ly be surrounded by sycophants and yes-men.

objective input and advice. He may achieve,” Glaser said.

That could mean a China that is “even more aggressive” in its use of economic coercion and its assertion of its territoria­l rights in places like the East and South China Sea, where it has longstandi­ng disputes with its neighbors.

apparent power grab is a sign of weakness, then that “may lead to actions on China’s part that look irrational... but are directed at domestic audiences.”

He could do things such as threatenin­g Taiwan that are aimed at “whipping up popular support. They would look very provocativ­e to us, from a foreign perspectiv­e, but they may not be intended that way.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines