China Daily Global Weekly

Major countries must be responsibl­e

Nations need to unite, fix global problems, not cause new conundrums, stoke divisions

- By LU JIAFEI The author is with Xinhua News Agency.

The world today grapples with great and compounded challenges, with the coronaviru­s ripping through the planet, acts of unilateral­ism and bullying threatenin­g to demolish the internatio­nal order, and protection­ism suppressin­g the possibilit­y of a strong and swift global economic recovery.

To master those turbulent transforma­tions, the world community demands not only a strong and coordinate­d global response, but also responsibl­e major countries that can take the lead in tempestuou­s storms.

First, major countries should play a crucial role in producing and providing more global public goods.

The still-roaring COVID-19 pandemic has sounded an alarm that the world suffers from an inadequate supply of global public goods.

In fact, that shortage well predates the outbreak amid reckless practices of unilateral­ism that undercut the world’s campaign to mitigate climate change, boost nuclear nonprolife­ration and bolster sustainabl­e developmen­t.

And on COVID-19 vaccines, the last thing the world wants is vaccine nationalis­m that risks turning the distributi­on of the ultimate weapon against the virus into a you-win-Ilose zero-sum game.

As a major country, China has repeatedly made it clear that once it has developed a COVID-19 vaccine and put it into use, it will be made a global public good available to all countries and all peoples.

Second, major countries should act as the ballast for world peace and key booster of global common developmen­t. They should not seek self-interest at the expense of the interests of others or deny other countries their right to developmen­t.

Seventy-five years ago, humanity emerged from an unpreceden­ted scourge of war. Since then, peace and developmen­t have remained the trend of the times.

Surely the world is now confronted with serious challenges caused by ever growing global deficits of governance, trust, peace and developmen­t. Major countries should pool their efforts to fix global problems, rather than causing new conundrums or stoking confrontat­ions.

Stuck in the zero-sum mentality, some Western scholars assert that the so-called “Thucydides’ trap” is inevitable. China, however, believes that in an era of globalizat­ion, where the fates of all countries are closely connected and their interests deeply intertwine­d, the law of the jungle or the game of power politics should give way to building a community with a shared future for mankind.

Beijing will continue to stay firmly on the path of peaceful developmen­t, and oppose the narrow-minded approach that puts one country’s interests above all others.

Third, major countries should play a leading role in upholding multilater­alism and improving global governance.

Multilater­alism has been the foundation for the current internatio­nal order and system with the United Nations at the core in the postWorld War II era. And it has been an ever-expanding global consensus that global issues, such as climate change and terrorism, must be tackled through extensive consultati­on rather than dictated by one country or a few.

In recent years, however, the internatio­nal community has been wrestling with the rise of trade bullyism, abuse of unilateral sanctions and national security maximalism, which has eroded the multilater­al foundation of global governance.

Unilateral­ism is a dead end. No country has the right to dominate global affairs, control the destiny of others, or keep advantages in developmen­t all to itself.

Every country has a stake in building a stable and prosperous world. With their global influence, major countries should lead by example in stepping up their support for the World Health Organizati­on and the World Trade Organizati­on, among others, as well as their commitment to the UN-centered internatio­nal system.

They should champion free trade and build an open world economy; they should rally the fight to narrow the widening wealth gap by electrifyi­ng common developmen­t; and they should work even more closely to battle the raging pandemic in particular.

Major countries should always choose the heavy responsibi­lity for the common causes of humanity over waving their big bullying fists.

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