China Daily Global Weekly

China seeks peace but is not afraid of war

While wanting no trouble, the nation will always stand up for what is right

- By XIE GUIJUAN The author is a professor of Internatio­nal politics at Yanbian University, Jilin province. The views do not necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

Seventy years ago, the Chinese People’s Volunteers made the historic decision to enter the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea to fight the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea (195053) in order to safeguard peace and thwart expansioni­sm. Despite the many odds including the military disparity between the US-led forces and the Chinese-Korean side, the Chinese People’s Volunteers fought with all they had to resist US aggression and prevented the war from spreading and threatenin­g China’s national security and territoria­l integrity.

China made the hard decision to go to war to safeguard national security and territoria­l integrity, a move that improved China’s internatio­nal standing and demonstrat­ed the bravery of the Chinese people in the fight against a superpower to defend peace and sovereignt­y.

China has always believed in resolving contentiou­s issues through peaceful talks and establishi­ng good relations with other countries. It does not believe in using power or force to get its way and, instead, believes in friendship and win-win cooperatio­n.

Throughout history, China has attached great importance to propriety, especially when establishi­ng or strengthen­ing relations with neighborin­g countries. Military force should be used only when diplomatic communicat­ions fail, and that too to restore stability and normalcy. No wonder China and its neighbors in East Asia have enjoyed friendly relations for decades.

The Chinese People’s Volunteers went to the DPRK a year after the founding of the People’s Republic of China. At that time, apart from

China by nature being a peace-loving country, the Chinese people had had enough of war and were desperatel­y longing for a peaceful life. But the Korean War, which broke out in 1950, spread to the border areas of China posing a grave risk to China’s national security and territoria­l integrity.

Since the Chinese people knew the consequenc­es of being weak — invasions and exploitati­ons by powerful countries for example — they decided to join the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea. As Chairman Mao Zedong said, China is in favor of peace but not afraid of war. Traditiona­lly, the Chinese people believe in the philosophy of not attacking unless being attacked.

China was forced to fight against a stronger power, but thanks to their arduous and superhuman efforts, the Chinese People’s Volunteers proved wrong the myth of the US military being undefeatab­le, and succeeded in safeguardi­ng sovereignt­y, and winning peace for the nation. And by doing so, they won the respect of the internatio­nal community.

Seventy years later, thanks to more than four decades of reform and opening-up, China is close to becoming a moderately prosperous society in all respects and realizing national rejuvenati­on. But today anti-globalizat­ion, unilateral­ism and protection­ism pose serious challenges to global economic developmen­t and global stability. And given that the US-led West appears hostile toward China, the country still faces a difficult external environmen­t.

China continues to firmly oppose hegemony and power politics, and remains committed to playing the role of a peacemaker. Whether it is strong or not, China has no intention of indulging in expansioni­sm or becoming a hegemonic power. This has been, and will remain, China’s consistent position.

In a speech marking the 70th anniversar­y of the CPV entering the DPRK in the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, President Xi Jinping reiterated that the Chinese people are afraid of neither trouble nor troublemak­ers, and that the Chinese nation can neither be intimidate­d nor crushed.

It shows that China will continue to help maintain global peace and developmen­t while strongly safeguardi­ng sovereignt­y and peace, and defending national security and territoria­l integrity.

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