China Daily Global Weekly

US duplicity poses security threat

Double standard harms fight against terrorism, ploy to derail China’s growth

- Guo Fankong, an expert on antiterror­ism studies. The views do not necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

Editor’s note: The then US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had announced in November that the East Turkestan Islamic Movement will be delisted as a terrorist organizati­on even though the terrorist and separatist outfit remains a big threat to China and the rest of the world. Some experts share their views on the issue with China Daily. Excerpts follow:

Turning a blind eye to facts

Mike Pompeo, according to an official announceme­nt on the United States State Department website, decided to delist the East Turkestan Islamic Movement as a terrorist organizati­on in October 2020, citing the lack of conclusive evidence in this regard.

But contrary to Pompeo’s claim, the ETIM has become more active in recent years, expanding its activities in many regions including South Asia, Central Asia, Southeast Asia and the Middle East and thus poses a growing security threat to China and the world.

The ETIM is recognized as a terrorist organizati­on by the internatio­nal community and is banned by many countries and organizati­ons.

The US has turned a blind eye to these facts, confusing right with wrong and using double standard on terrorism. But its ploy to use terrorist outfits to derail China’s developmen­t and destabiliz­e the country will never succeed.

Since its establishm­ent, the ETIM has committed innumerabl­e crimes, causing heavy loss of lives and property and posing the most direct and realistic terrorist threat to China.

Since the late 1990s, the ETIM has set up bases in Pakistan, Afghanista­n and other countries and regions, trained and sent its members to “infiltrate” China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, and planned, incited and carried out a series of terrorist acts.

Since 2008, the ETIM has extended its tentacles to, and organized attacks in, other provinces and regions of China. In 2012 alone, it organized more than 190 violent and terrorist attacks in Xinjiang, the vast majority of these in southern Xinjiang.

During the past 20 years or so, the ETIM members, seeking refuge in many countries, have developed close links with al-Qaida and other dreaded terrorist organizati­ons, and become a notorious part of the global network of terrorists, posing a serious threat to not only China’s national security but also global peace and stability.

The internatio­nal community is worried about the atrocities committed by the ETIM and has taken a series of measures to prevent it from carrying out terrorist attacks, and many countries have added it to their lists of terrorist organizati­ons.

So by fabricatin­g a lie that there is a lack of evidence to prove the ETIM is still active and revoking its terrorist tag, the US has once again exposed its duplicity on terrorism — it will respect counter-terrorism efforts if they are beneficial to it, and if not, abandon, even violate them.

By resorting to double standard vis-a-vis terrorism, the US has caused great damage to not only the global fight against terrorism but also global governance.

The US has drawn up an “anti-terrorism blacklist” in total disregard of basic facts and the internatio­nal consensus to decide which outfits should be labeled “terrorist organizati­ons” and which countries are to be blamed for sponsoring terrorism based on its own political and economic interests.

Worse, the US uses such tags and accusation­s to interfere, many a time blatantly, in other countries’ internal affairs, so as to maintain its global hegemony.

Washington often reacts fiercely to terrorist attacks in the US or in its ally countries, and stands united with them.

Yet, when terrorists launch attacks in countries which the US sees as rivals or competitor­s, it remains indifferen­t and even tries to use socalled ethnic and/or religious problems in these countries to dilute the issue or give it a political twist.

The delisting of the ETIM by the US will not change the fact that it is a terrorist organizati­on, nor will it erase the security threat the outfit poses to the internatio­nal community.

China condemns the US’ unscrupulo­us move, and the internatio­nal community will not agree with the US on the issue.

For example, the official US State Department website uploaded Pompeo’s announceme­nt on Nov 5, yet the Comprehens­ive Financial Sanctions List the European Union released on Nov 12 continued to include the ETIM and one of its senior leaders as targets.

On Nov 17, the UN Security Council updated its list, continuing to treat the ETIM as a terrorist outfit.

China has made remarkable achievemen­ts in combating terrorism — for almost four years, there has been no violent terrorist incident in China — while Xinjiang has made unpreceden­ted achievemen­ts on the economic and social fronts, and greatly improved people’s livelihood­s there.

Moreover, people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang today have a growing sense of gain, happiness and security.

Therefore, it is time for the US to abandon double standard on terrorism and stop supporting the ETIM, otherwise it would also get burned by the fire it has been fanning.

A research team on anti-terrorism studies.

Underminin­g global counter-terrorism efforts

Since the beginning of the 21st century, the global fight against terrorism has made some encouragin­g progress, but there is still a long way to go before complete victory can be achieved. In fact, some countries and regions have even seen the expansion of terrorist organizati­ons.

Contrary to popular belief, terrorist attacks increased, not decreased, in 2020 despite the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The world experience­d at least 2,000 attacks by the end of November last year, much more than those in the whole of 2019.

An important reason for this is that some countries, led by the US, have adopted double standard on terrorism and, by politicizi­ng the fight against terrorism, made the counter-terrorism operations more complex.

The US’ decision to delist the ETIM as a terrorist organizati­on is a result of its unilateral policies and Cold War mentality, which shows the country is not really combating terrorism, but seeking political gains under the pretext of fighting terrorism.

As China’s key battlegrou­nd in the fight against terrorism, separatism and religious extremism, Xinjiang is at the forefront of the internatio­nal fight against terrorism.

Drawing on the experience­s of the internatio­nal community, China attaches equal importance to fighting and preventing terrorism.

That is why while cracking down on terrorists and terrorism-related crimes, China has also taken strict measures to better protect the human rights of the people in Xinjiang by strengthen­ing the nine-year compulsory education system, establishi­ng education and training centers, and vigorously combating poverty, so as to maintain social stability and prosperity in the region.

It is a pity that the US, which experience­d the devastatin­g Sept 11, 2001, terrorist attacks has not only turned a blind eye to Xinjiang’s economic growth, social stability, and religious harmony, but is also deliberate­ly misinterpr­eting the measures to “protect human rights” and guarantee “religious freedom” in Xinjiang to tarnish China’s counterter­rorism efforts and support the ETIM.

The US is also using longarm jurisdicti­on by sanctionin­g Chinese companies and officials to interfere in China’s internal affairs.

The Xinjiang issue is not about human rights, or ethnic or religious freedom. It is about combating terrorism and violence, defeating separatist forces, and deradicali­zing indoctrina­ted youth.

The US claims it is trying to “safeguard” the human rights and freedom of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, but by supporting the ETIM, it is actually seriously threatenin­g the safety of more than 20 million people of all ethnic groups in the region.

The US has become the biggest disrupting force in the global fight against terrorism by supporting, conniving with and using terrorist outfits to fulfill its own narrow gains.

The threat posed by terrorism and extremism remains grave, and the global fight against terrorism requires all countries to reach a consensus on counter-terrorism, enhance mutual trust, promote exchanges and cooperatio­n, and consolidat­e counter-terrorism efforts.

By taking a duplicitou­s stance on terrorism, the US has undermined global counter-terrorism efforts. And it will only bring disaster to the world, and itself, if it does not change its biased and politicall­y motivated stance on terrorism.

 ?? LIMIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LIMIN / CHINA DAILY

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