China Daily Global Weekly

Xi displays exemplary leadership in WEF talk

Chinese president shows can-do spirit as he speaks of tackling global problems

- By XBixlxvxee­xrxSxixnxg­xh

In the midst of worsening Sino-American relations amid various global and regional geopolitic­al issues, the pandemic and trade frictions, Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered a special address on Jan 17 to the 2022 World Economic Forum virtual session.

The key themes that underlined his speech demonstrat­ed the rise of a world leader in Xi, as well as China as a country. In a speech full of symbolism and anecdotes, Xi talked of his country’s willingnes­s to provide additional COVID-19 vaccines, the urgent need for global collaborat­ion to overcome political, economic, security and health crises and gridlocks as well as to jettison Cold War approaches and mentality to world challenges.

Anyway you cut it, it was clear that the Chinese leader’s speech was aimed at delivering a powerful message against the politics of divide and rule and oneupmansh­ip, and instead called for a win-win approach to world problems.

Essentiall­y, Xi’s speech was about optimism, confidence, forward-looking and being problem solving, be it through exemplary leadership at home or abroad. Clearly, the “Century of Humiliatio­n” is behind China today. At a time of non-stop crises around the world, Xi attempted to provide a stable hand and anchor that aims to push the clouds of uncertaint­y away and assert a can-do human spirit.

China and the Asian region, directly and indirectly, were being projected as the future, be it in the political, economic, strategic or even innovation domains. Without referring to it as the Asian paradigm, Xi talked of endemic multiple crises that if left unaddresse­d could deal a great setback to those who fail to tackle them, to the detriment of the people under such leaders.

People simply cannot live on empty words or hyped media promises of feeling good.

It is believed by many across the world that the West — the United States as well as Western Europe — is in perpetual and deep crisis. This is because their system of governance is in jeopardy as democracy has failed, and Western hegemony of more than 500 years is in regression and, in many countries of the West, they are in one form of lifesuppor­t or another. This was best evident in the Capitol Hill attack on Jan 6 in Washington last year, on the so-called citadel of American democracy.

In short, the West is in decline and this trouble is going to worsen as it has been losing its leadership, is incapable of addressing crises, most of which are of its own creation. The decline of the West cannot be reversed, as the crisis is a terminal one.

In the words of Xi, while small boats may not survive a storm, “a giant ship is strong enough to brave a storm”. However, China is not going to lead the world through ideologica­l or military power but rather through cooperativ­e efforts.

Rather than through the “Monroe”, “Truman”, “Eisenhower”, “Carter” or even “Bush” Doctrines, China is going to lead the world through example and more important, by helping others to address and overcome their multiple internal and external challenges, including the threat of hegemony by the West.

The championin­g of economic globalizat­ion, the need to build bridges — not walls — to promote economic growth, open integratio­n, fostering internatio­nalism rather than nationalis­m, the dangers of unilateral­ism and protection­ism, the threat of bullying and hegemony, the need to be sensitive to climate change and environmen­tal protection, and the all-important goal of common prosperity, were recurrent themes that Xi outlined throughout his speech.

Even though Xi has not left China since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, his statesmans­hip in the midst of the global political, economic and health crisis cannot be denied or dismissed.

Clearly, after the terrible injustice inflicted by the West on China since the mid-nineteenth century, today, China has arrived as a great power and Xi’s speech was a testimony of this.

By using Chinese characteri­stics to describe China’s leadership, including the need to “add wings to the tiger” as the Year of the Tiger, the zodiac sign in the Chinese calendar, is about to arrive, Xi is clearly showing a different China, more confident and articulate, and where the words are backed by deeds and sheer power of China as a modern state.

This involves not just talking about strength but also using it for goodwill, as evident from the fact that 2 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines have already been exported by China to 120 countries and another 1 billion will be provided, including a donation of 600 million doses to Africa and 150 million

Xi’s speech is about how to move forward in a world that is wracked by multiple crises and where the West is losing its leadership role and the capacity to lead.

doses to the neighbors in Southeast Asia.

The West combined is nowhere near China in this regard.

In the final analysis, Xi’s speech is about how to move forward in a world that is wracked by multiple crises and where the West is losing its leadership role and the capacity to lead, something that many took for granted since the end of the Second World War.

With the all-round withering of the West, both internally and externally, and Washington’s downsizing of its “global policeman” duties, best evident from its retreats from Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n, the world is at a cusp of a new world order and where the role and importance of China is likely to be in terms of being the primus inter pares as far as global decision-making and agenda-setting are concerned.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States