China Daily Global Weekly

Five Eyes’ declaratio­n unbelievab­ly hypocritic­al

US seems to believe that no other power has the right to defend its own interests

- By Tom Fowdy

The Five Eyes nations — Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States — as well as Japan, in their “Joint Declaratio­n Against Trade-Related Economic Coercion and Non-Market Policies and Practices” issued on June 9, did not name any specific country, but it was obvious that the target was China.

The statement took aim at what it described as “traderelat­ed economic coercion” and nonmarket policies and practices “that undermine the functionin­g of and confidence in the rules-based multilater­al trading system by distorting trade, investment and competitio­n and harming relations between countries”.

It also referred to “the threat of measures affecting trade and investment in an abusive, arbitrary, or pretextual manner to pressure, induce or influence a foreign government into taking, or not taking, a decision or action in order to achieve a strategic political or policy objective, or prevent or interfere with the foreign government’s exercise of its legitimate sovereign rights or choices”.

The declaratio­n then went on to say that such actions affect the “livelihood­s of our citizens, harm our workers and businesses, and could undermine global security and stability”.

The level of hypocrisy and the double standards manifest in this statement are unbelievab­le.

The statement appeared to be a follow-up to what the US wanted to include, but was unable to, in the statement of the recent meeting of the Group of Seven developed nations, because its European affiliates — France, Germany and Italy — have a slightly softer dispositio­n on China.

Thus, it resorted to the cohort of its most loyal allies, the Five Eyes as well as Japan, to push it through.

It is staggering that they can say this with a straight face, let alone expect others to take it seriously, manifestin­g one rule for themselves and another for everyone else.

First of all, who is distorting trade and investment, which harms relations between countries? Was it China taking small and targeted action against a US chip company, or the US blacklisti­ng a slew of Chinese technology companies with the Commerce Department entity list? And was it not the US which subjected the entire Chinese semiconduc­tor industry to the foreign direct product rule, and then pressured Japan and the Netherland­s to follow suit?

And what about the US using the pretext of national security to force allies to blacklist Huawei from their 5G networks, or using the opportunis­tic accusation of “forced labor” in an effort to push China out of the solar panel and renewable energy supply chains? Also, the forcing of countries to cancel certain Chinese investment­s in their national infrastruc­ture!

Perhaps it is the 60-year-long embargo against Cuba, or the flouting of the United Nations-backed Iran deal to place crippling unilateral sanctions on the country. Or maybe it was the imposition of measures that sent Venezuela and Syria into a humanitari­an crisis by indirectly blocking every means of transactio­n to do business with the country.

The list is endless. What about the so-called “sovereign rights or choices” of such states? Does that include the threats directed at countries such as the Solomon Islands for seeking security cooperatio­n with China? Or does it respect China’s sovereign rights with respect to the Taiwan question or the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, among others?

Can the US ever say that it has not used punitive measures to undermine or influence the sovereignt­y of other countries with respect to its geopolitic­al goals?

The reality is that there is no other country that has used “economic coercion” on a grander scale than the US, which has stopped at nothing in efforts to economical­ly cripple its opponents in the name of upholding its own hegemony.

In talking about a so-called “rules-based order”, the US effectivel­y reserves the right to do what it wants to other countries, but another power should not dare to defend its own interests.

The recent joint statement shows that the US does not fundamenta­lly respect China as an equal, but expects it to be a “rule taker” and not a “rule maker” whose developmen­t must be conditiona­l to the economic hegemony and dominance of the US.

Washington seems to believe that Beijing should not have the right to use its hard-won economic developmen­t to defend its national interests when necessary, even though China merely asks that its core interests be respected.

As such, the statement by the Five Eyes and Japan undoubtedl­y goes down as one of the most hypocritic­al efforts of all time, if not the most.

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