China Daily Global Edition (USA)

At United Nations, Biden talks peace but serves up hypocrisy

- By ZHAO RUINAN zhaoruinan@chinadaily.com.cn Agencies and Jan Yumul in Hong Kong contribute­d to this story.

In his debut speech at the United Nations General Assembly, US President Joe Biden said the United States is not “seeking a new Cold War or a world divided into rigid blocs”. But, for many experts, the rhetoric is laden with hypocrisy in standing in sharp contrast with Washington’s actions in recent months.

Biden’s speech on Tuesday came as world leaders, in person and on screen, returned to the United Nations’ foremost gathering for the first time in the pandemic era, with the climate crisis and the world’s worsening divisions taking center stage.

Biden said the US will “compete vigorously” with other major powers while emphasizin­g that the country does not want a new Cold War or the emergence of “rigid blocs”.

He also told world leaders that the US is moving from “relentless war” to “relentless diplomacy”, stressing the need for global unity to address the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change.

“We’re opening a new era of relentless diplomacy, of using the power of our developmen­t aid to invest in new ways of lifting people up around the world,” Biden said.

But Xu Liping, a researcher at the National Institute of Internatio­nal Strategy of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said Biden’s speech runs counter to what the US has been doing.

“The speech is actually a slap in the face to the US. The so-called new

Cold War refers to the actions that take another country as an ‘imaginary enemy’ who holds a different ideology, and decouple with the target country, throw sanctions on it and even threaten it, as well as care only about the interests of small blocs with its allies,” Xu said.

“The US has been curbing Chinese technologi­cal companies, decoupling from China in scientific and technology fields and strengthen­ing its military presence in the South China Sea. Aren’t these gestures of a new Cold War?”

Biden also boasted that the US, under his watch, had reached a turning point with the end of military operations in Afghanista­n last month, closing out the country’s longest war. That set the stage, he said, for his administra­tion to shift its attention to intensive diplomacy at a moment when there is no shortage of crises facing the globe.

“Today, many of our greatest concerns cannot be solved or even addressed by the force of arms,” he said. “Bombs and bullets cannot defend against COVID-19 or its future variants.”

Chen Xiangyang, director of the Institute of World Political Studies at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, said Biden’s speech amounts to a heavy dose of political propaganda.

“Biden’s wording demonstrat­es hypocrisy and duplicity, aimed at building a good and friendly image of the US. But the words are inconsiste­nt with the deeds,” said Chen, cautioning the internatio­nal community to observe the US’ moves while listening to its words.

Biden’s debut at the UN General Assembly also came amid Washington’s rift with Paris. The blow-up resulted from a three-way agreement between the US, the United Kingdom and Australia that undercut a more than $60 billion submarine deal with France in favor of a plan to equip Australia with nuclearpow­ered submarines.

The three sides also announced a new security partnershi­p known as AUKUS, which has sparked strong criticism from leaders of the European Union.

French Foreign Minister JeanYves Le Drian said on Monday there was a “crisis of trust” with the US as a result of the episode.

Biden wasn’t so concerned. Asked by a reporter as he arrived at the UN on Tuesday on how he planned to repair relations with the French, Biden responded with two words: “They’re great.”

Biden explicitly said that the US is not seeking a new Cold War. However, the advent of AUKUS sends a different signal, said Muhammad Abdul Basit, a political scientist in Pakistan with a focus on internatio­nal relations and sociopolit­ical issues.

Chen said: “It’s obvious that the rift between the US and its allies is enlarging because the US continues to promote the ‘America First’ and is self-centered. The fragmentat­ion is the result of its self-serving policies.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States