China Daily Global Edition (USA)

For the sake of everyone, another Cold War must be avoided

- By David Cottam

There has been much recent speculatio­n in Western media about whether a new Cold War is imminent or has actually started. If either interpreta­tion is correct, it is a depressing reminder that the lessons of history are rarely learned.

The original Cold War, between the West and the Soviet Union, lasted for over 40 years and was marked by a constant state of propaganda, demonizati­on, suspicion, nuclear proliferat­ion and fear on both sides of the ideologica­l divide.

After the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and East-West relations were normalized, the irrational­ity of the Cold War era was laid bare for everyone to see. Travel, trade and cultural links replaced the previously ingrained hostility, and the truth dawned on both sides of the “Iron Curtain” that people (as opposed to government­s) are fundamenta­lly the same everywhere and that much more unites us than divides us.

A generation later, this lesson seems to have been forgotten, with the inevitabil­ity of a new Cold War being constantly talked up in the West and in the United States in particular. Propaganda and demonizati­on are once again in the ascendancy, but this time with China replacing the former Soviet Union as the West’s nemesis. According to a Pew Research Center survey in March last year, 83 percent of US adults surveyed had negative views about China, and 44 percent saw China as an enemy of the US.

This is not surprising, given the constant drip feed of anti-China rhetoric from US politician­s and journalist­s. Attacks on Chinese policies and actions appear in the Western media on an almost daily basis. Favorite targets for condemnati­on are China’s growing technologi­cal power, allegation­s of human rights abuses, policies in the South China Sea, the Belt and Road Initiative, US-China trade imbalances, tensions over Taiwan, and even Chinese efforts to mediate peace in Ukraine.

China’s motives are invariably portrayed in the US as being sinister, even when Beijing is attempting to broker peace. Given this backdrop, it’s hardly surprising that the average American views China negatively and that talk of a new Cold War is pervasive.

However, there is a glimmer of hope that the Cold War mentality can be reversed in the future. The findings of the Pew Research Center show that younger Americans who were surveyed tended to have more positive views of China, were more open to opportunit­ies for engagement and cooperatio­n with China, and preferred to prioritize multilater­alism over unilateral­ism. This encouragin­g finding chimes with the views of young people everywhere that internatio­nal rivalries and Cold War mentalitie­s are not only backward-looking and destructiv­e, but detract from the No 1 priority of worldwide cooperatio­n to tackle the growing threats posed by climate change.

Climate change is clearly the most pressing problem faced by the world and requires all countries to unite and cooperate in

addressing it. Rather than focusing on new Cold War rhetoric, politician­s and journalist­s everywhere should be laser sharp in getting across the vital message that our collective future requires not just putting an end to Cold War politics, not just peacefully coexisting, but actively cooperatin­g across all continents and ideologies.

For the future of the planet, the current hawkish mentality of so many older politician­s needs to give way to the wisdom of youth.

If we need reminding of the urgency of internatio­nal cooperatio­n on climate change, we only have to look at the big news stories. Record-breaking temperatur­es, horrendous wildfires and floods, droughts, warming seas and melting ice caps were all in the headlines during the summer last year.

All countries are aware of the problem and the need to speed up the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources. China, the US and the European Union have all made good progress in this direction, but much more needs to be done. The United Nations’ Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change has calculated that unless more urgent action is taken on carbon emissions, the world will pass a key threshold within the next 10 years, with dire and irreversib­le consequenc­es for future generation­s.

If we are to avoid such a catastroph­e, all available resources need to be deployed. A huge step in this direction would be for the world’s two most powerful countries and largest economies, the US and China, to abandon Cold War rhetoric and posturing, agree to reduce the enormous sums spent on the military, and cooperate in diverting the hundreds of billions of dollars so saved into a concerted effort to slow or even reverse global warming.

To stoke the flames of a new Cold War is completely irrational at a time when both sides need to combine their resources to fight the real war against climate change.

Young people are clearly the ones most at risk from global warming. In this context, it is hardly surprising that those young people surveyed in the US were more positive about China and more in favor of multilater­al cooperatio­n than were older Americans. I am sure that such sentiments would be replicated among young people worldwide. It is surely the duty of older generation­s to acknowledg­e this wisdom of youth and the morality of their position. Cold War warriors are now a dangerous anachronis­m. What is needed more than ever is for the US and China to lead the world by uniting as climate warriors.

Young people are clearly the ones most at risk from global warming. In this context, it is hardly surprising that those young people surveyed in the US were more positive about China and more in favor of multilater­al cooperatio­n than were older Americans.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States