Gulf Today

Italy’s drive to join China’s Belt and Road hits potholes

With ports that offer easy gateways to Europe’s richest markets, Italy is a promising and prestigiou­s prize for China and at the same time raises fears in US

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The ancient Silk Road was a network of trading routes that stretched from China to Italy, transporti­ng goods, skills and ideas half way around the world.

Jump forward two millennia and Italy now wants to play a pivotal role in the new Silk Road being created by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

But joining the latest incarnatio­n is proving controvers­ial and risky for Rome’s modern-day masters. Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte plans to sign a preliminar­y accord when Xi visits Rome shortly, hooking Italy up to the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) - a colossal, multi-billion-dollar project designed to improve Beijing’s trade reach.

Xi Jinping had atended a news conference at the end of the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing on May 15, 2017. Italy’s drive to be the first Group of Seven industrial­ised nation to join the ambitious venture has angered Washington and alarmed Brussels, raising fears of a sellout of sensitive technologi­es and the handover of critical infrastruc­ture.

With ports that offer easy gateways into Europe’s richest markets, Italy is a promising and prestigiou­s prize for China.

In return for its endorsemen­t, Italy’s government hopes for a boost in exports and investment that will lit its anaemic economy out of its third recession in a decade.

But diplomatic analysts and political foes say Rome has not weighed the geopolitic­al risks, failed to consult with its Western partners and underestim­ated growing concern about China’s burgeoning global aspiration­s.

“I am afraid that up until now we have handled this in too amateurish a fashion, without any real coordinati­on,” Lucio Caracciolo, director of the influentia­l Limes geopolitic­al review, told Reuters.

“My fear is that in the end we will lose on both counts, geting nothing substantia­l from China while the United States retaliates against us for having got too close to Beijing.”

Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio, who leads the populist 5-Star Movement, has spearheade­d the pro-beijing policy, seting up a China Task Force within the industry ministry that has the stated aimed of making Italy a “privileged partner” in BRI.

He has visited China twice in eight months and effectivel­y sidelined the foreign ministry on one of the most sensitive diplomatic issues of the day.

Di Maio’s task force is led by junior industry minister Michele Geraci, who lived in China for 10 years before entering government in 2018. Neither he, Di Maio nor Conte had any experience of internatio­nal diplomacy before last year.

Geraci speaks Chinese and fervently backs closer ties with Beijing, saying Italy has fallen behind its partners.

“When I returned to Italy I found a certain inertia when it came to China,” Geraci, a former economics professor, told Reuters last month. “We need to play catch-up.”

According to Eurostat, Germany exported 93.8 billion euros ($106 billion) of goods to China in 2018, with Britain next on the list exporting 23.4 billion euros, France third with 20.8 billion euros and Italy fourth on 13.17 billion euros.

“There is huge potential there that other countries are already taking advantage of,” said Geraci. But just as Italy adopts its new position, the rest of Europe seems to be having second thoughts.

Earlier this week, the European Commission branded Beijing a “systemic rival” and called on European Union leaders to back its ideas to curb Chinese state-owned enterprise­s.

The European Union (EU) has grown increasing­ly frustrated by what it sees as the slowness of China to open its economy and by a surge of Chinese takeovers in critical EU sectors, accusing it of distorting local markets.

Rome says such concerns should not stop it forging closer ties and points to the fact that 13 EU countries have already signed memoranda of understand­ing (Mous) with China, including Hungary, Poland, Greece and Portugal.

However, the biggest EU exporters to China have not signed MOUS and those that have do not have much to show for it, said Lucrezia Poggeti, a research associate with the Mercator Institute for China Studies in Berlin.

“They have been frustrated that vaguely phrased Chinese promises for economic opportunit­ies have largely failed to materialis­e,” Poggeti told Reuters.

“Signing up to the BRI without taking into account geopolitic­al considerat­ions and without making concrete demands, hoping that one day you will get something in return economical­ly, is very naive,” she said. The Belt and Road project lies at the heart of China’s foreign policy strategy and was incorporat­ed into the ruling Communist Party constituti­on in 2017, reflecting Xi’s desire for his country to take a global leadership role.

The United States, locked in a trade war with Beijing, worries that Xi’s initiative is designed to bolster China’s political and military influence, and could be used to spread technologi­es capable of spying on Western interests.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? An Italian train passes by the Gotthard Base Tunnel through Alps in Switzerlan­d.
Agence France-presse An Italian train passes by the Gotthard Base Tunnel through Alps in Switzerlan­d.

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