China Daily (Hong Kong)

NATO slammed over smearing in document

Alliance’s new guideline focuses on Moscow, points fingers at Beijing

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn Agencies via Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

NATO faced rebuke from Moscow and Beijing on Thursday after it declared Russia a “direct threat” and said China posed “serious challenges” to global stability.

The Western military alliance was wrapping up a summit in Madrid, where they have approved the new guideline for the alliance for the next decade, focusing on Russia but also pointing fingers at China.

China accused the alliance of “maliciousl­y attacking and smearing” the country. Its mission to the European Union said NATO “claims that other countries pose challenges, but it is NATO that is creating problems around the world”.

“Since NATO positions China as a ‘systemic challenge’, we have to pay close attention and respond in a coordinate­d way. When it comes to acts that undermine China’s interests, we will make firm and strong responses,” its statement said.

NATO’s so-called Strategic Concept accused China of striving “to subvert the rules-based internatio­nal order”, a claim that has been repeatedly denied by Beijing.

The document also said China poses challenges toward their security, interests and values.

“China is not our adversary. But we must be clear-eyed about the serious challenges it represents,” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g said on Wednesday.

He also blamed it for “substantia­lly building up its military forces including nuclear weapons”, “bullying its neighbors and threatenin­g Taiwan” and “investing heavily in critical infrastruc­ture, including in allied countries”.

The alliance said, however, that it remained “open to constructi­ve engagement” with Beijing.

Jeffrey Sachs, a Columbia University professor who has served as adviser to several United Nations secretarie­sgeneral, said he disagrees that China

poses a challenge to the values, interests or security of NATO countries.

“China is nearly one-fifth of the world’s population, a great civilizati­on, and with cultural heritage and wisdom that contribute­s notably to all of humanity,” he told China Daily on Thursday.

“The whole world should be emphasizin­g our shared global interests in sustainabl­e developmen­t, common prosperity and the UN system, not alliance politics.”

Sachs stressed that the world urgently needs to return to diplomacy through dialogue based on mutual respect and common humanity, rather than military alliances, threats and conflicts and arms races.

“I find the (NATO) statement sad,” he said.

Ukraine crisis

The Russia-Ukraine conflict has been the focus of the three-day NATO summit.

The military alliance updates its guideline every 10 years. The last such “Strategic Concept” adopted at the 2010 Lisbon Summit called Russia a “strategic partner”. Now, the new document defines Russia as the “most significan­t and direct threat” to NATO allies’ security.

NATO leaders formally invited Finland and Sweden to join the alliance, after overcoming opposition from Turkey. If the Nordic nations’ accession is approved by the 30 member nations, it will give NATO a new

1,300-kilometer border with Russia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin warned he would respond in kind if the Nordic pair allowed NATO troops and military infrastruc­ture onto their territory. He said Russia will have to “create the same threats for the territory from which threats against us are created”.

“We don’t have problems with Sweden and Finland like we do with Ukraine,” Putin said. “We don’t have territoria­l difference­s.”

Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said on Wednesday the Madrid summit “confirms and consolidat­es the bloc’s policy of aggressive containmen­t of Russia”.

“We consider the expansion of the North Atlantic alliance to be a purely destabiliz­ing factor in internatio­nal affairs,” he said, as quoted by Russian news agencies.

At the summit, NATO’s 30 member states agreed to boost the number of its high readiness troops from the current 40,000 to 300,000, while also deploying more heavy weaponry in Baltic states and Poland.

Stoltenber­g said the Russian military operation in Ukraine “has shattered peace in Europe and has created the greatest security crisis in Europe since World War II”.

He also said leaders had also endorsed a comprehens­ive assistance package for Ukraine.

 ?? GUSTAVO VALIENTE / XINHUA ?? Police stand guard as demonstrat­ors protest against the NATO summit in the square of Tirso de Molina in Madrid on Wednesday.
GUSTAVO VALIENTE / XINHUA Police stand guard as demonstrat­ors protest against the NATO summit in the square of Tirso de Molina in Madrid on Wednesday.
 ?? EFREM LUKATSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People lay flowers to pay their respects to victims of a rocket attack in Kremenchuk, Ukraine, on Wednesday.
EFREM LUKATSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS People lay flowers to pay their respects to victims of a rocket attack in Kremenchuk, Ukraine, on Wednesday.

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