Global Times

Premier Li to visit Europe next week

▶ Great importance attached to ties with EU

- By Yang Sheng

Coming just two weeks after Chinese President Xi Jinping’s trip to Europe in late March, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang’s visit to Europe next week shows how highly China values its ties with Europe, said a senior Chinese diplomat on Wednesday.

Vice Foreign Minister Wang Chao made the remarks at a press briefing in Beijing Wednesday, adding that both Xi and Li have chosen Europe for their first foreign visits this year, kicking off a “season of Europe” for Chinese diplomacy for 2019.

According to Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Geng Shuang on Tuesday, as agreed by China and the European side and at the invitation of Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic of Croatia, from April 8 to 12, Premier Li will travel to Brussels, Belgium for the 21st China-EU Leaders’ Meeting and to Croatia for an official visit and the 8th China-CEEC (Central and Eastern European Countries) Summit.

Cui Hongjian, director of EU Studies at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times on Wednesday that “China-Europe relations are experienci­ng great changes at this moment, so this is a crucial period for

the two sides to shape their future relationsh­ip.”

In general, Europe needs to find out what role China will play in the future of European integratio­n, and China needs to find what role the EU, or the whole of Europe, can play in China's opening-up and reform in the next stage, Cui noted.

Indispensa­ble partners

The Chinese government released a document titled “China's Policy Paper on the European Union” in December 2018, which identified China and the EU as “indispensa­ble partners to each other's reform and developmen­t.”

However, a similar policy document published by the European Commission on March 12, titled “EU-China – A strategic outlook,” describes the China-EU relationsh­ip as simultaneo­usly “a cooperatio­n partner, a negotiatin­g partner, an economic competitor and a systemic rival.”

The two sides still have difference­s on how they define each other, which is why leaders on both sides need to maintain close communicat­ion on finding a direction to develop the China-EU relationsh­ip in the long term, Cui said.

Wang Yiwei, Jean Monnet Chair Professor at the Renmin University of China, said that more needs to be done than just planning for a long term relationsh­ip.

“There are urgent matters that both sides need to discuss and that requires support from each other, such as WTO reform and internatio­nal trade issues.”

The US is trying to team up with Japan and the EU to dominate reform of the WTO, which might seriously damage China's interests. The EU is paying close attention to the China-US trade talks, and at the same time desperatel­y wants to seize opportunit­ies from China's economic developmen­t, so it is asking China to be more open, Wang Yiwei told the Global Times.

New impetus

Wang Chao told the press briefing that China expects to cooperate with the European side on issues including climate change, the Iranian nuclear deal, building an open world economy, safeguardi­ng the consensus on multilater­alism and boosting coordinati­on and cooperatio­n on agendas like WTO reform and the G20.

Apart from China, no other major non-Western major power or rising economy has the strong intent and ability to cooperate with the EU on these issues and to overcome the challenges together, so China is an irreplacea­ble partner for the EU, Cui said.

China is also expecting to boost interconne­ctivity with the EU, Wang Chao noted, which includes injecting new impetus into negotiatio­ns of the ChinaEU investment agreement and strengthen­ing the co-building of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

Wang Yiwei said that due to trade frictions, the US has lost some opportunit­ies to share the benefits of China's opening-up in the next stage, but the EU does not have the same issues with China. Washington's loss is Brussels' gain.

No developed economy or Western power has the EU's ability to actively cooperate with China on so many fields, Cui said. “In cases like the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank and BRI projects, neither the US nor Japan can have the same participat­ion as the EU.”

Regardless of the impact from the US, China and the EU are truly indispensa­ble to each other, and the developmen­t of China-EU ties should not rely on an external dynamic from the US, but should find an internal driving force to guide the direction, Cui noted.

A sustainabl­e China-EU relationsh­ip needs to rid itself of the impact from Washington, Cui told the Global Times. “If Beijing and Brussels only cooperate when Washington is pulling out away from global governance, then what happens when Washington decides to return some day?”

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