Global Times

China points out direction of post-pandemic world order

Beijing backs cooperatio­n, upholds bottom-line mentality

- By Yang Sheng and Liu Xin

China is pointing out the correct direction – improving and reforming globalizat­ion; upholding multilater­alism – for the world to create a brighter future after the COVID-19 pandemic, Chinese analysts said after the Chinese foreign minister’s press conference on the sidelines of the annual national legislativ­e session on Sunday.

Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi elaborated at the press conference on Chinese foreign policy and strategy on the sidelines of the third session of the 13rd National People’s Congress in Beijing. He also fired back at provocatio­ns and stigmatiza­tion from the US.

Although the session had a shorter agenda due to the epidemic, the foreign minister’s conference lasted two hours. Questions on the China-US relationsh­ip predominat­ed at the press conference, prompting Jin Canrong, associate dean of Renmin University of China’s school of internatio­nal studies in Beijing to say that it proved the China-US relationsh­ip was “significan­t to the world, and the status quo of this bilateral ties makes the world concerned, and there are a lot of problems between the two sides.”

‘Political virus’

A “political virus” was spreading in the US, Wang said at the press conference.

That virus was of losing no chance to attack and smear China, he said.

“Some politician­s ignored the

basic facts and made up countless lies and conspiracy theories concerning China,” Wang said.

This was the first time a top diplomat and state councilor of China formally responded to senior US officials and politician­s’ provocativ­e and stigmatizi­ng words and acts, said Chinese analysts.

This kind of “political virus” was more difficult to eliminate than COVID-19 because it was determined by a deep-rooted Cold War and Sinophobic mentality in the brains of those US politician­s, they noted.

“Some political forces in the US are taking China-US relations hostage and pushing us two countries to the brink of a new Cold War. This is a dangerous attempt to turn back the wheel of history,” Wang said.

The two sides “should and must find a way of peaceful coexistenc­e and mutually beneficial cooperatio­n,” he said.

The COVID-19 epidemic was the common enemy of China and the US, and it is a shared wish of both peoples to support and help each other, Wang noted.

China’s policy toward the US had not significan­tly changed, according to Wang’s remarks, Jin said.

“China still insists on a cooperativ­e attitude and remains calm even as the US showed extreme hostility,” Jin said.

“The priority for China, the US and the rest of the world at this moment is to end the pandemic as soon as possible and so China will not launch a confrontat­ional approach against the US even if the US is in a worsening situation.”

Diao Daming, an associate professor at the Renmin University of China in Beijing, told the Global Times that if the White House prioritize­d the benefits of the American people and humanity, “it should listen to the good will and advise to stop its hostile moves. But this is not something that China can decide.”

If the US refused to stop its wrongdoing­s, China would “uphold the bottom-line mentality and fight till the end, with no compromise on sovereignt­y, security, dignity and interests and rights for developmen­t,” Diao said.

Bottom-line mentality

Answering the question of the Global Times at the conference, Wang said that the abuse of litigation by the US against China for the COVID-19 outbreak was “groundless, has no factual basis and no internatio­nal precedence and attempts to blackmail China over the epidemic are daydreamin­g and won’t work.”

Wang said, “the attempt to file frivolous lawsuits is a shoddy one, as it has zero basis in fact, law or internatio­nal precedence.”

Lü Xiang, a research fellow on US studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, said policymake­rs at the White House and senior US politician­s are getting increasing­ly panicky and nervous as they believe this is a most fragile moment for the US.

Lü said that US politician­s would like to exaggerate and hype threats from outside and that was why they were “very aggressive to China even though China is helping and providing medical supplies to American people.”

Today’s China is not what it used to be a hundred years ago, nor is the world anything like the one from a century ago. If anybody thought they could use some ludicrous lawsuits to undermine China’s sovereignt­y and dignity or to deprive the

Chinese people of their hardwon gains, they’d be daydreamin­g and bring disgrace to themselves,” Wang said.

The US could not afford an all-out confrontat­ion with China as COVID-19 has already caused a great loss of its strength. The Trump administra­tion would likely talk more and do less to harm China’s interests, Lü guessed.

Although Wang did not directly respond to the Global Times’ question about concerns that Washington may confiscate Chinese assets in the US as compensati­on, some experts saw this as unfeasible: The US would risk losing its own financial status if it resorted to this tactic, they said.

Correct direction

Wang urged the world to embrace a brighter future after the pandemic: improving and reforming globalizat­ion, and upholding multilater­alism.

“The world will never be the same again, and China will never stop moving forward,” he said.

Chinese experts noted this is an idea most members of the internatio­nal community share and the opposite direction to the unilateral­ism of “America first” which the Trump administra­tion is pushing.

In response to a question about whether China and Russia will join forces to challenge US predominan­ce, Wang said the two countries have supported and defended each other against slander and attacks coming from certain countries.

Jin noted that China holds different attitudes toward the US and the rest of the world and he said, “We do have reason to believe that China will win more cooperatio­n from other countries than the US as it is confident with its successful control over the COVID-19.”

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 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi attends a press conference on the sidelines of the third session of the 13th National People’s Congress (NPC) on Sunday. This year’s press conference­s are being held by video in light of the coronaviru­s.
Photo: cnsphoto Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi attends a press conference on the sidelines of the third session of the 13th National People’s Congress (NPC) on Sunday. This year’s press conference­s are being held by video in light of the coronaviru­s.

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