Global Times

US bid to split China, Russia doomed to failure

- By Wen Sheng The author is an editor with the Global Times. bizopinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

US President Joe Biden completed a whirlwind diplomatic tour last week in Europe, desperate to repair relations with Germany, France, Italy and other European countries ruined at the hand of his predecesso­r Donald Trump, while telling Russian President Vladimir Putin in a summit closely watched by the world, that America is still at its peak, and Moscow shall not think about a disruption to the global world order.

The two communique­s issued after the G7 and NATO meetings in which Biden both starred, highlighte­d a number of times China’s economic, technologi­cal and military rise, which the US isn’t feeling good and has determined to stymie China’s growth by all means.

Many US mainstream news organizati­ons have analyzed, the motivation behind Biden’s first in- person trip after the coronaviru­s struck the US is rallying European countries to counter China’s meteoric rise in strength. In addition, Biden wants to establish some “redlines” for Moscow, as Washington is accustomed to dictating to other nations what to do, or not to do.

Biden aspires to alienate the economic partnershi­p between Europe and China, as he has been obsessed with launching a fierce and repressive competitio­n with China since he becoming president. He claimed many times that “America is back” during his latest trip to Europe.

But is America back for good or for more confrontat­ions with the world’s other two powers, China and Russia? Do European countries really want to follow Biden’s heels and treat China, its largest trade partner, as an adversary, and make enemies with both Moscow and Beijing? European economies are generally weakened by the pandemic, and they need China’s vast market and investment. Many believe that it will hurt Europe to have antagonist­ic relations with Beijing.

In the past several months, Biden repeatedly said the struggle of the age is “democracy versus autocracy”, a narrative he carefully chose to disparage China.

During the European trip, he implored partners to focus on China, even cajoling European allies to help the US counter China’s rise, because in the eyes of many Washington politician­s, China is just growing too rapidly and is a threat to America’s long- standing global power.

Top Biden administra­tion officials have accused China of trying to build up a high- tech telecommun­ication network consisting of cellular networks, undersea cables and space assets that will give Beijing the ability to secretly monitor global communicat­ions. But, during the past many years, who has been the main culprit when it comes to eavesdropp­ing other countries’ leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel? It comes out that everything it accuses China of wanting to do, the US has already done, including spying on allies and using American tech companies to gather informatio­n.

And this time in the Geneva summit, Biden tried to drive a wedge between Russia and China. Biden told President Putin that Russian economy is “struggling”, and Russia faces a long border with China at a time when Beijing is “hell- bent on domination”. It is truly beyond any person’s normal imaginatio­n for Biden to utter those words to Putin, which only reflects the US president’s desperatio­n to enlist friends and foes alike, in order to slow down China’s rise.

Ever since Putin became the Russian top leader in 1999, relationsh­ip between the two great neighbors of Russia and China has been improving, and took a giant leap in 2004 as the two countries settled all their border issues in a landmark boundary agreement. The two powers share nearly identical positions on the internatio­nal stage, the two economies are complement­ary in structure, and in particular, the top leadership­s in Beijing and Moscow are respecting and adoring each other, which sets the bedrock for the two to stand back- with- back.

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Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ GT

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