People's Review Weekly

‘Himalayan Quad’ hype is Cold War mentality

- BY LAN JIANxUE Global Times

A recent article in the South China Morning Post explores the possibilit­y of China creating its own security bloc, the so-called Himalayan Quad. Citing a former Belarusian diplomat in India, the article argues that recent developmen­ts could theoretica­lly "push Beijing to institutio­nalise the Himalayan Quad project involving China, Nepal, Pakistan, and Afghanista­n as a counterwei­ght to the Quad."

Some began to hype the "Himalayan Quad" after the video conference of the foreign ministers of the four countries held on July 27 last year. Meanwhile, this is actually a normal mechanism of cooperatio­n between China and its neighbors. According to Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, the main focus of this conference was to strengthen China's cooperatio­n with these countries in collective response to the pandemic, COVID-19 containmen­t and vaccines, as well as post-COVID-19 economic recovery and developmen­t. This mechanism has a very promising future, mainly because China and its neighborin­g countries share weal and woe. China, Nepal, Pakistan, and Afghanista­n are all developing countries. In addition to the current common task of pandemic prevention and control, all these four countries need to develop their economy and improve people's livelihood­s.

The mechanism of cooperatio­n between China and these countries is kept open without

any geostrateg­ic and military intentions. On January 6, six countries - China, Nepal, Pakistan, Afghanista­n, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh - held the first meeting of directorge­neral level working groups on COVID-19 and poverty alleviatio­n cooperatio­n.

As Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying said, this meeting is "a followup step to the video conference of foreign ministers of China, Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Nepal on COVID-19 in July and the video conference of vice foreign ministers of China, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh on COVID-19 in November 2020."

It is thus clear that the "Himalayan Quad" cooperatio­n mechanism is actually an important part of China's efforts to build a community with a shared future for mankind. This is not at all the same thing as the Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue between the US, Japan, India and Australia. Different from the cooperatio­n between the four Himalayan

countries, the Quad is a regional exclusive military-political alliance dominated by a Cold War mentality both in terms of military power and internatio­nal influence. This kind of small circle will cause regional confrontat­ions and divisions. In fact, it is a certain potential risk to the region.

The Quad's nature decides it has no future. Quad will seek to force countries in the Indo-Pacific region to take sides and then stir up strife in the region. This will be unacceptab­le to countries in the region, where the wave against the US-led alliance will keep rising. At the same time, the Quad's agenda to contain Beijing will never work as China's rise is inevitable.

Powers like Japan, Australia and India have degraded to act as pawns to maintain the US' global hegemony. To maintain its world hegemony, the US needs an external enemy to rally its allies and partners to cooperate. As a result, since the alliance is led by the US, the search for an external enemy is an inherent flaw of the

Quad mechanism. This is against the general trend of global cooperatio­n and developmen­t, as well as the principle of multilater­alism.

The mechanism of the Quad has created a certain potential danger, or a strategic trap, for these three countries. Under this mechanism, Tokyo, Canberra and New Delhi's autonomy and decision-making power in diplomatic strategy are compromise­d.

Those who see the cooperatio­n between the four Himalayan countries as a counterwei­ght to Quad probably still harbor a Cold War mentality. China does not seek such confrontat­ions as the US and Soviet Union did during the Cold War. The mechanism of cooperatio­n between the four Himalayan countries was built primarily with a view to facilitate mutually beneficial interactio­n between China and its neighborin­g countries. Of course, if China and these countries face threats in areas other than non-traditiona­l security in the future, the four countries may further widen the scope of cooperatio­n between them. Neverthele­ss, the comparison between the cooperatio­n among the four Himalayan countries and the Quad can make the world understand the difference between real multilater­alism and pseudo-multilater­alism.

The author is director of the Department for AsiaPacifi­c Studies at China Institute of Internatio­nal

Studies. opinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

 ??  ?? Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi hosts a video conference of foreign ministers of China, Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Nepal on working together to fight COVID-19 and resume economy, July 27, 2020.
Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi hosts a video conference of foreign ministers of China, Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Nepal on working together to fight COVID-19 and resume economy, July 27, 2020.

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