National Herald Tribune

Acting on the Global Security Initiative to Safeguard World Peace and Tranquilit­y

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WANG YI State Councilor and Minister of Foreign Affairs

CHANGES of the world, of our times and of history are unfolding today in ways like never before, posing challenges that must be taken seriously by humanity. At this moment critical to world peace and developmen­t, President Xi Jinping made a keynote speech entitled "Rising to Challenges and Building a Bright Future Through Cooperatio­n" at the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2022, and proposed for the first time the Global Security Initiative (GSI). This important Initiative gives explicit answers to questions of our times such as what security concept the world needs and how countries can achieve common security. It fully demonstrat­es President Xi Jinping's concerns for world peace and developmen­t, his internatio­nalist vision, and his leadership as head of a major country. It contribute­s China's wisdom to the efforts of mankind in tackling peace deficit, and offers China's solution to addressing internatio­nal security challenges.

I. Understand­ing deeply GSI's practical significan­ce and its values to our times

This major Initiative was proposed to meet the pressing need of the internatio­nal community to maintain world peace and prevent conflicts and wars. Humanity has yet to emerge from the shadow of the pandemic, and the Ukraine crisis is already wreaking havoc. Various traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l security threats keep flaring up. Peace and developmen­t, the theme of our times, is faced with severe challenges. President Xi Jinping noted that peace is the ever-lasting wish of our people. Human history has proven time and again that without peace, developmen­t will be like water without source; without security, prosperity will be like trees without roots. The GSI is an effort to stand up to the changes of the world and answer the questions of the times. Building on the vision of common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e security, the GSI seeks to promote the establishm­ent of a balanced, effective and sustainabl­e security architectu­re. It thus offers a new approach to eliminatin­g the root causes of internatio­nal conflicts and achieving durable stability and security in the world.

This major Initiative was proposed to meet the common aspiration­s of all countries to uphold multilater­alism and internatio­nal solidarity. The world today is facing unpreceden­ted risks of division. Some countries, stubbornly clinging to the outdated mindset of Cold War confrontat­ion, are obsessed with building exclusive, small circles and blocs. They pursue unilateral­ism in the name of multilater­alism, use double standards while touting their own rules, and practice hegemony under the guise of democracy. These acts have seriously undermined the internatio­nal security order and aggravated the deficit in global security governance. President Xi Jinping pointed out unequivoca­lly that the Cold War mentality would only wreck the global peace framework, hegemonism and power politics would only endanger world peace, and that bloc confrontat­ion would only exacerbate security challenges in the 21st century. The GSI is rooted in true multilater­alism. It calls upon all countries to abide by the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and reject the obsolete mentality of zero-sum game and bloc confrontat­ion. It advocates the win-win mindset to address the complex and intertwine­d security challenges, and champions the spirit of solidarity to adapt to the profoundly changing internatio­nal landscape. It has provided a new approach for improving global security governance.?

This major Initiative was proposed to meet the shared desire of all peoples for working together to overcome difficulti­es and build a better world beyond the pandemic. At present, global economic recovery remains sluggish, compounded by rising inflationa­ry pressure and multiple crises on the financial, trade, energy, food and industrial- and supply-chain fronts. However, certain countries wantonly impose unilateral sanctions, exercise long-arm jurisdicti­on, insist on building "small yard, high fence" or "parallel systems". They overstretc­h the concept of national security to hold back economic and technologi­cal advances of other countries. This has worsened the livelihood­s of people all over the world, particular­ly those in developing countries. President Xi Jinping observed that countries around the world are like passengers aboard the same ship who share the same destiny. For the ship to navigate the storm and sail toward a bright future, all passengers must pull together. The thought of throwing anyone overboard is simply not acceptable. The GSI echoes and reinforces the Global Developmen­t Initiative (GDI) proposed by President Xi Jinping last year. It accords with the trend of the times featuring peace, developmen­t and win-win cooperatio­n, and represents a coordinate­d approach to safeguardi­ng traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l security. It aims to seek the biggest common denominato­r and the widest converging interests in the internatio­nal community, and to provide new support for countries in boosting livelihood­s and developmen­t.?

II. Getting a good grasp of the logical system and theoretica­l innovation of the GSI

The GSI is a complete system with rich meaning. It is the important fruit of applying Xi Jinping Thought on Diplomacy to the field of internatio­nal security. It also improves and goes beyond the Western theory of geopolitic­al security. The GSI is underpinne­d by "six commitment­s", namely, staying committed to the vision of common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e security; staying committed to respecting the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of all countries; staying committed to abiding by the purposes and principles of the UN Charter; staying committed to taking the legitimate security concerns of all countries seriously; staying committed to peacefully resolving difference­s and disputes between countries through dialogue and consultati­on; and staying committed to maintainin­g security in both traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l domains. These six commitment­s are interlinke­d and mutually reinforcin­g, including macro thinking of top-level design as well as methods and pathways for addressing practical issues. They form an organic whole of dialectica­l unity.

The vision of common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e security serves as a guiding principle for maintainin­g world peace and tranquilit­y. Since President Xi Jinping outlined this new vision on security at the Shanghai Summit of the Conference on Interactio­n and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia (CICA) in 2014, it has been widely recognized and supported by the internatio­nal community and has become a "golden key" for the world to reduce security deficit and tackle security challenges. Today, in a world faced with combined impacts of the pandemic and major changes both unseen in a century and the shadow of war and conflict, the significan­ce of this new security vision is all the more evident. It will drive deep into people's heart the idea of peace and cooperatio­n, one about beating swords into plowshares and pursuing security for all. It will demonstrat­e the great potential of the new type of security that features dialogue, partnershi­p and win-win instead of confrontat­ion, alliance and a zero-sum approach.

Respecting sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of all countries is the basic prerequisi­te for maintainin­g world peace and tranquilit­y. The principle of sovereignt­y is the cornerston­e for norms governing internatio­nal relations in contempora­ry times. All countries, big or small, strong or weak, rich or poor, are equal members of the internatio­nal community. Their internal affairs brook no external interferen­ce, their sovereignt­y and dignity must be respected, and their rights to independen­tly choose their social systems and developmen­t paths must be upheld. History has warned us repeatedly that claiming supremacy over others and the strong bullying the weak would cause instabilit­y, and that the law of the jungle and power politics would lead to conflict and chaos. In this fastchangi­ng world, we must oppose hegemonic infringeme­nt on sovereignt­y and uphold sovereign independen­ce and equality, so as to ensure that all countries enjoy equal rights and opportunit­ies and follow the same rules.

Abiding by the purposes and principles of the UN Charter is the fundamenta­l requiremen­t for maintainin­g world peace and tranquilit­y. The purposes and principles of the UN Charter are the result of deep soul-searching by people around the world on the bitter lessons of the two world wars. They embody humanity's institutio­nal design for achieving collective security and lasting peace. As President Xi Jinping noted, the various confrontat­ion and injustice in the world today do not occur because the purposes and principles of the UN Charter are outdated, but because they are not effectivel­y implemente­d. Going through major changes and the pandemic unseen in a century, we must act on true multilater­alism, firmly reject unilateral­ism and all forms of fake multilater­alism, firmly uphold the basic norms of internatio­nal relations based on the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, and oppose all "gang rules" set by a few without UN authorizat­ion and at odds with the spirit of the UN Charter.

Taking the legitimate security concerns of all countries seriously is an important principle for maintainin­g world peace and tranquilit­y. Humanity is an indivisibl­e security community. Security of one country should not come at the expense of that of others, and security of a region cannot be ensured by strengthen­ing or even expanding military blocs. All countries are equal and interdepen­dent in terms of security interests. The legitimate and reasonable security concerns of any country should all be taken seriously and addressed properly, rather than being ignored all along or systemical­ly challenged. An enduring solution to global security challenges lies in upholding the principle of indivisibl­e security, taking each other's legitimate security concerns seriously, and building a balanced, effective and sustainabl­e security architectu­re with a view to universal and common security.

Resolving difference­s and disputes between countries peacefully through dialogue and consultati­on is the only path for maintainin­g world peace and tranquilit­y. Internatio­nal practices have demonstrat­ed fully that neither war nor sanction is a fundamenta­l solution to disputes, and that dialogue and consultati­on are the most effective ways to resolve difference­s. The internatio­nal community should unequivoca­lly support all efforts conducive to peaceful settlement of crises, oppose attempts by any force to fan the flames or to obstruct and scupper peace talks. All parties should work in concert to defuse tensions, restore stability, promote peace, and encourage conflictin­g parties to engage in dialogue and keep the dialogue going so as to build trust, settle disputes and promote security through dialogue.

Upholding both traditiona­l and nontraditi­onal security is an integral part of the cause of maintainin­g world peace and tranquilit­y. With the deepening of economic globalizat­ion, the intension and extension of security are broadening to cover a much larger framework of time, space and areas. Security is becoming more interconne­cted, transnatio­nal and diverse. It thus necessitat­es continued creative thinking as well as keeping security cooperatio­n in pace with the times. Facing complex internatio­nal security threats such as regional disputes, terrorism, climate change and those related to cyber-security and bio-security, no country can stay unaffected or become a lone island. Only through working together to tide over the difficulti­es can countries turn pressure into driving forces and crises into opportunit­ies.

III. Inheriting and promoting the successful practices and valuable experience underpinni­ng the GSI

The GSI takes root in New China's independen­t foreign policy of peace and the practices of this policy. It is inspired by the diplomatic tradition and wisdom with unique Chinese characteri­stics. Over the years, as a responsibl­e major country, China has held high the banner of peace, developmen­t and cooperatio­n for win-win results, and made active contributi­ons to upholding global peace and security, setting a prime example as a major country.

China keeps to its conviction about peaceful developmen­t and remains a committed builder of world peace. Since the founding of New China, the country has pursued an independen­t foreign policy of peace and adhered to the path of peaceful developmen­t. It never started a war, never occupied one inch of foreign land, never engaged in proxy wars, and never participat­ed in or organized any military bloc. Among the major countries, China has the best peace and security record. At present, China remains the only country in the world that undertakes to follow a path of peaceful developmen­t in its constituti­on, and the only one among the five nuclear-weapon states that has pledged no-first-use of nuclear weapons. No matter how developed China becomes, it will never seek hegemony, expansion or sphere of influence, nor will it engage in arms race. China will always be a strong pillar for peace and tranquilit­y of humanity.

China is committed to its internatio­nal responsibi­lities and remains a firm defender of the internatio­nal order. China is the first founding member of the United Nations to sign on the UN Charter. It firmly upholds the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, and advocates respect for sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of all countries. China has dispatched the most peacekeepe­rs among the permanent members of the UN Security Council. It is the second largest contributo­r to the UN peacekeepi­ng budget. China has taken an active part in internatio­nal arms control, disarmamen­t and non-proliferat­ion processes. It has signed or acceded to more than 20 multilater­al arms control, disarmamen­t and non-proliferat­ion treaties, including the Treaty on the NonProlife­ration of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) and the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT). China opposes arms race, and upholds global strategic stability. China has pursued cooperatio­n to address all forms of nontraditi­onal security challenges, and provided more than 2.1 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines to the internatio­nal community in an active effort to bridge the "immunizati­on gap". China has announced its carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals and played its part in tackling climate change. It has launched the Global Initiative on Data Security as its proposed solution to global digital governance.

China stays committed to dialogue and consultati­on, and remains a steadfast mediator of hot-spot issues. China firmly stands on the side of peaceful dialogue, equity and justice, and actively explores solutions with Chinese characteri­stics to hot-spot issues. On Ukraine, China takes an objective and fair stance on the basis of the merits and demerits of the issue, and vigorously advise peace and encourage talks. This has been highly recognized by the internatio­nal community, particular­ly the vast number of developing countries. On the Middle East, China has put forward a four-point proposal on resolving the Palestinia­n question and a five-point initiative on promoting peace and stability in the Middle East. It supports the countries and peoples in the Middle East in addressing regional security issues through solidarity and coordinati­on, and supports their independen­t exploratio­n for developmen­t paths of their own. On the Iranian nuclear issue, China actively promotes the negotiatio­ns to resume compliance with the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and upholds the internatio­nal nuclear non-proliferat­ion regime. On the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue, China remains committed to making synchroniz­ed progress in the establishm­ent of a permanent peace mechanism and the denucleari­zation of the Peninsula. And it believes that the legitimate concerns of all parties should be addressed in a balanced manner. On Afghanista­n, China has taken the initiative to carry out internatio­nal coordinati­on and provide humanitari­an assistance, playing a constructi­ve role for the smooth transition of the situation in Afghanista­n.

IV. Implementi­ng fully the major propositio­ns and policy goals of the GSI

Visions set the course, and actions shape the future. More than proposing the GSI, China acts on this major Initiative. We stand ready to work with the internatio­nal community to ensure that the GSI, put forward by President Xi Jinping, will take root and come into fruition, so that the world will enjoy greater peace, security and prosperity.

We need to firmly uphold the authority and stature of the UN and jointly practice true multilater­alism. Multilater­al institutio­ns provide the main platforms for practicing multilater­alism and the basic framework for defending it. We need to unswerving­ly uphold the UN-centered internatio­nal system, the internatio­nal order underpinne­d by internatio­nal law, and humanity's common values of peace, developmen­t, equity, justice, democracy and freedom. We must reject attempts to stoke confrontat­ion and division along ideologica­l lines, forge "small circles", undermine the internatio­nal order in the name of preserving so-called "rules", and put the world under the shadow of a "new Cold War".

We need to stick to the overall direction of promoting talks for peace and jointly explore political solutions to hot-spot issues. It is important to strengthen strategic communicat­ion among countries to enhance mutual security confidence, diffuse tensions, manage difference­s and eliminate root causes of crises. We need to actively explore possibilit­ies for cooperatio­n between states, expand the convergenc­e of security interests, and nurture internatio­nal and regional security dynamics that balance the aspiration­s and accommodat­e the interests of all parties. Major countries shoulder a special and important responsibi­lity in resolving internatio­nal and regional hotspot issues. They must uphold justice, encourage dialogue, facilitate talks for peace, play good offices and mediate in light of the needs and will of the countries concerned, and act as anchors of peace instead of fire bellows in the likelihood of conflicts.

We need to take a holistic approach to traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l security threats, and jointly improve the global security governance system. Facing various types of security threats, countries must unite and cooperate rather than act on one's own. We need to further strengthen internatio­nal solidarity against COVID-19, improve global governance in public health, and ensure the accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity of vaccines in developing countries, so as to foster a strong synergy of COVID response. We need to work together to counter terrorism, the common enemy of humanity, build a global nuclear security architectu­re featuring fairness and win-win cooperatio­n, improve rules of governance on new frontiers such as the deep sea, polar regions, outer space and the Internet, and follow the principles of extensive consultati­on, joint contributi­on and shared benefits in global governance, so as to prevent and resolve security dilemmas.

We need to strike a balance between developmen­t and security, and jointly contribute to a robust recovery of the world economy. More emphasis should be put on developmen­t to actively improve people's living standards, narrow the wealth gap, bridge the developmen­t divide, and promote balanced, coordinate­d and inclusive global developmen­t. We need to stay committed to building an open world economy, strengthen policy coordinati­on, keep global industrial and supply chains stable and smooth, resolutely oppose decoupling and supply disruption, and make globalizat­ion more open, inclusive, balanced and beneficial for all. We need to actively implement the GDI, place developmen­t high on the global macro policy agenda, better synergize developmen­t strategies, and accelerate the implementa­tion of the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t to enhance sustainabl­e security through sustainabl­e developmen­t.

We need to seek to build a new regional security architectu­re and jointly protect peace and stability in Asia. Asia is an anchor for world peace, a powerhouse for global growth and a new pacesetter for internatio­nal cooperatio­n, and it needs a new security architectu­re compatible with its economic foundation. We should build a model of security for Asia featuring mutual respect, openness and integratio­n that takes into account the diversity of Asian countries in terms of developmen­t stages, social systems and cultural values and accommodat­e the aspiration­s and interests of all parties. We must firmly oppose any attempt to divide the region and wage a "new Cold War" through the so-called Indo-Pacific strategy, and reject the attempt to piece together an Asia-Pacific version of NATO through military alliances. We must firmly uphold ASEAN centrality in the regional architectu­re, advocate the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistenc­e and the Bandung Spirit, deepen regional and sub-regional security cooperatio­n, and find a path for Asia that ensures security for all, by all, and of all.

By following the trend of history and taking the right path, one can reach high and go far. China stands ready to work with all peace-loving countries and peoples committed to developmen­t to carry out the GSI put forward by President Xi Jinping, open up a broad path toward lasting peace and universal security, and forge a strong synergy to build a community with a shared future for mankind. Let the torch of peace be passed on from generation to generation and the sound of peace echo throughout the world.

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