China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Washington forms another gang to impose mob rule in unruly game

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For all his political discord with his predecesso­r Donald Trump over a variety of domestic and internatio­nal issues, US President Joe Biden has displayed a stronger willingnes­s than Trump to push an antiChina policy and form a united front against China with the United States’ buddies. Wednesday’s announceme­nt that the US is forming an Indo-Pacific alliance with the United Kingdom and Australia is the latest example of this ill trend.

With a shiny new acronym, AUKUS is apparently intended to be a new Indo-Pacific security alliance under the US alliance system which will allow for greater sharing of defense capabiliti­es. And, it seems, helping Australia to acquire nuclear-powered submarines is one of the top priorities.

Unsurprisi­ngly, China’s rising influence in the region was, again, said to be the reason behind the formation of the new group. With the US presumably thinking it can display a more confident swagger by beefing up Australia’s military strength, which is the weakest among the trio.

Clearly realizing that his country’s participat­ion in AUKUS will have an adverse impact on its already frosty relations with China, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Thursday extended an “open invitation” for talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

But this olive branch, extended right after the forming of AUKUS and Morrison’s announceme­nt of the acquisitio­n of US nuclear-powered submarines and cruise missiles, cannot hide Canberra’s enthusiasm in jumping on the US bandwagon to contain China’s rise and developmen­t, which will only push its bilateral ties with China from bad to worse.

Apart from AUKUS, the Asia-Pacific, or the IndoPacifi­c as the US likes to refer to the region now in a bid to deny its Asian identity and the commonalit­y of Asian values, is no stranger to US-led cliques. Others include the so-called Quad countries, a loose strategic partnershi­p among the US, India, Japan and Australia, and the Five Eyes, an intelligen­ce-sharing arrangemen­t comprising the US, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the UK.

The Biden administra­tion, for all its claims to be different from its predecesso­r, seems to have copied one unpleasant mannerism at least and that is how to behave in the region like a street gang boss, amplifying difference­s and stoking confrontat­ion in a bid to start turf wars.

It is no exaggerati­on to say that the US penchant for forming gangs and playing zero-sum games pose a serious threat to the rules-based internatio­nal order and run counter to the internatio­nal aspiration for peace, developmen­t and stability.

To see the consequenc­es of its unruly games, one does not need to look beyond the plight of Afghanista­n, a country that was first invaded and then abandoned by the US and its Western allies, including the UK and Australia.

What would most benefit the US and its allies, and thereby benefit all, would be for them to discard their ideologica­l bias and Cold War mentality and return to multilater­alism to resolve their difference­s with other countries through dialogue, rather than ganging up on other countries in a futile attempt to intimidate them.

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