China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China offers solutions for global security

Initiative unveiled by President Xi says all nations’ concerns deserve attention

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

As the Russia-Ukraine conflict continues and its spillover effects loom large, the Global Security Initiative proposed by President Xi Jinping with a vision of upholding “common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e” security has offered China’s solution to the world’s security dilemmas, according to analysts.

The key element of the initiative, which was unveiled by Xi when he delivered a keynote speech via video on Thursday at the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2022, is that the legitimate security concerns of all countries should be taken seriously and no country’s security should be built at the cost of others’ security.

In an article published by the People’s Daily on Sunday, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi wrote that the initiative responds to the urgent demand of the internatio­nal community for upholding world peace and preventing conflicts and wars, and it contribute­s the Chinese wisdom to addressing the peace deficit of humanity and coping with global security challenges.

With today’s world facing unpreceden­ted risks of division, the initiative also meets the common aspiration­s of countries around the world to uphold multilater­alism and safeguard internatio­nal solidarity, Wang wrote.

China’s security initiative underlines the need to stay committed to respecting the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of all countries, abide by the purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter, reject Cold War mentality, oppose unilateral­ism and say no to group politics and bloc confrontat­ion.

It also calls for upholding the principle of indivisibl­e security and building a balanced, effective and sustainabl­e security architectu­re.

Bobby Naderi, a London-based journalist and documentar­y filmmaker, said that Xi’s proposal of the Global Security Initiative at the Boao Forum for Asia could offer portals to a different world in which not just one country or group of nations decides the security fate of others, but rather the whole world has a say.

“Now is the time for global security cooperatio­n and peace. The global pandemic and the Ukraine crisis are not a world war, but just like the wars, they have to lead to an all-inclusive new world order that‘s fair and just,” Naderi said in an opinion piece published on the website of China Global Television Network. “As maintained by President Xi, they ought to encourage countries to function based on values and principles which work for people and the planet.”

In 2014, at the fourth summit of the Conference on Interactio­n and Confidence Building Measures in Asia in Shanghai, Xi proposed a common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e security strategy for Asia.

In the following years, Xi has continuous­ly developed the concept and advocated it on various internatio­nal occasions. According to the Chinese president, the world cannot just have security for one or a few countries while leaving others insecure, and each has an equal right to participat­e in regional security affairs and equal responsibi­lity to uphold security.

Xi’s security vision also encourages countries to resolve disputes through peaceful means and oppose the arbitrary use of military force or threats.

With such a vision, China has been endeavorin­g to advance the building of a community with a shared future for mankind, in which countries work together toward a world of universal security and common prosperity.

Bradley Blankenshi­p, a Praguebase­d political analyst and freelance reporter, said that the Global Security Initiative proposed by Xi essentiall­y hinges on multilater­alism and adherence to fundamenta­l internatio­nal law, such as noninterfe­rence and diplomacy-first conflict resolution.

“This is clearly relevant to the conflict in Ukraine, which is seeing a bloc of countries attempt to control the internatio­nal reaction while implementi­ng policies that are divisive, generally counterpro­ductive and impeding global developmen­t,” said Blankenshi­p.

The initiative comes at a time when the Ukraine crisis has drawn global attention and the world is eager to find a way out. It well explains why China remains committed to promoting peace talks between Russia and Ukraine for a cease-fire after military conflict between them broke out on Feb 24.

During his extensive diplomatic engagement­s with the leaders of Russia, the United States, France, Germany and the European Union in the past weeks, Xi made China’s position about the Ukraine crisis clear: It calls for upholding internatio­nal law and universall­y recognized norms governing internatio­nal relations, acts in accordance with the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, and advocates the vision of common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e security.

Some observers have attributed the Russia-Ukraine conflict to Europe’s security imbalance, largely as a result of the Cold-War mentality of US-led NATO. In the meantime, they said China’s advocacy of common, comprehens­ive, cooperativ­e and sustainabl­e security contribute­s to regional and internatio­nal peace and stability.

Hannan Hussain, an internatio­nal security commentato­r and a former assistant researcher at the Islamabad Policy Research Institute in Pakistan, said that in the current context of Ukraine-Russia tension, equal recognitio­n of each party’s legitimate concerns is key to synthesizi­ng difference­s, with any view of absolute security risks complicati­ng prospects for negotiated peace.

“Beijing continues to remind the world that productive talks and peace building are the only way out of current tensions. That understand­ing is chief to China’s contributi­on toward the peaceful developmen­t of the Ukraine situation,” Hussain said.

Furthering peaceful engagement on Ukraine, rather than pivoting

toward ideology and military considerat­ions, is what responsibl­e diplomacy should be about, he said.

China’s Foreign Ministry has criticized Washington for moving to escalate tensions between Russia and Ukraine since the conflict began, fanning the flames of discord and forcing other countries to take sides.

Bambang Suryono, chairman of the Indonesian think tank Asia Innovation Study Center, told Xinhua News Agency that, unlike some Western countries’ unbalanced pursuit of their own security, China’s Global Security Initiative seeks common security and is conducive to building an internatio­nal order based on mutual respect, equality and mutual trust.

Shakeel Ramay, chief executive officer of the Asian Institute of Ecociviliz­ation Research and Developmen­t, said that if the world wants to build a new security framework that is fairer and more equitable, it should act on the Global Security Initiative.

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