China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Primal fear

Washington pushing the world to brink of disaster with its anxiety at a changing world

- The author is director of the Institute of Russian, Eastern European and Central Asian Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y

As shown by the recently released US National Security Strategy and comments from several US officials, the United States views China and Russia as strategic opponents. Washington has no intention of brokering an early ceasefire in the protracted Russia-Ukraine conflict that has cost countless lives and brought major security and economic challenges to the world. Instead, it has become more deeply involved, supplying huge amounts of military assistance to Ukraine. It has also been increasing its military deployment­s around China. Its so-called values-based diplomacy on the internatio­nal stage is nothing but a move to suppress China and Russia as much as possible, trying to take the opportunit­y to strengthen its global hegemony after the Cold War.

After Joe Biden took office as president, the US foreign policy has become more directiona­l. The unilateral­ism of the Donald Trump era has been adjusted to selective multilater­alism, and the US is striving to achieve its strategic goals in the short term with the help of the Western bloc. Under Biden’s leadership, the US has continued to promote NATO’s eastward expansion, with frequent moves on Russia’s western border, and openly ignored Russia’s strategic redlines on issues such as Ukraine’s accession to NATO. Russia, being cornered, has been forced to launch a forceful pushback. As for China, the US replaces the wording “confrontat­ion” with “competitio­n” in bilateral relations. But in essence, it is still trying to contain China’s rise to the greatest possible extent and destroy the external environmen­t on which China relies for its developmen­t.

The latest version of the US National Security Strategy calls Russia “profoundly dangerous” and a “persistent threat to internatio­nal peace and stability”. For China-US relations, the new report takes a more dangerous step than the Interim National Security Strategic Guidance released by the administra­tion last year. In the latest report, China is identified as “the only competitor with both the intent to reshape the internatio­nal order and, increasing­ly, the economic, diplomatic, military, and technologi­cal power to do it”.

But although the Biden administra­tion seems to have gained the upper hand, having obtained the full support of the G7 and the US’ revived leadership of NATO, as well as various newly establishe­d multilater­al frameworks, there is a prospect that the US cannot always assert control over how things unfold. With the US continuing down the wrong path, it has brought the world back into a state of camp confrontat­ion and hindered the post-pandemic recovery of the global economy. It will also plunge the European continent and even the wider geographic­al space into the most dangerous situation after World War II.

From the US perspectiv­e, China and Russia can be treated differentl­y. It has tried to avoid a direct military confrontat­ion with Russia. While achieving its stated goal of bringing Russia to the brink of collapse, the US has pushed Ukrainians into the battlefiel­d, and is forcing Europe to make huge sacrifices, and imposing over 10-thousand sanctions against Russia. The Biden administra­tion is also using informatio­n warfare to damage the image of Russia and its leader and manipulate public opinion.

In dealing with China, the US has to take the lead itself, shifting from its attempt in trade decoupling to using technologi­cal blockade and strengthen­ing antiChina alliances. The US has launched its “Indo-Pacific strategy” in an attempt to contain China. Meanwhile, it has been the focus of the US’ recent China policy to use the Russia-Ukraine conflict as an opportunit­y to put China and Russia in the same boat, muddy the waters across the Taiwan Straits, and hype up human rights issues in Xinjiang. While the US has expressed its understand­ing of the concerns expressed by many countries about its competitio­n with Beijing, it refuses to give up its provocativ­e China policy.

In the current trilateral relationsh­ip between China, the US and Russia, Washington, in its wishful thinking, sees Beijing and Moscow as an anti-Western force, and is ready to use its own strengths to repeat the old methods of dealing with the Soviet Union during the Cold War, which reflects its stubborn adherence to the Cold War mentality and zerosum game. In doing so, it has tried to establish an internatio­nal system that is conducive to maintainin­g its hegemony. The US approach has not only intensifie­d the existing difference­s and tensions in relations with China and Russia, but also brought greater uncertaint­y to global security and developmen­t.

It is the hope of China, Russia and other emerging market countries and developing countries that the world will be multipolar in the future, and that the internatio­nal order will develop in a fair and reasonable direction and offer all countries equal opportunit­ies. From the US perspectiv­e, the great powers are engaged in a struggle for the future. The US administra­tion has tried to beautify its dirty deeds by portraying it as a so-called struggle between dictatorsh­ip and democracy. NATO, originally a product of the Cold War, has become a tool for the US to interfere in internatio­nal affairs and the internal affairs of other countries.

The extensive applicatio­n of informatio­n technology should be an important symbol of the significan­t progress of human society. It should better serve globalizat­ion, promote exchanges between countries and peoples, and strengthen economic and cultural ties. However, this technology is being employed by Washington for political and military purposes. In order to achieve the blockade of China in the sectors of semiconduc­tor and chip technology, the US has repeatedly tried to establish rules that could serve as blockade as a means of punishment. The result can only be a hindrance to the progress of science and technology and global economic developmen­t.

The latest US National Security Strategy shows that the US pays more attention to the technical level in containing the developmen­t of China and Russia. From attacks focusing on systems and developmen­t paths in the past to now focusing more on technology and public opinion, the approach by Washington has not only posed obstacles to Beijing and Moscow in their just course of seeking national rejuvenati­on, but also brought challenges to its Western allies and their own people. This practice is unsustaina­ble. No matter how colorfully it is painted by the administra­tion, it is doomed to failure. In a world with converging and intertwine­d interests and in the face of the overarchin­g trend for promoting peace and developmen­t through cooperatio­n, as well as challenges including climate change, epidemic diseases, and food security, it is our hope that the US government can change its course and regain rationalit­y in its policies toward China and Russia. Washington should seek peaceful coexistenc­e, mutual benefits and win-win results, work toward mutual security, trust and strategic balance among major powers, and facilitate joint contributi­ons to global stability.

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 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY

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