Houston Chronicle

Blinken jousts with China, Russia at U.N.

- By Rick Gladstone

Secretary of State Antony Blinken, meeting with counterpar­ts from both China and Russia on Friday, said that the United States would “push back forcefully” against breakers of internatio­nal rules, even as he acknowledg­ed his own country’s violations.

Blinken’s counterpar­ts, Foreign Ministers Wang Yi of China and Sergey Lavrov of Russia, took their own diplomatic swipes at the United States, accusing it of hypocrisy and of defining internatio­nal rules in terms designed to assert Western dominance in the world.

The exchanges came at a United Nations Security Council meeting, convened by China and held virtually via videoconfe­rence link, on the theme of multilater­al cooperatio­n against the pandemic, global warming and other common threats.

Although the terms and tone used in the Friday meeting were more diplomatic, the difference­s were stark in the world views espoused by Blinken and his counterpar­ts. Those difference­s suggested that the gridlock among the big powers of the Security Council would not ease anytime soon.

The session was held the same week that Blinken, meeting with the foreign ministers of the Group of 7 nations in Britain, emphasized what he described as the importance of “defending democratic values and open societies” — a signal of the Biden administra­tion’s intent to challenge China and Russia on human rights, disinforma­tion and other issues that had been de-emphasized or ignored by the administra­tion of former President Donald Trump.

“Nationalis­m is resurgent, repression is rising, rivalries among countries are deepening — and attacks against the rules-based order are intensifyi­ng,” Blinken said. “Some question whether multilater­al cooperatio­n is still possible. The United States believes it is not only possible, but imperative.”

Blinken said the United States would work with any country on the global threats presented by the coronaviru­s and climate change, “including those with whom we have serious difference­s.”

At the same time, he said, in a clear warning to China and Russia, that the United States would “push back forcefully when we see countries undermine the internatio­nal order, pretend that the rules we’ve all agreed to don’t exist, or simply violate them at will.”

Wang, whose country holds the rotating Security Council presidency for May, sought to depict China as a responsibl­e global citizen that adhered to internatio­nal law. Without mentioning the United States by name, he chided countries that he said had defined internatio­nal rules as a “patent or privilege of the few.”

He also declared that “no country should expect other countries to lose,” reflecting a Chinese accusation that the United States is seeking to suppress China’s ascendance — an accusation that Blinken and others have denied.

Lavrov was more direct in his criticisms of the United States and its allies, describing Blinken’s references to a “rules-based order” as a guise for Western efforts to repress other countries.

He was especially critical of the economic sanctions that the U.S. and the European Union have imposed on Russia and others they disagree with.

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