Advertisement
Diplomacy
Opinion
Yu Jie

Opinion | To win hearts in the Indo-Pacific, China must end its combative diplomacy

  • China’s pursuit of trade partnerships is at odds with its high-octane rhetoric as it seeks to respond to the West’s Indo-Pacific strategy
  • China can nurse its resentment or it can inject realism into its foreign policy, stop military threats, and offer trade and vaccine help without demanding recognition

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
46
Illustration: Craig Stephens

With its conceptual ambiguity, “Indo-Pacific” is the latest geopolitical buzzword between the United States and its allies.

Behind its increased use is an overt aim to curb China’s growing economic, political and military influence between the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Beijing’s foreign policy deliberation is being rigorously tested with this increasing tilt by the West towards the Indo-Pacific.
For China, this tilt complicates the already erratic relations between Beijing and Taipei, escalates the sabre-rattling in the South China Sea, and disrupts its flagship Belt and Road Initiative, which the country has invested heavily in.
Advertisement
But the growing geopolitical significance of the region goes well beyond China’s relations with Western liberal democracies and regional economies. It exposes a permanent contradiction in Beijing’s foreign policy between pursuing economic growth with trade partners and simultaneously conducting combative diplomacy with many countries.

The reality is that if Beijing doubles down on its diplomatic war of words, it will not help fulfil China’s own age-old foreign affairs priority – creating a stable external environment to foster its domestic economic development. This conservative maxim was advocated by Deng Xiaoping but it should remain a mantra for Beijing in handling foreign affairs today.

02:23

Gloves off at top-level US-China summit in Alaska with on-camera sparring

Gloves off at top-level US-China summit in Alaska with on-camera sparring
In response to the Covid-19 pandemic and a tougher international environment, Beijing proposed the new dual circulation strategy to promote domestic consumption. A central part of this strategy is to boost the domestic economy’s ability to power itself.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x