Chinese leader Xi Jinping presses his case for world leadership through a “global security initiative.” But flowery words mask the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) real intentions.
Another day, another communist Chinese grand initiative. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), Made in China 2025, Digital Silk Road (and “Digital China”), Polar Silk Road, etc. This one is perhaps the most grandiose of all: a “global security initiative.”
Let us examine the topic.
The topic of security—especially as it applies to the internal security required to keep the CCP in—is never far from the thoughts of Xi and other communist leaders. All initiatives posed by Xi have a singular ultimate focus: to enhance the power, authority, and security of the CCP over all other considerations.
One of Xi’s first expostulations about security occurred in May 2014 in a keynote speech given at the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA) in Shanghai.
“We need to … establish a new regional security cooperation architecture, and jointly build a shared, win-win road for Asian security,” Xi said. This is the usual highfalutin nonsense that we have come to expect.
But this statement in that speech reflected Xi’s real intentions regarding regional security: “We should abide by the basic norms governing international relations, such as respecting sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity; non-interference in internal affairs; respect social systems and chosen development paths.”
This declaration was a veiled announcement that Taiwan is part of mainland China’s “territorial integrity,” and that China would brook no foreign interference in how Beijing pursues integration of Taiwan into the communist polity.
Xi has repeated and expanded upon that gobbledygook over the past few years, and his views on “security” have been propagated endlessly by state-run Chinese media.
The associated policies that Xi supposedly advocates include international arms control, disarmament and non-proliferation, a nuclear strategy of self-defense, and an active role in global peacekeeping operations.
As usual, these Chinese communist actions speak louder than their flowery words. Apparently, Xi’s claims of support for “comprehensive and sustainable security” apply exclusively to CCP regime continuity in Beijing. At the same time, his “inspiring human society towards lasting peace” really means “inspiring other countries to obtain a form of peace by kowtowing to Chinese military supremacy.”
This brings us to Xi dressing up his regional security blarney as a new “global security initiative.” It is all of a piece with the same CCP goals and objectives.
This is the key sentence from his announcement in Hainan on April 21: “We should uphold the principle of indivisibility of security, build a balanced, effective and sustainable security architecture, and oppose the building of national security on the basis of insecurity in other countries.”
The concept itself is absurd, especially when applied to Taiwan, because communist China’s vast military expansion, a small portion of which was noted above, clearly strengthens China’s security at the expense of the security of other states in the region (and the world)!
China’s actions once again speak louder than words and expose the self-serving hypocrisy that pervades Beijing’s diplomacy. Regarding the first phrase highlighted above, the CCP has refused to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine—a direct violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity—while actually increasing the importation of Russian-produced hydrocarbons since the start of the war.
The second phrase concerning “non-interference in internal affairs” is quite obviously aimed at any foreign interference in Taiwan.