日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

Home / 30 Years of Reform & Opening / Opinion & analysis Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
A path for developing nations
Adjust font size:

By Wang Yusheng

Wang Yusheng was a former director of the Information Department of the Foreign Ministry and is now a researcher at the Development Research Center of the State Council.

Wang Yusheng was a former director of the Information Department of the Foreign Ministry and is now a researcher at the Development Research Center of the State Council. 

Over the past few years, the complexity of the international situation has been coupled with three powerful factors that mark profound changes in international affairs.

Firstly, to a great extent the emergence of developing countries has turned the wheel of history. Their resurgence has changed the world's political map as a new force, making it hard for America to maintain hegemony.

Some experts say the era of America is past. I do not think that this point holds. The U.S. is still the most powerful nation in the world, although it will be impossible for it to maintain this lead through the next five decades.

Secondly, the central preoccupation for developing countries in the new era has shifted from battling against capitalism to pursuing peaceful development.

What the developing countries need to do now is to step up the development of a multipolar world, advocate democracy in international relationships and diversity of development approaches, urge greater political autonomy, and bring change to the unfair and unreasonable global economic order.

Thirdly, China has become a significant factor in changing the trend of international relationships and issues. America maintains a watching brief on China that is expected to be a defining feature of a number of its strategies, and still looks for opportunities to outmaneuver China.

As a tactic to limit the rise of China, which it fears will menace its international hegemony, America is keen on building an alliance of democratic nations. However, China's booming economy has split the alliance of the western countries, which find themselves torn between time-honored values and practical interests – their values are supposed to be inviolable principles, while China's huge market is an enticing temptation that dangles in front of them.

When it comes to the Beijing Olympic Games, we are glad that it was great success. Yet it is very dangerous for us to merely view it as a source of national pride. Further challenges await us still. We should be confident in ourselves and rally our efforts.

We should prepare for danger in times of safety, and insist on a defensive rather than an offensive strategy in dealing with foreign relations.

We should avoid projecting too much of an image that China is a rising power in the world. I think it is better not to indulge in an excess of propaganda. In my opinion, harmony rather than hatred and confrontation is what we need in developing foreign policy.

We should emphasize that diplomatic principle that pursues harmony and cooperation, abandoning cold war ideology and downplaying the line between capitalism and socialism.

We will definitely encounter a great many difficulties on the way ahead, including polemic and lecturing from the outside world. We need to keep us cool and move forwards.

(China.org.cn translated by He Shan, December 10, 2008)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
主站蜘蛛池模板: 长宁区| 醴陵市| 冷水江市| 阿克陶县| 丰都县| 和林格尔县| 行唐县| 通江县| 漾濞| 嘉定区| 韶关市| 白山市| 小金县| 鸡泽县| 裕民县| 紫金县| 洛阳市| 临湘市| 石阡县| 武鸣县| 瑞丽市| 安化县| 通辽市| 镇原县| 武宁县| 阿拉善右旗| 天柱县| 陇西县| 南丹县| 淅川县| 潮州市| 台中市| 永宁县| 通化市| 新平| 平定县| 鹤岗市| 阿鲁科尔沁旗| 彰化县| 临武县| 霸州市|