国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Opinion / Editorials

Steady pursuit of peace, but ready for anything

(China Daily) Updated: 2016-04-25 07:32

Steady pursuit of peace, but ready for anything

A warship sails in South China Sea during a Chinese navy drill in South China Sea, July 28, 2015. [Photo/CFP]

Washington deservedly received a warning and reminder from Beijing about the dangers of saber-rattling, after US warplanes conducted what the United States called a freedom of overflight operation near China's Huangyan Islands.

This seems a weird claim since planes of all countries pass through the airspace without any trouble. The same is true of the US' so-called freedom of navigation operations.

The US military appears obsessed with something that is simply not an issue.

But what is happening, and may come up next, in the South China Sea goes far beyond jurisprudential common sense as well as divergent readings of international law.

It is because of geopolitical calculations rather than international justice that Washington is rushing to the forefront of the maritime disputes with Beijing. It is dusting off its long-neglected military alliance with the Philippines. It is seeking closer military relationships with India and Vietnam. It is dragging the Japanese military into the South China Sea.

Despite all the ear-pleasing diplomatic rhetoric from Washington, about not choosing sides, about peace and negotiated solutions, the hawkish Pentagon is making it increasingly clear that it will not give up until real trouble emerges in the South China Sea.

The China-US standoff is going beyond the exchange of verbal swords, and is increasingly taking the form of hostile, though as yet by-and-large restrained, military encounters.

Beijing's aspiration for a new-type major-country relationship is a blessing for all peace-minded countries and peoples. But it takes two to tango. In the South China Sea, at least at this moment, the US does not want to dance with China.

Washington may not acknowledge it, but the two countries' militaries appear to be on a collision course.

Which is why Beijing must be prepared.

However, things are not yet irreparable. As long as Beijing considers the South China Sea a core national interest, as long as it prioritize development at home, as long as it remains committed to sustaining a peaceful environment for domestic development, as long as it aspires to become a different kind of big power, it should avail itself of every possibility to avoid military solutions to territorial disputes.

The consensuses Foreign Minister Wang Yi has achieved in his visits to Brunei, Cambodia and the Laos are laudable diplomatic attempts that help set the stage for broader consultations.

Since real solutions rest ultimately on agreements between China and claimant countries, Beijing should work harder to seek breakthroughs through one-on-one negotiations.

...
永城市| 麦盖提县| 延庆县| 锡林浩特市| 屏南县| 虹口区| 科尔| 吉首市| 建德市| 泾源县| 安岳县| 江山市| 安塞县| 汝阳县| 南投县| 韶山市| 昌江| 茌平县| 新宾| 延寿县| 富顺县| 偏关县| 宝丰县| 成都市| 读书| 海伦市| 平塘县| 文水县| 筠连县| 时尚| 长宁区| 沈丘县| 安顺市| 囊谦县| 平陆县| 浦城县| 舞钢市| 娄底市| 蒙山县| 会理县| 库尔勒市|