Necessary response to US' manic zeal
China Daily
1595592472000

Vehicles pass by the China Consulate General in Houston, Texas, US, July 22, 2020. (Photo: Agencies)

Necessary and legitimate response. The world, for the past three days, had been speculating about which US consulate China would order to close after the US State Department asked China on Tuesday to shut down its consulate in Houston, Texas, US within 72 hours. And China did so following the traditions of diplomacy.

That China would respond to the United States' provocative move, which marks a new diplomatic low, was a foregone conclusion — for that is the universally accepted practice under the reciprocity principle of diplomacy. More important, Washington's increasingly offensive moves on the pretext of safeguarding national security, or protecting "American intellectual property" or the "private information" of US citizens deserves a befitting response lest its belief in its infallibility becomes a chronic ailment.

That's why China's decision on Friday ordering the closure of the US consulate in Chengdu, Sichuan province, didn't create ripples around the world. Of course, the international community is worried that tensions between the two countries are escalating due to the whimsical moves of the US.

Despite the US' desperate moves against China — sabotaging the most important bilateral relationship in the world — led by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who continued his anti-China tirade in a speech at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California, on Friday, just a day after returning from his latest anti-China crusade in Europe, Beijing has been exercising considerable restraint.

For it is well aware that it is not the American people, whose goodwill for their Chinese counterparts remains unchanged, as Chinese Ambassador to the US Cui Tiankai told the media earlier this week, but the incumbent US administration's failure to respond to the novel coronavirus pandemic and its manic zeal for ruling the US four more years that has stoked McCarthyist intolerance against China.

Even though Sino-US ties have hit a historical low and, as many have alleged, the US seems intent on drawing China into the vortex of a new cold war, Beijing is in no mood to return the favor — and thus fall prey to Washington's ploy. Simply because it believes peace, stability, cooperation and development are the demand of the times, and US decision-makers will sooner or later return to their senses and repair the bilateral relationship.

The world is no longer America's oyster. And it got a taste of that when even its allies refused to act against their conscience when Washington tried to marshal them in order to contain China. They know that China's economic development, which has helped it lift about 800 million people out of poverty and become the world's second-largest economy, has also brought tangible benefits to the rest of the world and helped improve global governance.

The international community knows Pompeo and his ilk's "China threat" theory, driven by their anxiety over the US' comparative decline, is a ruse to interfere in China's internal affairs and check its rise. And only those ready to stake their future on the current US administration are likely to present themselves on the "America first" altar.