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Sunday, December 22, 2024  
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China seeks to boost Shanghai bloc to counter the West

Talks in Astana took place ahead of this week’s NATO summit in Washington
Photo via AFP
Photo via AFP

China is seeking to strengthen its leadership of an expanding bloc of nations it sees as a potential counterweight to the world order led by the United States.

Leaders of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) member states met last week in Kazakhstan, with President Xi Jinping calling on strategic ally Russia and other partners to “firmly support each other”.

Founded in 2001 by Beijing and Moscow as an economic and security grouping, it includes India, Pakistan and several Central Asian states.

It expanded last year to include Iran and this year welcomed Belarus.

The talks in Astana took place ahead of this week’s NATO summit in Washington, where the Western military alliance is marking its 75th anniversary and reaffirming its support for Ukraine.

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In stark contrast, the SCO’s joint declaration made no mention of Russia’s war in Ukraine, or of Taiwan, which China claims as part of its territory.

With China assuming the annual rotating chair of the SCO, analysts expect it will work to integrate the two new members and boost collaboration across its vast remit — bolstering, in turn, its own leadership of the alliance.

“The SCO is increasingly defining itself as an alternative vision for world order, juxtaposed against the traditional postwar order led by the United States and other Western powers,” said Bates Gill, a senior fellow for Asian security at the US-based National Bureau of Asian Research.

The bloc’s expansion to include new members could be seen as echoing Xi and Putin’s repeated calls for their vast region to resist Western influence.

The SCO claims to represent 40 percent of the world’s population and about 30 percent of its GDP, but its members have diverse political systems and even open disagreements with one another.

Zhang Xiaotong, director of the China and Central Asia Studies Center at Kazakhstan’s KIMEP University, said Beijing would look to boost trade among members as it grapples with efforts to contain its growing influence in Asia, and an economic slowdown at home.

“China is likely to… encourage peace in the Eurasian continent and put economics at the centre of SCO agenda so as to help improve (its) growth,” he told AFP.

China and Russia have historically used the SCO to deepen their own ties with Central Asian states and vie for influence in the region.

Recently, however, they have increasingly pitched the organisation as a competitor to the West.

Last week’s SCO declaration blasted the “unilateral and unrestricted build-up” of missile defence systems in what appeared to be a thinly veiled swipe at Washington.

Xi also said the group should “resist external interference” and “firmly support each other”, while Putin hailed the arrival of a “multipolar world”.

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