The Dawn of Xivilization: Israel and China’s New
Global Initiatives
Tuvia Gering
INSS Insight No. 1730, May 31, 2023 https://www.inss.org.il/publication/the-dawn-of-xivilization
In the last two years, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has
announced three global initiatives: the Global Development Initiative (GDI),
the Global Security Initiative (GSI), and the Global Civilization Initiative
(GCI). These new initiatives are a means of bolstering the legitimacy of the
Chinese Communist Party, with Xi at its head. More importantly, they reflect
how China’s foreign policy has evolved and the lessons learned from its global
engagement in the ten years since the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) was
launched. Due to the prominence of these initiatives in China’s foreign policy,
Israel will need to closely monitor their progress and weigh the implications
for its security and interests. While Jerusalem must strive to continue cooperating
with China where those considerations are maintained, it must avoid blanket
support for initiatives that serve China’s propaganda and interests at the
expense of the West and the US in particular. Such backing could lend credence
to Beijing’s efforts to undermine Washington’s security framework in the Middle
East, which is the bedrock of Israel’s security. Additionally, it could support
Beijing’s efforts to undermine universal norms and values.
“This is a victory for peace,” pronounced
China’s top diplomat, Wang Yi, after overseeing the signing of a normalization
agreement between Iran and Saudi Arabia on March 10, 2023. Wang emphasized that
the credit for the breakthrough should be given to General Secretary Xi
Jinping’s Global Security Initiative (GSI). The same initiative had been mentioned
by Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang as a possible basis for resolving the
Ukrainian war, and once more in a conversation
with Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen on April 17 as means of resolving the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Over the last decade, the Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI) had been the centerpiece of Xi’s foreign policy, but three additional
Chinese initiatives that have been launched in the last two years now challenge
its primacy.
The first is Xi’s Global Development Initiative (GDI),
which he announced at the UN General Assembly in September 2021. With global
growth slowing in the shadow of COVID-19, its stated
goal is to assist the international community in achieving the UN 2030
Agenda’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). In June 2022, China announced
32 concrete steps (“deliverables”)
for its implementation, which bring together existing Chinese-led development
initiatives while adding new tools and resources. Among them are a billion
dollars added to the three-billion-dollar Beijing-led South-South development
fund and the training of 100,000 workers by China.
The second is the Global Security Initiative (GSI),
launched in April 2022. It complements the GDI based on the Sinicized Marxist notion
that “security is a prerequisite for development, and development is a
guarantee for security.” In a GSI
Concept Paper published last February, on the one-year anniversary of the
war in Ukraine, China called for a “joint, comprehensive, cooperative and
sustainable” security that respects the sovereignty of countries and addresses
their “legitimate security concerns.” Chinese leaders maintain that the GSI
promotes a “new” security concept that complies with the UN Charter, abides by
peaceful resolution of disputes, and maintains world peace in “traditional
security” (areas related to warfare and power politics) and “non-traditional
security” (such as climate, economy, cyber, and pandemics).
GLOBALink | Former Croatian president hails
China-proposed Global Civilization Initiative https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wExIvE9fHGQ
The GDI and GSI were joined in March by the Global
Civilization Initiative (GCI), which focuses on “soft power” fields such as
education, culture, and values. According
to the Chinese foreign minister, the GCI’s goal is to promote “unity, harmony,
mutual respect, and mutual understanding among different civilizations” and to
support the “shared values of humanity.”
What Distinguishes the Global Initiatives from the
Belt and Road Initiative?
The BRI will be ten years old this December, and by
that time, approximately 14,000 projects in 165 countries totaling trillions of
dollars will have been associated
with its name. Regardless of the economic contributions it makes to its
partners, the initiative has had an “image problem” in recent years due to
corruption, lack
of transparency, and damage to the environment and to workers’ rights (the
prevalent claim that China sets “debt traps” to seize assets, however, has been
thoroughly
debunked). Domestic and foreign funding constraints, as well as the number
of projects and “competing brands” of the G7, the European Union, India, and
Japan have exacerbated the challenges.
The BRI has its roots in the turn of the century, more
than a decade before Xi came to power, in localized development initiatives in
China’s border regions. In comparison, the new initiatives are his and, by
definition, “global” from the start. Unlike the BRI’s Sinocentric “Silk Roads,”
they promote issues that enjoy a broad international consensus, as a senior
Chinese diplomat put
it: “Who would oppose cooperation on development?” Indeed, as of April, the
GDI had received the support of over a hundred countries and international
organizations, as well as the UN Secretary-General’s blessing, and nearly 70
countries had joined the “Group of Friends of the GDI” headquartered in New
York.
塑造和平使者形象 習近平提「全球文明倡議」|鏡新聞調查報告 #鏡新聞 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTGN1vyfBoQ
Taiwanese Mirror Media reports on China's new global
initiatives and Beijing's mediation between Iran and Saudi Arabia in March
With the 69-year-old Xi entering his third term and no
successor in sight, the initiatives are accompanied by a personality cult
campaign (party-state propaganda aptly coined the term “Xivilization”).
Their goal is to legitimize the leader’s perpetual rule and the party he heads,
painting him as a “great
Marxist strategist” who “cares
for the fate of humanity” and is capable of identifying global “deficits”
in development, security, trust, and governance. They also demonstrate the
evolution of China’s foreign policy under Xi, from maintaining a low profile to
“striving for achievement.” This activism, or “spirit
of struggle,” is promoted in light of his catchphrase “great changes unseen
in a century.” Because China has become so entwined with the world and vice
versa, responding to the changes is not enough; Beijing must “get closer to
world’s center
stage” and seize
the initiative so that the changes are in line with its interests and values.
Finally, the three initiatives demonstrate Beijing’s
genuine faith in the “righteousness of its way.” After four decades of almost
double-digit growth, China has turned from a backward country into an economic
powerhouse. In Xi’s view, China’s rise is a mirror image of the decline of the
United States and the West, and it attests to the superiority of the “Chinese
model.” Along with the BRI, the three initiatives serve as the “blueprint”
for a new world order – a post-Western world order – that will see the “great
rejuvenation of the Chinese nation” and the realization of Xi’s vision of a
“community with a shared destiny for mankind”:
- The GDI aims to set the agenda for global
development by first coopting this high-consensus concept and then
transforming it. Under this kind of “development,” the sovereign state’s
interests trump individual freedoms. And unlike the Sinocentric Silk
Roads, the GDI works toward the SDGs and has its own exclusive and US-free
China-led “Group of Friends of the GDI” under the auspices of the UN. This
fact confers international legitimacy and makes its anti-liberal ideas
more palatable. For instance, its emphasis on cyber cooperation is done
under the guise of China’s “internet sovereignty,” i.e., securing a global
network that is atomized, censored, and monitored.
- The GSI’s very definition of a “new security
concept” implies an antithesis to an “old security concept” led by the US.
According to China, the latter advocates a zero-sum game, inciting camp
confrontations and nurturing a Cold War mentality. In reality, the GSI is
intended to undermine the legitimacy of the network of US-led security
alliances and partnerships that Beijing sees as a threat, including NATO,
the Quad, AUKUS, and the G7. The GSI Concept Paper, for example, calls for
a “new security architecture,” for the holding of Middle East
security forums in Beijing, and the convening of “a larger, more
authoritative, and more influential international peace conference”
for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
- Xi stated
at the unveiling of the GCI that the success of the Chinese development
model “breaks the myth of modernization equals Westernization.” It
presupposes that the US is fueling a “clash
of civilizations,” whereas China wants to
allow “all flowers to bloom in the big garden of world civilizations.”
This remark by the Chinese foreign minister should serve as a stark
reminder of the
last time a Chinese leader wished to “let a hundred flowers bloom.”
Today, China employs cultural relativism of so-called “shared values of
humanity” to redefine the very essence of universal values such as human
rights and democracy as subject to the dictates of the sovereign state. In
doing so, it seeks to deter “interference in internal affairs” in the name
of the universal values that it violates.
Implications for Israel
As with the BRI, China has not yet established any
clear-cut mechanisms, budgets, nor timetables for the three initiatives. As for
the Chinese mediation between Iran and Saudi Arabia, it was evidently linked to
the GSI only after the fact, much in the same way the BRI umbrella brought
together a haphazard assortment of projects that had begun prior to its launch.
The three initiatives, however, should not be dismissed as mere rhetoric. Even
if most of their projects remain on paper, their centrality in China’s foreign
policy necessitates Israel’s awareness of and monitoring of their development.
Xi Jinping invited
Israel to “take an active part in the GDI” in a conversation with President
Isaac Herzog in November 2021. Jerusalem has yet to respond or take an official
stance on the three initiatives. But if it does – or if senior Israeli
officials publicly support it – they will join the company of anti-liberal
nations who have embraced it, giving China a propaganda win. If Israel joins
and is later forced to withdraw, its relations with Beijing will suffer. In
comparison, as the only G7 country to join the BRI in 2019, Italy is now
looking for a way out, souring bilateral relations with China in the process.
At the same time, outright opposition to the initiatives will be perceived as
too confrontational. Therefore, Israel’s interest is not to join the
GDI or express blanket support for it, but rather to continue
project-by-project cooperation with China on development while balancing
economic, foreign policy, and security considerations.
The GSI, in contrast, is intended to undermine US-led
security frameworks. In the Middle East, it may jeopardize the progress of the
Abraham Accords and the I2U2 (a minilateral grouping launched in 2022 and
comprised of Israel, the US, India, and the United Arab Emirates). Furthermore,
given that Beijing is dogmatically
biased in favor of the Palestinians and provides Iran with an economic
lifeline, international
legitimacy, and technological
solutions to ensure the regime’s survival, support for the GSI goes
against Israel’s strategic interests.
Aside from security concerns, Israeli support will be
misguided on a normative level. The GSI’s stated support for the UN Charter is
a smokescreen
for China’s refusal to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the most egregious
violation of the charter, which Beijing and Moscow justify as a response to
“NATO expansionism.” Similarly, the good intentions that pave China’s
road to “inter-civilizational dialogue and cooperation” under the GCI erode universal
values that underpin human rights, dignity, and freedom from oppression, and
reject the foundation of liberal democracies on which countries such as Israel
were founded.
Just as it is not advisable to sign a contract without
thoroughly reading it, Israel should not adopt China’s new initiatives without
carefully examining their content and implications.
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