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China’s New “Toolbox” for Security and Sovereignty

China’s new Foreign Relations Law is meant to guide and govern the country’s foreign policy – a de facto TOOLBOX to handle issues related to external relations. It is designed to act as a “deterrent” to sanctions and is needed urgently to safeguard national sovereignty and security.

In March this year, President Xi Jinping hit out at the string of sanctions the US and its European allies have been slapping on China. In a blunt like never before tone, Xi described these measures as a means of “all-around containment, encirclement and suppression of China”, signaling a possibly harder stance against what he perceives as an effort by the United States to block China’s rise. This speech apparently set the stage for the new  Foreign Relations Law (passed on June 28) that has transformed Xi’s views in to a law in a difficult geo-political and challenging commercial environment.

The law is meant to guide and govern the country’s foreign policy – a de facto TOOLBOX to handle issues related to external relations. It is designed to act as a “deterrent” to sanctions and is needed urgently to safeguard national sovereignty and security. It says Beijing has the right to “take measures to counter and restrict actions that endanger the country’s sovereignty, security, and development interests, violate international law or “fundamental norms of international relations.” It also authorises the State Council – the country’s cabinet – and the executive branches of government to come up with regulations and systems to apply the countermeasure on issues such as US-led export controls on advanced technology.

It calls on state agencies charged with, executing Xi’s vision to strengthen interdepartmental coordination and cooperation to enforce the retaliatory measures. The State Council, which coordinates China’s government ministries, is authorized to “establish related working institutions.”

As expected, the law drew criticism from US and European officials and experts, warning it will equip authorities with unprecedented powers to go after any person or organization considered a risk to national security.

The US State Department said the law will “greatly expand the scope of what (Beijing) considers espionage activities”.

“Foreign businesses do not have clarity on what is officially considered a national secret,” the European Chamber of Commerce in China wrote in response to questions on the law. “Laws that are vaguely worded and broad in scope present compliance challenges, and can also result in discretionary implementation, which is not conducive to attracting foreign investment or rebuilding business confidence among the foreign business community in China,” according to Bloomberg News agency.

But Beijing big-wigs insist on self-defense and preemption through such legislation. We should] make full use of the Foreign Relations Law as a legal tool – through legislative, law enforcement, judicial and other means – to carry out our fight in response to acts of containment, interference, sanctions, and destruction,” wrote Wang Yi, the senior-most diplomacy adviser, in the People’s Daily (June 29).

China is confronting a growing number of unpredictable factors and should continuously expand its legal “toolbox for foreign struggles …the … law clearly opposes all hegemonism and power politics, and is against any unilateralism, protectionism, and bullying acts, towards China,” Yi underlined.

China’s foreign minister, Qin Gang, a former ambassador to the United States, had also already hinted at harsher measures back in March.

“The United States actually wants China not to fight back when hit or cursed, but this is impossible but if it takes a less confrontational stance toward China…if the U.S. doesn’t step on the brakes but continues to speed up, no guardrail can stop the derailment,” Qin had said.

The Beijing mood has been increasingly suspicious and blunter since the US CIA announced the establishment of a China-focused center in October 2021. CIA Director William J. Burns had then characterized the new China Mission Center as an effort to “further strengthen our collective work on the most important geopolitical threat we face in the 21st century, an increasingly adversarial Chinese government.”

No surprise that China is reluctant to resume high-level communication with American armed forces until Washington lifts sanctions on Chinese Defense Minister Li Shangfu. Beijing has also sanctioned individuals, including former US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo in recent years, who have few, if any, ties to the Chinese economy.

Even Secretary of State Anthony Blinken’s visit (June 20) could not help in softening respective positions or preventing the new legislation – which is now the long-term self-defense mechanism for Beijing, which is both skeptical as well as apprehensive as the US-led Indo-Pacific strategy unfolds, drawing NATO- AUKUS, QUAD into ever closer anti-China cooperation.

Latest business deals and joint venture agreements between Indian and US firms, analysts argue, are also part of the Indo-Pacific strategy to relocate business from China and shift future investments to India and its periphery – a legitimate goal that every nation is entitled to pursue. Why should the safeguarding of own national interests by one nation be seen with skepticism by others? Why deploy brinkmanship instead of pursuing mutually beneficial means to protect national interest? Collaboration can be a much more effective tool for national development and international connectivity than a confrontationist approach that boxes nations into silos of individual or group interests.

Imtiaz Gul
Imtiaz Gul
Imtiaz Gul has over 35 years of journalistic experience. Gul regularly appears as an analyst/expert on Pakistani and foreign TV channels as well as the Doha-based Al-Jazeera English/Arabic satellite TV channel for his expertise in areas such as Afghanistan/Tribal Areas/and the Kashmir militancy. He has authored several books.

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