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China’s support for Assad’s repression is folly

In vetoing the United Nations Security Council’s draft resolution on Syria, China claims that it has acted in the interests of the Syrian people, a position articulated in the People’s Daily, the newspaper of the Communist Party’s Central Committee, in a commentary appearing under the pen name Zhong Sheng. The characters for “Zhong Sheng” mean the sound of a bell, but they are phonetically the same as “the voice of China.” The word play was no accident: The voice of China on this issue is as clear as a bell.

The commentary’s main points are that it is wrong for the great powers to use the U.N. as an instrument of regime change in Syria, and it is better for the country’s multi-faceted and highly complex problems to be resolved by political means and internal negotiations. If China (and Russia) had not used their veto, a rerun of Libya would have occurred, with European powers, supported by the United States, going beyond the U.N. mandate and using local “rebels” to oust Syria’s government.

What is important about China’s move in the Security Council is that vital Chinese national interests were not at stake, at least not directly or immediately. This marks a departure from its past use of its U.N. veto. The commentary in the People’s Daily also reflects that new sense of confidence. The Chinese government now wants the rest of the world to know why it has used its veto – and expects its decision to be respected.

The problem with China’s position is that the U.N. resolution was aimed at ensuring precisely the outcome that Chinese leaders claim to seek. With Syrian government forces killing civilians indiscriminately and in increasing numbers under orders from President Bashar Assad, the resolution sought to restrain Assad from using force to “resolve” the country’s political problems.

China insists that its goal is for the people of Syria to escape violence, conflict and the flames of war. However, its veto will do just the opposite. The world has already seen the use of even greater and more wanton force against civilians in the city of Homs following China’s veto in the Security Council.

By using its veto power, the Chinese government has effectively ensured that atrocities in Syria will continue and increase in intensity. Contrary to what its leaders expect, China’s standing among most people in the Middle East – and its ambition to project soft power globally – will be gravely damaged.

If China were genuinely eager to see Syria’s people determine their own political future without Assad’s forced removal, it should have pressed for a modification of the resolution, calling for a cease-fire and the start of a political process that worked toward a settlement and Assad’s eventual departure from power. Would the United States, the United Kingdom, or France have vetoed such a resolution?

Why, then, did China force a showdown in the Security Council? China’s rise, coming at a time of self-doubt and apparent decline in Europe and North America, has given its leaders confidence that they no longer need to tolerate the post-Cold War international order.

China’s communist rulers have always resented the advent of “humanitarian intervention.” After all, if the Western powers can impose regime change on authoritarian states on humanitarian grounds, why would this stop at China’s borders? But, until now, there was little that China’s leaders could do about it. Now, with the costs of the West’s misadventures in Iraq and Afghanistan (and, to a lesser extent, in Libya) compounded by its major economies’ weakness, China’s leaders appear to see an opportunity to push back.

With Russia on its side, the Chinese government can take a stand without appearing isolated. And, while a long-term strategic alliance between Russia and China may not be in the offing, tactical cooperation to stop the West from imposing its values on the global community is likely to persist, so long as Vladimir Putin retains power in Russia.

A rising great power like China taking on a proactive global role is, in principle, a positive development. But the world will not be a better place if China’s newfound assertiveness is focused – or, just as importantly, is perceived to be focused – almost exclusively on helping autocrats to stay in power through brutal repression of their citizens.

Steve Tsang is director of the China Policy Institute and a professor of contemporary Chinese studies at the University of Nottingham. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with Project Syndicate © (www.project-syndicate.org).

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on February 14, 2012, on page 7.
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China and Syria / China veto / China-Syria relations / Chinese veto / China / Syria
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Comments  
2faces February 18, 2012 03:54 AM

It seems China and Russia have been isolated and their internal policies of corruption and brutality against their own people put on the international stage. The Arab League proposal to remove the Syrian leader and stop the Syrian government from killing its own people who are exercising their human rights was overwhelmingly backed by the vast majority of UN members: 137 approved, 12 against, and 17 abstained. this shows that the ideologies of China and Russia are out of step with the rest of the world. Indeed, this will further damaging China's goal of being a world power. Now China is wondering if it will be invited to the international powers' meeting in Tunis to discuss the Syrian crisis.

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