Analysis: China’s handling of troubles in Afghanistan, Myanmar and North Korea will differ to the west, and e its identity as a global power

First, it was North Korea. Then, came Myanmar. Now, it is Afghanistan. The three ongoing crises in China’s neighbourhood seem to have little in common. But for Beijing, they pose the same question: how to deal with strategically important yet failing states on its border, and how will China’s response define its identity as a global power.

For many years, China watchers in the west have been looking for clues to how a rising power will exercise its influence on the world stage through its involvement in Africa or its relations with the US. But the way China approaches the three neighbouring countries may provide a clearer picture.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Doddie Weir, former Scotland and Lions second-row, dies aged 52

Weir diagnosed with motor neurone disease in 2016 Former lock made appearance…

‘I had surgery on Sunday and was home by Monday’: calls for NHS rollout of gamechanging stroke treatment

Doctors and patients are demanding wider access to therapy available only as…

Multiple people injured in shooting incident at South Carolina mall

The shopping center in Columbia, the state’s capital, was being evacuated as…

Coronavirus news: expert warns against lifting England restrictions too soon; Vietnam detects hybrid of UK and India variants

Victoria records five new cases of Covid-19 taking Melbourne outbreak to 35;…