British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has suggested that the “golden era” of relations between Britain and China is coming to an end.
In his first major foreign policy speech, the billionaire representative of Britain’s bourgeois minority gave strongman Xi Jinxing a bad press over the authoritarianism in China.
He said: “We recognise China poses a systemic challenge to our values and interests, a challenge that grows more acute as it moves towards even greater authoritarianism.”
Sunak was speaking at the backdrop of the ongoing protests in China described by most observes as “the highest levels of civil disobedience seen in decades.”
“Instead of listening to their people’s protests, the Chinese government has chosen to crack down further, including by assaulting a BBC journalist,” he said.
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The prime minister signaled a hardening of diplomatic relations and went ahead to call China a “systemic challenge to our values and interests.”
However, Sunak admitted that western countries “could not ignore China’s influence over world affairs” and its “ability to help with shared challenges such as economic stability and climate change.”
“The move marked an abrupt change from his more hardline stance while running for the Conservative leadership over the summer, sparking criticism it was “thin as gruel” and similar to the “appeasement” strategy initially adopted by Britain toward the Nazis in the 1930s,” Aubrey Allegretti says.
“The so-called ‘golden era’ is over, along with the naive idea that trade would lead to social and political reform, Sunak told dignitaries at the Lord Mayor’s Banquet.
Sunak cautioned that Britain’s adversaries were planning for the “long-term”, and the UK needed to take a “longer-term view on China”.
Additionally, according to Allegretti, Sunak reiterated that the UK will “deepen its ties with Indo-Pacific nations since the region, he argues, would deliver more than half of global growth compared with just a quarter from Europe and North America combined by 2050.”
“By deepening these ties we’ll help protect the arteries and ventricles of the global economy, supporting security and prosperity – both at home in our European neighborhood and in the Indo-Pacific,” he added.