By
Peter Koenig
November 24/25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
The Belt and Road
Initiative (BRI), also called the New Silk Road,
is based on a 2,100-year-old trade route between the
Middle East and Eastern Asia, called the Silk Road.
It wound its ways across the huge landmass Eurasia
to the most eastern parts of China. It favored
trading, based on the Taoist philosophy of harmony
and peaceful coexistence – trading in the original
sense of the term, an exchange with “win-win”
outcomes, both partners benefitting equally.
Today, in the western world we have lost this
concept. The terms of trade are imposed always by
the ‘stronger’ partner, the west versus the poorer
south – the south where most of the natural
resources are lodged. Mother Earth’s assets have
been and are coveted by the west – or north – for
building and maintaining a lifestyle in luxury,
abundance and waste. This trend has lasted for
centuries of western colonialism: Exploitation,
loot, esclavisation and rape of entire peoples of
the Global South by the Global North, to use the
current soothing World Bank lingo.
The New Silk Road, or BRI, is Chinese
President Xi Jinping’s brainchild. It’s
based on the same ancient principles, adjusted to
the 21st Century, building bridges
between peoples, exchanging goods, research,
education, knowledge, cultural wisdom, peacefully,
harmoniously and ‘win-win’ style. On 7 September
2013, Xi presented BRI at Kazakhstan’s Nazarbayev
University. He spoke about “People-to-People
Friendship and Creating a better Future”. He
referred to the Ancient Silk Road of more than 2,100
years ago, that flourished during China’s Western
Han Dynasty (206 BC to 24 AD).
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Referring to this epoch of more than
two millenniums back, Xi Jinping pointed
to the history of exchanges under the
Ancient Silk Road, saying,
“they had proven that countries with
differences in race, belief and cultural
background can absolutely share peace and
development as long as they persist in unity and
mutual trust, equality and mutual benefit,
mutual tolerance and learning from each other,
as well as cooperation and win-win outcomes.”
President Xi’s vision may be shaping the world of
the 21st Century. The Belt and Road
Initiative is designed and modeled loosely according
to the Ancient Silk Road. President Xi launched this
ground-breaking project soon after assuming the
Presidency in 2013. The endeavor’s idea is to
connect the world with transport routes,
infrastructure, industrial joint ventures, teaching
and research institutions, cultural exchange and
much more. Since 2017, enshrined in China’s
Constitution, BRI has become the flagship for
China’s foreign policy.
BRI is literally building bridges and connecting
people of different continents and nations. The
purpose of the New Silk Road is “to construct a
unified large market and make full use of both
international and domestic markets, through cultural
exchange and integration, to enhance mutual
understanding and trust of member nations, ending up
in an innovative pattern with capital inflows,
talent pool, and technology database”. BRI is a
perfect vehicle for building peacefully a World
Community with a Shared Future for Mankind –
which was the theme of an international Forum held
in Shanghai, from 5-7 November, a tribute to China’s
70th Anniversary of her Revolution and
achievements – with a vision into the future.
BRI is a global development strategy adopted by the
Chinese Government. Already today BRI has
investments involving more than 150 countries and
international organizations – and growing – in Asia,
Africa, Europe, the Middle East and the Americas.
BRI is a multi-trillion investment scheme, for
transport routes on land and sea, as well as
construction of industrial and energy infrastructure
and energy exploration – as well as trade among
connected countries. Unlike WTO (World Trade
Organization), BRI is encouraging nations to benefit
from their comparative advantages, creating win-win
situations. In essence, BRI is to develop mutual
understanding and trust among member nations,
allowing for free capital flows, a pool of experts
and access to a BRI-based technology data base.
At present, BRI’s closing date is foreseen for 2049
which coincides with new China’s 100th Anniversary.
The size and likely success of the program
indicates, however, already today that it will most
probably be
extended
way beyond that date. It is worth noting, though,
that only in 2019, six years after its inception,
BRI has become a news item in the West. Remarkably,
for six years BRI was as much as denied, or ignored
by the western media, in the hope it may go away.
But away it didn’t go. To the contrary, many
European Union members have already subscribed to
BRI, including Greece, Italy, France, Portugal – and
more will follow, as the temptation to participate
in this projected socioeconomic boom is
overwhelming.
Germany, the supposed economic leader of Europe, is
mulling over the benefits and contras of
participating in BRI. The German business community,
like business throughout Europe, is strongly in
favor of lifting US-imposed sanctions and
reconnecting with the East, in particular with China
and Russia. But official Berlin is still with one
foot in the White House – and with the other trying
to appease the German – and European – world of
business. This balancing act is in the long run not
sustainable and certainly not desirable. At present
BRI is already actively involved in over 80
countries, including at least half of the EU
members.
To counteract the pressure to join BRI, the European
Union, basically run by NATO and intimately linked
to Washington, has initiated their own ‘Silk Road’,
attempting to connect Asia with Europe through
Japan. In that sense, the EU and Japan have signed a
“free trade agreement” which includes a compact to
build infrastructure, in sectors such as energy,
transport and digital devices. The purpose is to
strengthen economic and cultural ties between the
two regions, boosting business relations between
Asia and Europa. It is an obvious effort to compete
with or even sideline China’s BRI. But it is equally
obvious that this response will fail. Usually
initiatives taken in ill-fate are not successful.
And China, non-belligerent China, is unlikely to
challenge this EU-Japan competitive approach.
In another approach to counter BRI, The U.S.
Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC),
Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
(DFAT), and Japan Bank for International Cooperation
(JBIC), launched on 4 November the Blue Dot
Network (BDN), an initiative supposedly run
entirely by private actors, funded by private
banking, intended to bring together governments, the
private sector, and civil society “to promote
high-quality, trusted standards for global
infrastructure development in an open and inclusive
framework.”
It is not clear how the BDN will interact with or
counteract BRI. Anything run entirely by the private
sector, especially western private banking, is no
good omen for the country their “development effort”
touches. Such investments’ objectives are primarily
shareholder profits, not socioeconomic development
benefitting the countries where they plan to invest.
No competition for China’s BRI. Again,
non-aggressive China is unlikely to react.
China’s New Silk Road is creating a multipolar
world, where all participants will benefit. The idea
is to encourage economic growth, distributed in a
balanced way, so as to prioritize development
opportunities for those most in need. That means the
under-developed areas of western China, eastern
Russia, Central Asia, Central Europe – reaching out
to Africa and the Middle East, Latin America, as
well as to South East Asia and the Pacific. BRI is
already actively building and planning some six to
ten land and maritime routes, connecting Africa, the
Middle East, Europe and South America.
The expected multi-trillion-dollar equivalent
dynamic budget is expected to be funded by China,
largely, but not exclusively, by the Asian
Infrastructure and Investment Bank (AIIB), by Russia
– and by all the countries that are part of BRI and
involved in singular or multi-country projects. The
long-term return on these massive investments in
people’s wellbeing is an exponential multiple of the
original investments and cannot be limited to
numerical economics, as social benefits of wellbeing
cannot be defined by linear accounting.
Implementing BRI, or the New Silk Road, is itself
the realization of a vision of nations: Peaceful
interconnectivity, joint infrastructure and
industrial development, as well as joint management
of natural resources. For example, BRI may help with
infrastructure and management advice resolving or
preventing conflicts on transboundary water
resources. There are some 263 transboundary lake
and river basins, covering almost half the earth’s
surface and involving some 150 countries. In
addition, there are about 300 transboundary aquifers
serving about 2 billion people who depend on
groundwater.
The Chinese government calls the Silk Road
Initiative “a bid to enhance regional
connectivity and embrace a brighter future”.
Today, John Lennon’s “Give Peace a Chance” is
more relevant than ever. And China is a vanguard in
promoting peaceful development across the globe. BRI,
China’s foreign policy flagship, is clearly an
initiative towards world Peace.
Peter Koenig is an economist and geopolitical
analyst. He is also a water resources and
environmental
specialist. He worked for over 30 years with the
World Bank and the World Health Organization around
the world in the fields of environment and water.He
lectures at universities in the US, Europe and South
America. He writes regularly for Global Research;
ICH; RT; Sputnik; PressTV; The 21stCentury;
Greanville
Post;
Defend Democracy Press,
TeleSUR; The Saker Blog, the New Eastern Outlook
(NEO); and other
internet sites. He is the author of
Implosion
–An
Economic Thriller about War, Environmental
Destruction
and Corporate Greed
–fiction
based on facts and on 30 years of World Bank
experience around the
globe. He is also a co-author
of
The World
Order and Revolution!
-Essays
from the Resistance.
Peter Koenig is a Research Associate of the Centre
for Research on Globalization.
Do you agree or disagree? Post
your comment here
The original source of this article is
Information Clearing House
==See Also==
Note To ICH Community
We ask that you assist us in
dissemination of the article published by
ICH to your social media accounts and post
links to the article from other websites.
Thank you for your support.
Peace and joy