China-Arab Cooperation Forum serves as vital channel for enhancing mutual trust, people’s ties
The 10th China-Arab Cooperation Forum was held in Beijing on May 30 and this year marked the 20th anniversary of the forum. Over the past two decades, China-Arab ties have continued to reach new heights, from new-type partnership and strategic cooperative relations to strategic partnerships, and then to jointly building a China-Arab community with a shared future.
Looking back, the forum has become an important channel for China and Arab countries to enhance political mutual trust, which is the cornerstone of stable and far-reaching China-Arab relations. Its political dialogue mechanism supports each other’s core interests and major concerns.
READ MORE: Blueprint set for future of Sino-Arab ties
The forum has become an important platform for China and Arab countries to hold extensive consultations and jointly contribute to the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which offers sustained vitality to China-Arab cooperation.
The forum has built a bridge for cultural exchanges between China and Arab countries. Over the past 20 years, people-to-people exchanges between the two sides have become increasingly frequent, with various cultural exchange mechanisms.
Looking ahead, the Global Development Initiative (GDI) , Global Security Initiative (GSI), and Global Civilization Initiative (GCI) will inject new vitality into China-Arab cooperation.
First, the forum should work together with the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) to implement the GSI. The Middle East region is not only a pivotal node of China’s peripheral diplomacy, but also has a bearing on China’s energy and economic cooperation zones, and is also a defense for China to combat the “three forces” of terrorism, separatism and extremism and maintain stability of China’s western border.
Faced with the sheer momentum of high-tech development in the Gulf region and the urgent demand for cooperation with China’s high-end industrial chain, the Middle East has gradually become a pivot of the United States’ strategy to contain China. This can be seen in its “India-Israel-United Arab Emirates-US” (I2U2) mechanism aimed at hedging the BRI.
The Middle East and Central Asia are adjacent to each other, and it is a consensus for all parties to jointly get out of an awkward situation and pursue prosperity and peace in order to avoid development obstacles and ethnic ideologies being intertwined there through mixing and fermenting religious and cultural factors.
As a multilateral platform for dialogue and cooperation, the forum can collaborate with the SCO, which focuses on regional security and stability, to achieve higher-level coordination and complementarity; jointly promote the construction of a security architecture in the Middle East; establish a “security cooperation seminar” mechanism; seek interaction and cooperation between China and Arab countries in resolving regional conflicts, opposing terrorism, maintaining maritime security and other security fields; and jointly create an environment for regional peace and stable development.
Second, the forum should join hands with BRICS — comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — to promote the GDI. At present, Arab countries show an unprecedentedly strong desire for peace, security, and stability, with its strategic autonomy enhanced and a strategic shift toward “looking East”; oil-producing countries in the Gulf region are also competing for a first-mover advantage in the fourth industrial revolution to ensure sustainable economic growth.
As an effective carrier for promoting the scale and effectiveness of China-Arab economic and trade cooperation, the forum collaborates with BRICS that focuses on the regional economy, supports the modernization of Arab countries, promotes collective development through regional growth, and drives the construction of a shared community of development through a community of shared interests.
Third, the GCI should be implemented on the basis of mutual learning among civilizations. Over the past decade, China’s exchanges with Middle Eastern countries in finance, investment, technology, arms sales, politics, security and other fields have been increasing, developing from the low end of the industrial chain to the high end.
ALSO READ: China-Arab ties continue to move forward in spirit of friendship at an ever-faster pace
This has brought about competition between China and the US in the economic and trade field in the region, while reminding us of the so-called clash of civilizations. Dialogue among civilizations should be an effective way to reverse and regulate the conflicting reality.
The forum will be committed to creating a broader pattern of people-to-people exchanges, setting up the China-Arab Center for the GCI with the Arab side, and accelerating the construction of platforms such as the Think Tank Alliance, the Youth Development Forum, the University Alliance, and the Cultural and Tourism Cooperation Research Center. Therefore, the people-to-people bonds will be enhanced, mutual understanding and consensus will be promoted through dialogue among civilizations, and a China-Arab community with a shared future for the new era will be built with utmost efforts.
The author is deputy director of the China-Arab Research Institute at Ningxia University. The author contributed this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily.
The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.