China Is
Seen As The Only Economic If Not Military Power That Can Balance US Influence
In The Gulf And Arabian North Africa
Sometimes
agreements made some years ago come to life. The UAE raised its relationship
with China to the strategic level in 2018, and two-way trade certainly saw a
fillip since. The UAE is, and has traditionally been the gateway to trade
throughout the Gulf, presently sanction crippled Iran, and North Africa.
In July 2018,
President Xi Jinping visited Abu Dhabi. As many as 13 financial and trade
agreements were signed amongst almost 150 over the years since 1984 when
diplomatic relations were established. Xi Jinping met with the then Crown
Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan of Abu Dhabi and the ruler of Dubai.
Xi was the first Chinese supreme leader to visit the UAE in 29 years.
There has been a persistent attempt on the part of
China to establish a free-trade agreement with the entire GCC area, with the
help of UAE and Saudi Arabia, but a few wrinkles such as concern over its
propensity to dump cheap exports need to be ironed out yet.
China is
currently seen as a power that may be able to prod the two-state solution in
Palestine into being, given its influence and leverage. The leader of the
Palestinian Authority also recently paid a state visit to Beijing. And this
Chinese influence extends not only to all the oil exporting countries of West
Asia, but rivals, Iran and its proxies, the Hezbollah, the Hamas, the Houthis,
elements in Syria and Iraq. China cannot be ignored also by Israel and its
all-weather ally, the United States.
For the
Arabs, this is a balance they seek between pressures from America and those
from China. Work on this is proceeding apace. The UAE and Chinese central banks
have recently renewed a $ 4.9 billion currency swap agreement. There is a
cooperation agreement between the Dubai and Shanghai stock exchanges, and the
UAE sovereign fund Mubadala has opened a Beijing office.
Now there is
not only a state visit to Beijing from 29th to 31st May
2024, from the president of the UAE, but a conference of Arab nations, the
China-Arab States Cooperation Forum, formed 10 years ago.
Sheikh
Mohamed has visited China several times before. Starting in 1990 accompanying
his father, the first president of the UAE, and then again in 2009, 2012, 2015,
2019 and 2022. This time, Sheikh Mohamed said he wants to ‘enhance Arab-Chinese
cooperation’. Reports say he wants to ‘finesse’ the relationship, particularly
after considerable progress with the UAE relationship with India and its
geopolitical implications.
This is the
40th year of diplomatic relations between China and the UAE, and
Sheikh Mohamed is in Beijing to celebrate it. Formal ties were established in
1984. In 2023, the UAE’s non-oil trade with China reached $ 81 billion
accounting for 12% of all UAE trade. The UAE’s investments in China reached $
11.9 billion across sectors like telecommunications, renewable energy,
transportation, hospitality, and rubber. There is a resident Chinese community
in the UAE of about 350,000 people.
For the 10th
China-Arab Summit between 28th May and 1st June, there will
be as many as four heads of state from UAE, Egypt, Bahrain and Tunisia present
in Beijing.
This, while
NATO foreign ministers are meeting in Prague to discuss the fraught idea of
Ukraine being allowed to hit targets inside Russia. NATO is coincidentally
celebrating 25 years of its existence, but there is no unanimity of agreement
on further provoking Russia .
UAE and
Saudi Arabia, as the biggest middle powers in the GCC and the Gulf, though
strategically close to the US for its military needs, want to settle the
Palestine question perennially troubling their region. The state visit of the
President of the UAE to Beijing, the first since he assumed power, can be
partially seen in this light.
Besides, China has a GDP of $17.7 trillion
even in its much-weakened economy. It has had upwardly revised GDP forecasts of
5% per annum. This, by the international lending agencies such as the World
Bank and the IMF, after China undertook strenuous efforts to right things
lately. Stock investors around the globe are returning to China to take
advantage of attractive beaten down valuations.
This
economic heft in China, despite its aggressive trade practices and erstwhile,
pre-Covid, ‘wolf warrior diplomacy’, is only second to that of the United
States. The tension with Taiwan and all countries around the East and South
China Seas are additional friction points. India has its own tense stand-off
with China all along its long border alongside Tibet, and proxy problems with Pakistan as well.
Still, most countries are forced to deal with China till more effective
geopolitical shifts take place. It remains a formidable trading partner with every
country and is still the factory to the world.
Aware of all
this, leading countries of the Gulf and Arab North Africa did sign up years
ago, when China’s star was higher in the sky, for its predatory Belt and Road
Initiative. Ironically, no work has been done on it in the region, better
heeled than the usual ‘beneficiary’, so far.
Nearly
bankrupt Pakistan’s CPEC has been, and is, struggling, and India has refused to
be part of it altogether from the very start.
So perhaps
UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain are not missing much, given the
programme’s debt trap propensities and erratic progress. Countries such as
Cambodia, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, Bangladesh, alongside
some in Central Africa probably rue the day they got involved. Some in Europe,
such as Italy, have actually withdrawn from the belt and road initiative.
While China
has a vast military establishment, it is an unknown quantity when it comes to
its effectiveness. Though it has not been involved in a shooting war of any
size, it is not considered to be really up to scratch compared to the US
technologically or in terms of its manpower under arms. Though, the size and
extent of its blue water navy and submarines are indeed impressive. Likewise,
its progress with hypersonic missiles and drones underpinned by its nuclear
weapons prowess.
However,
Russia with a mere $ 1 trillion economy, and a huge nuclear weapons arsenal, is
considered to be a much more fearful military power.
The
Gulf-based GCC sells 80% of its oil to China. The UAE alone exports over $ 30
billion ($32.5 billion) of its petroleum to China, and is its biggest trading
partner in the Gulf, importing over $50 billion worth ($57.7 billion) of
machinery, electrical equipment, broadcast equipment, and is lately making
preparations to import its cheaper and very good electrical cars.
China also offers, along with India, an
increasing opportunity to conduct much of the mainstay petroleum business in
local currencies to reduce dependence on a very strong US dollar. This despite
the gargantuan debt America carries. China too carries a lot of external and
internal debt. The difference is that the US dollar remains the main global
currency for international trade.
To make the
export import trade more attractive, China is now steadily devaluing the Yuan
that it had kept artificially strong for many years.
What can
come out of a closeness with Beijing, beyond the obvious bully-boy arrangements,
is hard to say. But as a matter of hedging one’s bets in an increasingly
unstable multipolar world, an actualised China of today, and an emerging India
of tomorrow, is definitely important to consider.
(1,225
words)
May 30th,
2024
For:
Firstpost/ News18.com
Gautam
Mukherjee
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