Advertisement
US-China relations
Opinion
My Take
Alex Lo

To eat or be eaten: Blinken’s culinary view of world politics

  • Top American diplomat said a mouthful when he wheeled out the adage about being ‘on the menu’ if you are not at the table as a dining guest

3-MIN READ3-MIN
12
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Photo: Reuters
Alex Lo has been an SCMP columnist since 2012, covering major issues affecting Hong Kong and the rest of China.

Call it the restaurant theory of international relations. As US Secretary of State Antony Blinken explained at the Munich Security Conference more than a week ago, “if you’re not at the table in the international system, you’re going to be on the menu”.

He was responding to a question about rising US-China tensions, and the “greater fragmentation” they are causing to global politics.

The comment has set the Chinese blogosphere ablaze. In an editorial, the Global Times gave it a colourful Chinese translation: “If you’re not the knife and the chopping board, you’ll be the fish and meat on the board.”

Advertisement

That’s not quite literal and is a bit more sensational than the original, which seems to be a favourite among American politicians. For an amusing history of the saying, I refer you to quoteinvestigator.com.

Every now and then, political leaders let slip what they really think, rather than what they have been telling others. So Blinken, or Mr Rules-based International System, was speaking his mind, for once.

Advertisement

But, who decides on the guest list and what’s on the menu? I think we all know what Washington thinks about that.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x