Advertisement
Advertisement
Italy
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio (right) with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Rome. Photo: EPA-EFE

Politico | US more important ally for Italy than China, foreign minister says

  • Luigi Di Maio said Sino-Italian commercial ties ‘are absolutely incomparable with’ Rome’s alliance with Washington
  • The US has expressed concern over Italy’s links to China, particularly after a previous government signed up to Beijing’s belt and road infrastructure plan
Italy

This story is published in a content partnership with POLITICO. It was originally reported by Hannah Roberts on politico.eu on June 28, 2021.

The United States is a much more important ally for Italy than China, Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio affirmed on Monday.

During a news conference in Rome standing beside US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Di Maio said Sino-Italian commercial ties “are absolutely incomparable with” Italy’s alliance with the US as well as partnerships with Nato and the EU.

The US has previously expressed concerns about Italy’s relationship with China, particularly after Di Maio helped sign his country up to Beijing’s belt and road infrastructure plan while serving as economic development minister in 2019.

But since Mario Draghi became Italian Prime Minister in February, leading a so-called government of national unity, the former European Central Bank chief has been emphasising the country’s commitment to its transatlantic relationship.

“Let me be very clear,” Di Maio said, Italy’s alliances with the US, Nato and the EU “are not just strategic alliances, but alliances of values which allow our democracy to confront issues such as violations of human rights.”

Why US-led response to belt and road is cause for celebration, not alarm

“Italy is a strong commercial partner with China, we have had historic relations, but they absolutely do not compare with and do not interfere with our alliances of values with the US, Nato and the EU,” he added.

The previous Italian government had hoped that by endorsing the Belt and Road Initiative, China would offer the country fresh investment for its domestic economy, which had been stagnant for a decade.

But the move by Italy, a member of the G7 group of the world’s largest so-called advanced economies, to enter China’s sphere of influence also caused consternation in Washington, and came just after the European Commission had labelled Beijing a systemic rival.

02:35

Belt and Road Initiative explained

Belt and Road Initiative explained

Italy, which was awarded the largest share of the EU’s post-pandemic economic recovery fund at 209 billion euros (US$243 billion), now has far less need for Chinese investment.

Earlier this month, Rome joined as a participant in a US initiative called Build Back Better World, which the White House calls “a constructive initiative to meet the enormous infrastructure needs of low- and middle-income countries,” providing them with a “positive alternative to China.”

Blinken welcomed Di Maio’s approach to China, saying, “I think we all recognise the complexity of relationship, with China … adversarial, competitive and at times cooperative.”

Blinken added: “The common denominator is approaching [these complexities] together and increasingly that’s what we are seeing.”

Read Politico’s story.

24