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Diplomacy
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LettersChina’s voice of stability is one many are choosing to heed

Readers discuss Beijing’s diplomatic messaging at the ‘two sessions’ meetings, and the spirit of Eid ul-Fitr

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China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi speaks during a press conference on foreign policy and external relations during the fourth session of the 14th National People’s Congress in Beijing, China, on March 8. Photo: EPA
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In a fragmented global landscape marked by fresh turmoil in the Middle East and mounting transatlantic strains, China leveraged its annual “two sessions” to project an image of stability. Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s press conference on March 8 laid out Beijing’s diplomatic messaging for the year ahead, offering what it frames as “certainty” amid the drift.

The message is calibrated for a multipolar era. With the US-China relationship still the diplomatic equation’s most delicate variable, Wang struck a pragmatic tone. Neither power can remodel the other, he argued, but both can choose how to engage. For Beijing, this reinforces a push towards engagement on terms closer to parity.

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Beyond bilateral friction, China is doubling down on its Global South outreach. Wang framed the collective rise of these nations as a hallmark of global transformation, with Beijing positioning itself as a defender of multilateral frameworks. The strategy is also regional: turning its periphery into a “common home of peace, tranquility, prosperity, beauty and friendship” through platforms like the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership and Association of Southeast Asian Nations code-of-conduct talks.

For international observers, the subtext is clear. As traditional great-power rivalry offers little but polarisation, China presents itself as an alternative pole – one offering investment and a commitment to multipolar coexistence. With the country’s gross domestic product surpassing 140 trillion yuan (US$20.3 trillion) for the first time, attention is also fixed on the 15th five-year plan.

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The promise of stability will ultimately be judged on implementation. But for now, in a fractured world, Beijing’s voice is one many are choosing to heed – and in the multipolar order taking shape, it is a voice likely to carry increasing weight.

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