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August 10, 2013

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OPINION - Winners and losers in Snowden fiasco

Everyone knows the competition between China and the US is  key to 21st century international relations. But China’s strength  still lags far behind that of the US. As China’s comprehensive  strategic partner, Russia took the initiative in the Snowden case  and came to the forefront of the rivalry with the US, which  shows multipolar flexibility in global geopolitics. Russia’s action  deserves respect from China.

US President Barack Obama has announced he will attend the  G20 summit in St. Petersburg this September. A meeting  between Russian and US defense and foreign ministers will  also be scheduled for later this week in Washington. Although  Obama canceled his Moscow summit last week with Russian  President Vladimir Putin ahead of the G20 summit, it is a  relatively insignificant change. The US has apparently accepted  the fact that Russia granted one-year asylum to National  Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden. Russia has  impressed the world, which views the Kremlin as the “winner”  and the White House as the “loser.”

This judgment is correct. In the Snowden case, all the other  countries involved have become winners while the US is the  sole loser. Washington put on a show of bravado, but failed to  extradite Snowden in the end. By contrast, Moscow displayed  its national characteristics of decisiveness and boldness and  kept Washington at bay.

Many Chinese netizens believe China should have done so, but  China only showed hesitation and weakness.

If China had Snowden in its care, a big change in its attitude  toward Sino-US relations would have been brought and China  would have had to undertake risks associated with such a  change.

Yet China ostensibly chose to not interfere. Now, the decision  seems to have generated better results. Some of the US’  hypocritical national policies were exposed, and Snowden was  not extradited to the US. International opinion is scathing of the  US in information security issues. At the same time, Sino-US  relations have not been greatly affected.

Moscow has consolidated its tough diplomatic attitude toward  Washington and drawn closer in diplomatic status when a gap  still exists in terms of the actual strength of the two. Moscow is  willing to take the lead in the Snowden case and has experience  in doing so. This perfectly fits Beijing’s interests.

Everyone knows the competition between China and the US is  key to 21st century international relations. But China’s strength  still lags far behind that of the US. As China’s comprehensive  strategic partner, Russia took the initiative in the Snowden case  and came to the forefront of the rivalry with the US, which  shows multipolar flexibility in global geopolitics. Russia’s action  deserves respect from China.

China is not willing to engage in a head-on confrontation with  the US, but it has already had the ability to unite with those who  can restrict the US’ abuses of power. We did not confront the  US directly, and this serves the long-term interests of China’s  diplomacy.

Washington ate the dirt this time, but it does not necessarily  mean it is really awed by Moscow. In the same manner,  Washington is unlikely to fear Beijing, and Beijing needn’t fear  Washington. What Beijing should care about most is how to  maximize its interests in its relations with Washington.

Snowden can do more in a country like Russia. The  performance that has disgraced the US is far from over.

rickrozoff
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