BEIJING – China’s use of the Belt and Road initiative to help boost the
reconstruction process of Afghanistan and promote talks between Afghanistan
and Pakistan is a sign that Beijing is more confident in investing
political, diplomatic and economic assets to facilitate peace and stability
in neighboring regions, experts said.
Zhao Gancheng, director of the Center for Asia-Pacific Studies at the
Shanghai Institute for International Studies, told the Global Times that
one way of cooperation is for China to transfer some of its industries to
Afghanistan.
“Afghanistan is a close neighbor adjacent to China’s Xinjiang Uyghur
Autonomous Region. Its important strategic location connects Central and
South Asia and is thus critical to regional peace.
Afghanistan is also rich in natural resources, which is conducive to
cooperation along the CPEC,” Zhao said.
The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is a network of highways,
railways, pipelines and
optical cables, and a flagship project under the Belt and Road initiative.
The 3,000-kilometer-long
corridor starts from China’s western city of Kashgar and ends at Pakistan’s
city of Gwadar.
Analysts said China is trying to help chart a road-map for the peace
process in Afghanistan
through its own experience by using the economic corridor as an impetus for
development.
They added that China’s role in regional diplomacy is slowly shifting to a
more proactive
stance but the country still hesitates to involve itself in any disputes
directly or militarily.
“The past US presence in Afghanistan has proved that military means alone
cannot solve the dilemma in Afghanistan. China will not make that mistake,”
Qian Feng, a researcher of the Chinese Association for South Asian Studies,
told the Global Times.
Qian denied that China is challenging the US’ role in the region or filling
the power vacuum it has left.
“Both Afghanistan and Pakistan agree to the talks because of China’s
neutral and objective
stance.
Even if the US influence is dropping in the region, it is not because of
China but due to failed US foreign policy,” Qian said.