Beijing
will replace the United States as the organization’s top state donor,
expanding its influence as the U.S. retreats from international
cooperation.
Chinese
Vice Premier Liu Guozhong told the World Health Assembly that his
country is making the contribution to oppose “unilateralism,” a trait
Beijing often ascribes to Washington as relations between the two powers
deteriorate.
President Donald Trump in January ordered the U.S. withdrawal from the WHO, a move that would leave Beijing as the top donor and most powerful member country.
“The
world is now facing the impacts of unilateralism and power politics,
bringing major challenges to global health security,” Liu said Tuesday
in Geneva. “China strongly believes that only with solidarity and mutual
assistance can we create a healthy world together.”
China’s
pledge of $500 million, which Liu said would be given over the next
five years, is one of the clearest examples of Beijing’s efforts to step
into a global leadership void left by Trump as he pursues his “America
First” foreign policy.
“The
Trump administration’s attacks on and contempt for international
governance have offered new opportunities for Chinese diplomacy,” said
Zhao Minghao, a professor of international relations at Fudan University
in Shanghai.
At the assembly Tuesday, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called the organization “moribund” and “mired in bureaucratic bloat.”
Beijing,
meanwhile, has worked to portray itself as a superior alternative to
U.S. power — namely, as a responsible global leader and defender of the
international order. Under leader Xi Jinping, China has pursued a more
aggressive foreign policy in its bid to replace the U.S. as the world’s
preeminent power — a strategy that requires more friends — and has
sought to rewrite the rules of the global order in its favor.
Even before Washington’s isolationist turn, China had been expanding its influence at organizations such as the United Nations.
Of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, China is
the top contributor of U.N. peacekeepers. On a visit to Europe last
week, Chinese Defense Minister Dong Jun said his country would
contribute more to peacekeeping operations.
The
goal, analysts say, is to shape international norms to Beijing’s liking
as well as entrench the role of China in global supply chains.
Zhao
said he expects Beijing to play a bigger role in international
cooperation when it comes to public health, but also climate change and
the green-energy transition. China produces more than 60 percent of the world’s electric cars and 80 percent of the batteries that power them.
In
contrast to Trump, who has ordered the U.S. to withdraw from the Paris
climate agreement, the landmark international treaty to reduce carbon
emissions, Beijing has reaffirmed its commitment to the accord and stepped up investments in green-energy infrastructure in Southeast Asia and other regions.
“China is trying to be more active in areas where it has advantages,” Zhao said.
Beijing
also has tried to use the U.N. to bolster its territorial claims over
Taiwan, which the ruling Chinese Communist Party says it will take
control of by force if the self-ruled island democracy does not come
willingly. At Beijing’s insistence, Taiwan has been barred from
attending the World Health Assembly for the past nine years.
“China’s
Taiwan region, unless given approval by the central government, has no
basis, reason or right to participate in the WHA,” China’s Foreign
Ministry said in a statement Monday, hailing the decision to exclude
Taiwan.
Experts
say Beijing takes advantage of its role in international organizations
to push the idea that Taiwan is not a sovereign government.
“China
has long used health diplomacy to interfere with Taiwan’s international
participation and visibility,” said Chen Hsiu-hsi, a public health
professor at National Taiwan University.
China
“has built friendly ties with various countries and advanced its own
agenda through organizations and events where the U.S. is not involved,”
he said, which makes it harder for Taiwan to lobby to participate.
Beijing’s
increased participation in the WHO, compared with Washington’s
withdrawal, may also help insulate it from long-running U.S. criticism
of China’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic, which was first
detected in the city of Wuhan.
“It’s
astonishing that a country like U.S. that announced its departure from
the WHO would attack another country that is expanding its investment in
the organization,” a spokesman for the Chinese delegation in Geneva
said Tuesday, according to China’s official Xinhua News Agency.