US President Donald Trump has also wavered in recent days on whether to ban WeChat and TikTok – arguably the two most successful mobile phone apps to emerge from China – over concerns about the Chinese government’s access to American users’ data.
“No country has the right to dominate global affairs, control the destiny of others or keep advantages in development all to itself,” said Xi.
Experts say that given the Chinese leader’s increasingly hardline policies both within China and around the world, Xi’s rhetoric at the UN about multilateralism and international law were unlikely to sway any American politicians who are already alarmed by Beijing’s actions.
But Xi may have bigger concerns anyway, said Andrew Mertha, director of the China studies programme at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.
“For China’s leaders, it is always far preferable to burn some cross-national bridges than to appear weak internationally in front of one’s own domestic constituency,” Mertha said.
Trump was scheduled to speak but did not appear. The acting US deputy permanent representative to the UN, Ambassador Cherith Norman Chalet, did so instead.
Xi and Trump are both expected to address the annual UN General Assembly meeting on Tuesday.
Source: SCMP




