Why BRI Is Back with a Bang in 2023
PEPE ESCOBAR • JANUARY
6, 2023
https://www.unz.com/pescobar/why-bri-is-back-with-a-bang-in-2023/
The year 2022 ended with a Zoom call to end all Zoom
calls: Presidents Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping discussing all aspects of the
Russia-China strategic partnership in an exclusive video call.
Putin told Xi how “Russia and China managed to ensure
record high growth rates of mutual trade,” meaning “we will be able to reach
our target of $200 billion by 2024 ahead of schedule.”
On their coordination to “form a just world order
based on international law,” Putin emphasized how “we share the same views on
the causes, course, and logic of the ongoing transformation of the global
geopolitical landscape.”
Facing “unprecedented pressure and provocations from
the west,” Putin noted how Russia-China are not only defending their own
interests “but also all those who stand for a truly democratic world order and
the right of countries to freely determine their own destiny.”
Earlier, Xi had announced that Beijing will hold the 3rd Belt
and Road Forum in 2023. This has been confirmed, off the record, by diplomatic
sources. The forum was initially designed to be bi-annual, first held in 2017
and then in 2019. 2021 didn’t happen because of Covid-19.
The return of the forum signals not only a renewed
drive but an extremely significant landmark as the Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI), launched in Astana and Jakarta in 2013, will be celebrating its
10th anniversary.
BRI version 2.0
That set the tone for 2023 across the whole
geopolitical and geoeconomic spectrum. In parallel to its geoeconomic breadth
and reach, BRI has been conceived as China’s overarching foreign policy concept
up to the mid-century. Now it’s time to tweak things. BRI 2.0 projects, along
its several connectivity corridors, are bound to be re-dimensioned to adapt to
the post-Covid environment, the reverberations of the war in Ukraine, and a
deeply debt-distressed world.
And then there’s the interlocking of the connectivity
drive via BRI with the connectivity drive via the International North-South
Transportation Corridor (INTSC), whose main players are Russia, Iran, and India.
Expanding on the geoeconomic drive of the Russia-China
partnership as discussed by Putin and Xi, the fact that Russia, China, Iran, and
India are developing interlocking trade partnerships should establish that
BRICS members Russia, India, and China, plus Iran as one of the upcoming members
of the expanded BRICS+, are the ‘Quad’ that really matter across Eurasia.
The new Politburo Standing Committee in Beijing, which
is totally aligned with Xi’s priorities, will be keenly focused on solidifying
concentric spheres of geoeconomic influence across the Global South.
How China plays ‘strategic ambiguity
This has nothing to do with the balance of power, which is
a western concept that additionally does not connect with China’s five
millennia of history. Neither is this another inflection of “unity of the
center” – the geopolitical representation according to which no nation is able
to threaten the center, China, as long as it is able to maintain order.
These cultural factors that in the past may have
prevented China from accepting an alliance under the concept of parity have now
vanished when it comes to the Russia-China strategic partnership.
Back in February 2022, days before the events that led
to Russia’s Special Military Operation (SMO) in Ukraine, Putin and Xi, in
person, had announced that their partnership had “no limits” – even if they
hold different approaches on how Moscow should deal with a Kyiv lethally
instrumentalized by the west to threaten Russia.
In a nutshell: Beijing will not “abandon” Moscow
because of Ukraine – as much as it will not openly show support. The Chinese
are playing their very own subtle interpretation of what Russians define as
“strategic ambiguity.”
Connectivity in West Asia
In West Asia, BRI projects will advance especially
fast in Iran, as part of the 25-year deal signed between Beijing and Tehran and
the definitive demise of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – or
Iran nuclear deal – which will translate into no European investment in the
Iranian economy.
Iran is not only a BRI partner but also a full-fledged
Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) member. It has clinched a free trade
agreement with the Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU), which consists of post-Soviet
states Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan.
And Iran is, today, arguably the key interconnector of
the INSTC, opening up the Indian Ocean and beyond, interconnecting not only
with Russia and India but also China, Southeast Asia, and even, potentially,
Europe – assuming the EU leadership will one day see which way the wind is
blowing.
So here we have heavily US-sanctioned Iran profiting
simultaneously from BRI, INSTC, and the EAEU free trade deal. The three critical
BRICS members – India, China, and Russia – will be particularly interested in the
development of the trans-Iranian transit corridor – which happens to be the
shortest route between most of the EU and South and Southeast Asia, and will
provide faster, cheaper transportation.
Add to this the groundbreaking planned
Russia-Transcaucasia-Iran electric power corridor, which could become the
definitive connectivity link capable of smashing the antagonism between
Azerbaijan and Armenia.
In the Arab world, Xi has already rearranged the
chessboard. Xi’s December trip to Saudi Arabia should
be the diplomatic blueprint on how to rapidly establish a post-modern quid pro
quo between two ancient, proud civilizations to facilitate a New Silk Road
revival.
Rise of the Petro-yuan
Beijing may have lost substantial export markets within the
collective west – so a replacement was needed. The Arab leaders who lined up in
Riyadh to meet Xi saw ten thousand sharpened (western) knives suddenly
approaching and calculated it was time to strike a new balance.
That means, among other things, that Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammad bin Salman (MbS) has adopted a more multipolar agenda: no more
weaponizing of Salafi-Jihadism across Eurasia, and a door wide open to the
Russia-China strategic partnership. Hubris strikes hard at the heart of the
Hegemon.
Credit Suisse strategist Zoltan Pozsar, in two
striking successive newsletters, titled War and Commodity Encumbrance (December
27) and War and Currency Statecraft (December
29), pointed out the writing on the wall.
Pozsar fully understood what Xi meant when he said
China is “ready to work with the GCC” to set up a “new paradigm of
all-dimensional energy cooperation” within a timeline of “three to five years.”
China will continue to import a lot of crude,
long-term, from GCC nations, and way more Liquified Natural Gas (LNG). Beijing
will “strengthen our cooperation in the upstream sector, engineering services,
and [downstream] storage, transportation, and refinery. The Shanghai
Petroleum and Natural Gas Exchange platform will be fully utilized for RMB
settlement in oil and gas trade…and we could start currency swap cooperation.”
Pozsar summed it all up, thus: “GCC oil flowing East +
renminbi invoicing = the dawn of the petroyuan.”
And not only that. In parallel, the BRI gets a renewed
drive, because the previous model – oil for weapons – will be replaced with oil
for sustainable development (construction of factories, new job opportunities).
And that’s how BRI meets MbS’s Vision 2030.
Apart from Michael Hudson, Poszar may be the only
western economic analyst who understands the global shift in power: “The
multipolar world order,” he says,” is being built not by G7 heads of state but
by the ‘G7 of the East’ (the BRICS heads of state), which is a G5 really.”
Because of the move toward an expanded BRICS+, he took the liberty to round up
the number.
And the rising global powers know how to balance their
relations too. In West Asia, China is playing slightly different strands of the
same BRI trade/connectivity strategy, one for Iran and another for the Persian
Gulf monarchies.
China’s Comprehensive Strategic Partnership with Iran
is a 25-year deal under which China invests $400 billion into Iran’s economy in
exchange for a steady supply of Iranian oil at a steep discount. While at his
summit with the GCC, Xi emphasized “investments in downstream petrochemical
projects, manufacturing, and infrastructure” in exchange for paying for energy
in yuan.
How to play the New Great Game
BRI 2.0 was also already on a roll during a series of
Southeast Asian summits in November. When Xi met with Thai Prime Minister
Prayut Chan-o-cha at the APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation) Summit in
Bangkok, they pledged to finally connect the up-and-running China-Laos
high-speed railway to the Thai railway system. This is a 600 km-long project,
linking Bangkok to Nong Khai on the border with Laos, to be completed by 2028.
And in an extra BRI push, Beijing and Bangkok agreed
to coordinate the development of China’s Shenzhen-Zhuhai-Hong Kong Greater Bay
Area and the Yangtze River Delta with Thailand’s Eastern Economic Corridor
(EEC).
In the long run, China essentially aims to replicate
in West Asia its strategy across Southeast Asia. Beijing trades more with the
ASEAN than with either Europe or the US. The ongoing, painful slow motion crash
of the collective west may ruffle a few feathers in a civilization that has seen,
from afar, the rise and fall of Greeks, Romans, Parthians, Arabs, Ottomans,
Spanish, Dutch, and British. The Hegemon after all is just the latest in a long
list.
In practical terms, BRI 2.0 projects will now be
subjected to more scrutiny: This will be the end of impractical proposals and
sunk costs, with lifelines extended to an array of debt-distressed nations. BRI
will be placed at the heart of BRICS+ expansion – building on a consultation
panel in May 2022 attended by foreign ministers and representatives from South
America, Africa, and Asia that
showed, in practice, the global range of possible candidate countries.
Implications for the Global South
Xi’s fresh mandate from the 20th Communist Party Congress has
signaled the irreversible institutionalization of BRI, which happens to be his
signature policy. The Global South is fast drawing serious conclusions,
especially in contrast with the glaring politicization of the G20 that
was visible at its November summit in Bali.
So Poszar is a rare gem: a western analyst who understands
that the BRICS are the new G5 that matter and that they’re leading the road
towards BRICS+. He also gets that the Quad that really matters is the three
main BRICS-plus-Iran.
Acute supply chain decoupling, the crescendo of
western hysteria over Beijing’s position on the war in Ukraine, and serious
setbacks on Chinese investments in the west all play on the development of BRI
2.0. Beijing will be focusing simultaneously on several nodes of the Global
South, especially neighbors in ASEAN and across Eurasia.
Think, for instance, the Beijing-funded
Jakarta-Bandung high-speed railway, Southeast Asia’s first: a BRI project
opening this year as Indonesia hosts the rotating ASEAN chairmanship. China is
also building the East Coast Rail Link in Malaysia and
has renewed negotiations with the Philippine s
for three railway projects.
Then there are the superposed interconnections. The
EAEU will clinch a free trade zone deal with Thailand. On the sidelines of the
epic return of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to power in Brazil, this past Sunday,
officials of Iran and Saudi Arabia met amid smiles to discuss – what else –
BRICS+. Excellent choice of venue: Brazil is regarded by virtually every
geopolitical player as a prime neutral territory.
From Beijing’s point of view, the stakes could not be
higher, as the drive behind BRI 2.0 across the Global South is not to allow
China to be dependent on western markets. Evidence of this is in its combined
approach towards Iran and the Arab world.
China losing both US and EU market demand,
simultaneously, may end up being just a bump in the (multipolar) road, even as
the crash of the collective west may seem suspiciously timed to take China
down.
The year 2023 will proceed with China playing the New
Great Game deep inside, crafting a globalization 2.0 that is institutionally
supported by a network encompassing BRI, BRICS+, the SCO, and with the help of
its Russian strategic partner, the EAEU and OPEC+ too. No wonder the usual suspects are
dazed and confused.
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