2025-09-02 00:00:00 Selama tiga hari terakhir, Xi Jinping telah menjadi tuan rumah di salah satu kota pelabuhan tersibuk China, menyambut para pemimpin dari seluruh Asia dan Timur Tengah untuk puncak koreografi yang dirancang untuk menampilkan visinya tentang tatanan dunia baru.
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Follow Beijing — For the last three days, Xi Jinping has played host in one of Chinaâs busiest port cities, welcoming leaders from across Asia and the Middle East for a carefully choreographed summit designed to showcase his vision of a new world order.
Now, the Chinese leader is set to exhibit a very different image with an ostentatious show of military might.
On Wednesday he will commandeer Beijingâs main artery â the Avenue of Eternal Peace â for a major military parade showing off the countryâs cutting-edge hypersonic weapons, nuclear-capable missiles, and undersea drones, alongside thousands of goose-stepping soldiers.
Xiâs message with his multi-day exercise of soft and hard power, is clear: China is a force that wants to reset global rules â and itâs not afraid to challenge those of the West.
Hitting that message home is Xiâs guest list for the gathering, a cohort of more than two dozen China-friendly world leaders topped by Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, which also includes Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian.
That also makes the first time that the leaders of a quartet of nations Washington strategists warn are converging to form an anti-American âaxis of upheavalâ will be together in one event.
For the Western leaders desperately trying to ramp up pressure on Putin to end his war in Ukraine, those optics will appear stark.
Iran, North Korea, China and Russia are seen as an emerging anti-American axis by some observers in the West precisely because Tehran and Pyongyang have fed Moscow weapons and â in the case of Pyongyang â troops, while China has aided its war-torn economy and industry.
As Xi gives them seats by his side on a symbolic day for China, he is showing himself as the one global heavyweight who could stand a real chance to pressure Putin to end his war â and that heâs not going to use that pull to play by the Westâs rules.
For Xi, Chinaâs longest-serving and most powerful leader in decades, the symbolism â and its timing â will be purposeful.
Under President Donald Trump, the US is shaking up its alliances and causing economic pain for countries around the world, including among friends and allies, with his global trade war.
Xi sees an opportune moment to make what might be his most dramatic showing yet of his challenge to a world based on Western rules and sensibilities.
Russian Pool via Reuters Already the optics are paying off for the Chinese leader.
Glimpses of the leadersâ activities in recent days have shown a powerful camaraderie among those gathered, with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Putin greeting Xi animatedly, Modi embracing Putin, and leaders reaching out to greet the Russian leader as he walked shoulder to shoulder with Xi.
These moments are arguably as powerful outcomes as the statements made, signaling a convergence of leaders without the West.
âWhat Xi is trying to convey is certainty about Chinaâs role in international affairs.
This is clearly signaling to people throughout the region that China has arrived as a great power and itâs not going anywhere,â said Jonathan Czin, the Michael H.
Armacost Chair in Foreign Policy Studies at Brookings.
China's President Xi Jinping holds a bilateral meeting with Maldivian President Mohamed Muizzu ahead of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit 2025 in Tianjin, China on Sunday.
Andres Martinez Casares/Getty Images âIf youâre a US ally or partner, sitting in a capital somewhere in the region, and you have real doubts about whether or not you can rely on the United States as a partner, thatâs an uncomfortable split screen to be viewing,â he added.
âThe time is nowâ Throughout his pageantry and diplomacy of recent days, Xi has appeared well aware of the opening the shake-up of American foreign policy has given him.
In his speeches and meeting with leaders gathered for the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) on Sunday and Monday â a cohort of leaders from as far afield as the Maldives to Mongolia â Xi played up a message that world is in a state of flux and chaos, and China is the responsible, stable power to guide it into the future.
â(We must) oppose the cold war mentality, block confrontation and bullying practices,â Xi declared as he spoke to a room of gathered leaders Monday, using language thatâs long been Chinaâs code to describe what it sees as the USâ behavior.
He also pledged hundreds of millions in grants to SCO member states this year â and launched a push to reform the international system.
The message is not new, but Beijing is betting it lands differently after the leading global superpower has cut off its vast network of foreign aid, slapped crippling tariffs on developing countries, and raised questions among its allies and partners about whether it really has their backs.
As Chinaâs leader put it in a speech late Monday: âThe house rules of a few countries should not be imposed upon others.â Related article A screen grab of a North Korean soldier, purportedly fighting for Russia in the war against Ukraine, in a propaganda video released on August 31, 2025.
Korean Central News Agency North Korea releases propaganda video praising its soldiers who fought for Russia And Xi has already seen benefits from the American shift.
Look no further than India, whose Prime Minister Narendra Modi was seen smiling and laughing as he spoke with Xi beside Putin on Monday â a significant show of warmth from a leader long wooed by US as an Asian counterweight to China.
Just last month India was slapped with up 50% tariffs on its exports to the US, half of those due as a penalty for its purchases of Russian oil, which the US sees as helping to fund Putinâs war.
And even for countries, like those in Southeast Asia, who have long looked warily at Chinaâs growing military power and assertiveness when it comes to its territorial claims in the South China Sea and over Taiwan, the shifting global dynamics could have an effect, observers say.
If thereâs a time to woo leaders that have long tried to hedge between the US and China, said Chong Ja Ian, an associate professor at the National University of Singapore, âthe time is now.â âA credible alternativeâ But as much as Xi is using his highly choreographed itinerary this week to pitch his leadership to a broad cohort of nations, heâs also using it to push back on Western criticism of his longstanding ties with partners like North Korea, Russia and Iran â all seen as rogue actors by the West.
In the wake of Putinâs war in Ukraine, voices in Washington have warned of an emerging coordination between whatâs been alternatively dubbed an âaxis of upheavalâ or an âaxis of growing malign partnershipsâ â though experts say so far thereâs been few signs of four-way coordination.
At least until now.
â(Chinaâs military parade) will be the first time that the leaders of China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran are all present in the same place,â said Brian Hart, a fellow of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
âThere have been little or no quadrilateral engagements between the four countries, so this is a distinctive moment.â China has been careful to not be seen as explicitly endorsing these countriesâ aggression â for example itâs widely seen to have sent large quantities of dual-use goods but not lethal weapons to Russia as it wages its war.
But as Xi gathers these players together, he wants to signal that he can set the rules around who âshould be deemed acceptable by the international community, regardless of what the democratic West or the US may think,â according to Steve Tsang, director of the SOAS China Institute at the University of London.
Journalists film a screen at the media center broadcasting live of Chinese President Xi Jinping, chairing the summit with leaders of member countries of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Tianjin, China, on Monday.
Rafiq Maqbool/AP Even still, the optics may also appear less stark with Trump in the White House.
Last month, he hosted Putin for an apparently friendly summit where he said heâd âalways had a fantastic relationshipâ with the warring leader and greeted him personally on the tarmac.
The American president also used a meeting with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung last month to discuss meeting again with Kim.
Both would be peace efforts â but Trump is well known to praise these autocrats.
But Xiâs message is part of a more sweeping vision for the Chinese leader, who may see no more fitting a moment to signal his alignments than the upcoming military parade, which commemorates the 80th anniversary of Japanâs surrender in World War II and Chinaâs role fighting the imperial power that waged a years-long and brutal invasion of its lands.
Like Putin, Xi has looked to pull from that history to reshape a narrative that positions China and Russia, which fought in World War II as the Soviet Union, as guardians of a âpost-warâ international order, distinct from the US-one they see as dominant now.
Related article Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the BRICS Summit in Fujian, China on September 4, 2017.
Kenzaburo Fukuhara/AFP/Getty Images Should the US be worried?
Indiaâs Modi set for rare China trip after Trumpâs tariff sting In Xi and Putinâs eyes, a key cause of the war in Ukraine today â or even North Koreaâs bid to develop nuclear weapons â is not those countriesâ aggressions, but the US and its allies ignoring their âlegitimate security concerns.â And more broadly, their rhetoric blames the US and the alliances and value systems it formed in the wake of World War II for global crises, confrontation and disparity in the world today.
This week, Xi is âunapologetically defending a postâWorld War II order that he sees as under assault by Western powers determined to block Chinaâs rise,â said Tong Zhao, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment of International Peace in the US.
And as he surveys the global landscape and calls leaders from near and far to his side, Zhao added, âXi is pressing ahead with a campaign to delegitimize US leadership, weaken Western solidarity, and elevate China as a credible alternative.â Asia China Russia War in Ukraine See all topics Facebook Tweet Email Link Link Copied!
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