.Executive Intelligence Review Online
China's New Silk Road:
Changing the Paradigm Toward Global Development
by William C. Jones and Michael Billington

On September 7, 2013, the world changed. On that day, Chinese President Xi Jinping, speaking at Nazarbayev University in Astana, Kazakhstan, called for the development of a Silk Road Economic Belt (SREB) stretching from the Pacific Ocean to the Baltic Sea. We must expand the development of Eurasia, Xi said, creating an economic belt along the Silk Road. The idea of the Silk Road hearkens back to a period 2,000 years ago, in the Han Dynasty, when Zhang Qian, an envoy of the Han Emperor, was sent on a visit to Central Asia in order to establish trade among nations of the region stretching all the way to Europe and to the Middle East and Africa. More than 20 years ago, relations between China and Central Asia began to take off, Xi said. The old Silk Road began to radiate with a new vitality. President Xi was decidedly intent on creating a new vitality in a world economy today that was quickly self-destructing. Developing friendly relations with the countries of Central Asia has now become a priority for China's foreign policy, Xi said. We should have wider aspirations, broaden our field of vision of regional cooperation, and together create new brilliance in the region. One month later, during a visit to Indonesia, President Xi announced a similar Maritime Silk Road, also referring to Chinese history, specifically when Chinese Admiral Zheng He in the 1400s conducted a series of maritime voyages to Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Africa, creating a network of economic and cultural ties between the nations along his route....
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  • China's New Silk Road:
    Changing the Paradigm Toward Global Development

    The world changed on Sept. 7, 2013, when Chinese President Xi Jinping called for the development of a 'Silk Road Economic Belt' to span the great landmass 'from the Pacific Ocean to the Baltic Sea.' While the idea of the Silk Road looks back 2,000 years to the Han Dynasty, in more recent years, 'relations between China and Central Asia began to take off,' Xi said, 'The old Silk Road began to radiate with a new vitality,' one which presents the alternative to the collapsing Western financial system.'Developing friendly relations with the countries of Central Asia has now become a priority for China's foreign policy,' Xi said. This development perspective and its concomitant reaching out to other nations, has come to inform the policies of the BRICS. This article is excerpted from the new EIR Special Report, 'The New Silk Road Becomes the World Land-Bridge.'

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