China on Sunday touted its new Silk Road as "a project of the century" at a summit highlighting its growing leadership on globalisation, but a North Korean missile test competed for attention. President Xi Jinping hosted leaders from 29 nations for the two-day summit in Beijing ending Monday after US and South Korean military officials confirmed that Pyongyang had launched a ballistic missile.
Delegations from North Korea and the United States attended the forum, though not their leaders. Few Western heads of government made the trip. The summit is showcasing Xi's cherished One Belt, One Road initiative, a revival of the ancient Silk Road trading routes that could further expand China's growing global influence on trade and geopolitics.
"This is indeed a gathering of great minds," Xi said, addressing leaders from Russian President Vladimir Putin to Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. Xi pledged to pump an extra $124 billion in funds into the initiative, calling it "a project of the century" in a "world fraught with challenges".
The Chinese-bankrolled project seeks to link the country with Africa, Asia and Europe through an enormous network of ports, railways, roads and industrial parks. The initiative spans some 65 countries representing 60 percent of the world population and around a third of global gross domestic product. The China Development Bank has earmarked $890 billion for some 900 projects.
The project could also serve Beijing's geopolitical ambitions as Washington retreats into "America First" policies. While Xi did not mention North Korea during his speech, it was discussed at his bilateral meeting with Putin. "Both parties expressed their concern over the escalation of tensions" on the Korean peninsula, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters. The Chinese foreign ministry said in a statement it opposed such missile tests and called for restraint from all parties. The delegates from both Koreas held a brief meeting at the summit, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency.
"We strongly condemned North Korea's launch of the missile," said Park Byeong-Seug, who leads Seoul's delegation, according to Yonhap. The US representative, White House adviser Matt Pottinger, was pictured near North Korea's minister of external economic relations, Kim Yong Jae, as they arrived. But US embassy spokeswoman Mary Beth Polley told AFP that the two officials did not hold a meeting. "No small talk, nothing," she said.
North Korea relies heavily on trade with China for its economic survival, and US President Donald Trump has urged Xi to use that leverage to put pressure on Pyongyang. The White House called on all nations to impose "far stronger sanctions" following the latest test, which came days after South Korea elected a new president.
Sunday's missile launch "is absolutely an embarrassment to Beijing but it also shouldn't be overstated", Christopher Balding, economics professor at Peking University, told AFP. Xi focused on his initiative, boasting that it represented a "road for peace", but he cautioned that "all countries should respect each others' sovereignty... and territorial integrity".
He warned that "isolation results in backwardness". The new financing that he promised on Sunday includes 100 billion yuan ($14.5 billion) for the Silk Road Fund and lending schemes worth 380 billion yuan. He also urged financial institutions to contribute 100 billion yuan. Praising Xi's initiative, Putin warned that "protectionism is becoming the norm". "The ideas of openness, trade freedom are rejected more and more, very often by those who were their supporters not so long ago," Putin said.
Raising concern While Trump railed against China's trade policies during the US election, he has nurtured friendly ties with Xi and his envoy to the summit said US companies were ready to get involved in the Silk Road.
"US firms can offer the best-value goods and services required over the life of a project," Pottinger told the forum, though he warned that success would depend on transparent government procurement, among other things. German Economy Minister Brigitte Zypries echoed calls for transparency to ensure that the calls for bids are "non-discriminatory".