U.S. media said that Trump's postponed visit to China is a "blow" to China! On March 20, the U.S. Wall Street Journal published an article stating that China is pursuing the status of a superpower on equal footing with the United States, but Trump requested to delay the summit originally scheduled for April 1 in Beijing by "about a month," citing the need to stay in Washington to deal with the Iran conflict. U.S. media said that this move indicates that U.S. national security considerations are far more important than respecting Beijing's diplomatic schedule.

The summit with Trump could consolidate China's status as an equal superpower, but the U.S. move to delay the summit is disappointing, as it seems to remind China: Washington still dominates the global agenda. How do we view this argument from the U.S. media? Obviously, the argument from the U.S. media is very absurd. Why say so? In the logic of the U.S. media, the U.S. delaying the visit is sending a signal "who is the global leader," and whether China is a superpower needs certification from the U.S.

But the question is, does China need the U.S. to certify whether it is a superpower? How China is positioned in the international community, isn't that decided by our own development? The U.S. delayed the visit, and the U.S. media said that this means U.S. national security considerations are far more important than respecting Beijing's diplomatic schedule. Then we would like to ask, if we delay our schedule to the U.S., would the U.S. media think that the U.S. is not important in China's priority order?

It's a normal schedule adjustment, but the U.S. media insists on making a big deal out of it. Doesn't the U.S. media know a common sense? That is, when Trump visits China is not solely determined by the U.S. itself. The Iran issue is becoming increasingly complicated, and Trump is unable to be free, leading to a change in the schedule. However, the U.S. media ignores official statements and deliberately fabricates the so-called "blow theory" and "U.S. dominance theory," which is simply trying to use public opinion hype to intensify Sino-U.S. confrontation and highlight the image of the U.S. unipolar hegemony being very solid, but this is nothing more than creating trouble out of nothing and self-delusion.

Original: toutiao.com/article/1860113062887434/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author himself.