回去以后继续反华。。。。。。
欧洲领导人访中没用
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shepherd17
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Re: 欧洲领导人访中没用
近期欧洲领导人密集访华,那是因为他们有求于中国。他们访问中国主要是出于经济利益考量(中国庞大的市场、供应链与欧盟贸易伙伴关系)和地缘政治战略需要(求稳定、寻求合作应对全球挑战如气候变化、俄乌冲突,以及对华政策分歧、避免“脱钩”),试图在复杂国际局势下与中国保持对话与务实合作,稳定双边关系并寻求共同解决方案。
你咋说没用涅?
Re: 欧洲领导人访中没用
shepherd17 写了: ↑昨天, 14:37近期欧洲领导人密集访华,那是因为他们有求于中国。他们访问中国主要是出于经济利益考量(中国庞大的市场、供应链与欧盟贸易伙伴关系)和地缘政治战略需要(求稳定、寻求合作应对全球挑战如气候变化、俄乌冲突,以及对华政策分歧、避免“脱钩”),试图在复杂国际局势下与中国保持对话与务实合作,稳定双边关系并寻求共同解决方案。
你咋说没用涅?
中国都在吹欧洲经济有求于中国多少年了,现在欧洲还是逢中必反。。。。。。
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shepherd17
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Re: 欧洲领导人访中没用
你覅因为对中共的仇恨扭曲了对大局的认识。是他们有求于中国,又不是中国求他们来的。
European leaders visit China to balance complex relations: seeking trade, investment, and climate cooperation while pressing on critical issues like Russia's war in Ukraine, human rights, trade imbalances, and China's growing global influence, aiming to foster strategic autonomy, manage rivalry, and shape a stable international order. Recent trips, like Macron's visit to Beijing, focus on using China's leverage with Russia for a Ukraine ceasefire, securing fairer trade, and promoting multilateralism.
Key Reasons for Visits:
Geopolitics and Security: Addressing Russia's war in Ukraine, seeking China's influence over Moscow, and discussing Taiwan.
Economic Interests: Attracting Chinese investment, ensuring market access for European firms, securing supply chains (rare earths), and addressing trade deficits.
Strategic Autonomy: Reducing dependence on China, managing systemic rivalry, and reinforcing Europe's independent voice in global affairs.
Global Challenges: Collaborating on climate change, food security, and other issues through multilateral forums like the UN.
Recent Examples:
- French President Macron's Visit (December 2025): Emphasized dialogue with Xi Jinping to find pathways for peace in Ukraine, strengthen France-China ties, and secure greater market access.
- EU-China Summit (July 2025): Focused on balancing cooperation with calls for fairer trade, reciprocity, and addressing strategic vulnerabilities, including China's support for Russia.
In essence, European leaders engage China to navigate a shifting world order, hoping to align interests where possible while pushing back on actions that challenge European security or economic fairness, notes Brookings.