US and its allies’ actions stand in stark contrast to values espoused by them on post-war order
On May 9, Russia commemorated the 80th anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War. Among the major allied powers of the anti-fascist war, China was the sole participant in this ceremony. The moment will be etched in history — a stark testament to how the founding principles of the United Nations Charter forged in the war’s aftermath are no longer upheld as universal values by some Western countries.
What values, then, do the Western nations that chose to absent themselves from this occasion truly uphold?
Observing Europe and the United States’ tacit approval — even support — of Israel’s continued military operations and “preemptive” attacks in the Middle East, the racist and Islamophobic nature behind their stance stands fully exposed.
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In the immediate aftermath of World War II, Western nations championed the construction of a peaceful international order. Established in October 1945 under the leadership of the US and the United Kingdom, the United Nations enshrined its Charter as the cornerstone of the postwar order — an instrument explicitly designed to rectify the failures of the League of Nations and ensure no more wars of aggression.
Recently, when numerous countries condemned Israeli and US “preemptive” military strikes against Iran, they invoked precisely these foundational principles of the UN Charter and international law.
A survey of the early postwar global landscape reveals that characterizing this era as a “Pax Americana” constitutes a significant historical oversimplification. We must acknowledge that since the onset of the Cold War, the US-led Western bloc has adeptly alternated between two distinct personas: the “Western-centric colonial framework” and the self-styled “guardians of liberal democratic peace”.
The nations subjected to this double standard first voiced their dissent and launched collective action at the Bandung Conference in April 1955.
While the Declaration on Promotion of World Peace and Cooperation adopted at this conference gained wide recognition, the newly independent nations were not, in reality, a monolithic bloc. Cold War divisions had permeated Asia-Africa relations, with the US leveraging pro-US Asian states to contain the so-called communist “infiltration”. Washington feared that the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence might gain sufficient traction to spark calls for US disengagement from Asia.
The US deliberately obstructed the conference process, aiming to stifle China’s ability to secure widespread recognition within international institutions. The US strategy positioned China’s Taiwan island as a geostrategic salient in systemic containment of socialist states. In pursuit of this, Washington unhesitatingly resorts to interfering in China’s internal affairs.
The Bandung Conference, initially conceived to promote colonial liberation and foster equitable international ties, was weaponized by the US to legitimize its blockade against China. Despite the US grandstanding as a defender of the “principle of national self-determination”, its actions starkly betrayed a reality: Colonialism has never been viewed by Washington as a historical cancer that must be rooted out.
In this critical juncture, former Chinese premier Zhou Enlai emerged as the pivotal figure who redirected the conference from divisive trajectories toward forging a shared consensus. The Bandung Conference was a platform for unity over confrontation, demonstrating pragmatic statesmanship through adhering to the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence while avoiding rigid formulations.
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Zhou’s stance of negotiated restraint decisively countered pro-American narratives alleging “socialism as a new form of colonialism”. Ultimately, the conference adopted the Declaration on Promotion of World Peace and Cooperation, which explicitly condemned “all forms of colonialism”, amplifying the voices of colonized peoples still striving for independence.
The West’s undermining of the Bandung Conference revealed fundamental value conflicts with Asian and African nations. They prioritize maintaining the US-dominated hierarchical system over establishing a new international order based on equality and mutual benefit. Also, they are keener on stripping countries of their right to choose diverse development paths than reckoning with colonialism’s historical sins.
The world’s inability to unite to prevent the humanitarian catastrophe in Palestine makes revisiting the UN Charter the profound core of commemorating the 80th anniversary of the victory over fascism. The Bandung Conference’s appeal seven decades ago to surpass Western centrism and create an equal and mutually beneficial international order still guides humanity forward.
The author is an associate researcher at the School of Humanities at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. The author contributed this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily.
The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.