please give a speech on one belt one road in favour of it and with some suggestions..
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China's One Belt, One Road project promises other countries new roads, trains and power plants. What China wants in return is only the willingness of other countries to link arms and make a buck together, says the Chinese President, who has made it his signature project.
"We will not base co-operation on ideological grounds, nor will we pursue any political agenda or make any explicit arrangements," Xi Jinping said Monday. He spoke at the close of a summit attended by dozens of global leaders who gathered to discuss China's Belt and Road Initiative to spread its development model and cash among neighbours near and far.
But as a document made public in Pakistan Monday makes clear, the planners behind China's overseas ambitions envision far more than economic co-operation among so-called "Belt and Road countries."
China also wants to export its surveillance-heavy security model, deliver content from its state-controlled media, and gain privileged access to foreign agricultural lands and mineral deposits for its corporate giants.
Those details are contained in a Chinese planning document, which upon publication by a Pakistani newspaper offers one of the clearest insights yet into the sweep of what China hopes to gain from its One Belt, One Road investments – and the trade-offs that face even those who have decided that Beijing's global leadership ambitions present more opportunities than problems.
Pakistan is one of the most important countries along China's "new Silk Road," with a national leadership receptive to Beijing's concept and a geographic position that stands to open a far more efficient trading path to Europe, Africa and the Middle East for Chinese companies. China's Belt and Road spending is expected to hit $51-billion (U.S.) in Pakistan.
"We will not base co-operation on ideological grounds, nor will we pursue any political agenda or make any explicit arrangements," Xi Jinping said Monday. He spoke at the close of a summit attended by dozens of global leaders who gathered to discuss China's Belt and Road Initiative to spread its development model and cash among neighbours near and far.
But as a document made public in Pakistan Monday makes clear, the planners behind China's overseas ambitions envision far more than economic co-operation among so-called "Belt and Road countries."
China also wants to export its surveillance-heavy security model, deliver content from its state-controlled media, and gain privileged access to foreign agricultural lands and mineral deposits for its corporate giants.
Those details are contained in a Chinese planning document, which upon publication by a Pakistani newspaper offers one of the clearest insights yet into the sweep of what China hopes to gain from its One Belt, One Road investments – and the trade-offs that face even those who have decided that Beijing's global leadership ambitions present more opportunities than problems.
Pakistan is one of the most important countries along China's "new Silk Road," with a national leadership receptive to Beijing's concept and a geographic position that stands to open a far more efficient trading path to Europe, Africa and the Middle East for Chinese companies. China's Belt and Road spending is expected to hit $51-billion (U.S.) in Pakistan.
salena:
hey thankyou for theanswer but can tell me some points for Iraq as my country is Iraq in this topic
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