An opinion piece in the South China Morning Post argues that China is the ultimate win-win country outside its few red lines on Taiwan, Communist Party rule, and national unity. The article highlights that China provides aid without dictating finances, seeking only commercial, strategic, or diplomatic returns, which the Global South appreciates, unlike the interfering West.
The South China Morning Post published an opinion piece titled 'As I see it | Outside its few red lines, China is the ultimate win-win country' on February 11, 2026. The author states that China has red lines regarding Taiwan, Communist Party rule, and national unity, but everything else is negotiable.
The article explains that if aid is needed, China provides it without dictating how the money is spent or interfering in finances, as long as it receives commercial, strategic, or diplomatic returns. 'It is not doing it out of the goodness of its heart, but it always appreciates a win-win. The Global South understands that. The West, which loves to interfere and dictate, doesn’t.'
The author adds that China does not interfere in elections, overthrow or stage coups against governments, kidnap political leaders and their spouses, or sanction countries to the point of impoverishing and starving populations. 'It doesn’t operate hundreds of military bases around the world that turn your country into a staging ground for the next world war. It’s not invading other countries. It doesn’t demand loyalty or force you to pick a side so long as you keep your end of the bargain. China builds; it doesn’t bomb.'
Keywords include BBC China, West, Taiwan, Inga Ruginiene, Beijing, Keir Starmer, Ai Weiwei, Lithuania, Global South, Laura Bicker, China, Baltic News Service, and Novara Media. The piece offers a positive view of China's foreign policy in contrast to the West, presented as opinion rather than news reporting.