• -6-6-6-@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    18 days ago

    No you have a point. Reasonably, wouldn't it make sense that China would be curious on investing/pushing more political influence onto Turkey/seek more control of trade into Europe where another major market is? Or are we analyzing this from the perspective of a capitalist country? Perhaps, China has no interest in pushing into new markets but rather developing and pushing their own. They might not have Maoist zeal, but they do a lot of work in Belt and Road and focus more on economic help to developing countries rather than trying to exert influence or control.

    It might be the 'pragmatic' mindset in the sense that they seek development mainly in all fields. They aren't interested in waging a war, or "winning" anything but rather developing the nation so it could compete in all fields in the future. More productive forces, more natural resources to tap into to serve the working class and nation, more research into fields of science to which we've seen the effects of what happens. They dominate science publications, they have plentiful resources in their own nation and they're dominating the world in manufacturing.

    Diplomatically; they offer a stable platform and more reason to their mindset than the constant carnival of elected officials that U.S parades around. I'm just surprised they haven't targeted Turkey with any of their initiatives diplomatically; would be useful to put pressure on Europe during this time but I suppose not.