This is apropos five letters to the Editor titled ‘How Trump pushed the world towards Beijing’ carried by the newspaper in recent days.
The Western hemisphere, once considered America’s natural sphere of influence, now reflects this tension. Caribbean and Latin American states increasingly engage China as a primary trade partner, infrastructure financier, and development lender. In Africa, China has surpassed traditional Western powers in trade volume and project scale. In the Middle East, even long-standing US partners diversify toward Beijing for energy, technology, and investment ties. What emerges is not a world won by China through conquest or coercion, but one reshaped by America’s own confrontational posture. The paradox of this moment is that America’s political capital is eroding. China, by contrast, often avoids overt military or ideological confrontation, relying instead on the slow, cumulative force of economic integration. The gravitational pull of markets, supply chains, and infrastructure has proven more durable than the shock of tariffs or the threat of sanctions.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2026
The writer is a former Press Secretary to the President, An ex-Press Minister at Embassy of Pakistan to France, a former MD, SRBC Macomb, Detroit, Michigan





















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