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the danish prime minister actually asked china to be "responsible" for the conflict between russia and ukraine, and threatened to "no longer be naive to china"

2024-09-27

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[text/qi qian, observer network] on september 25, local time, danish prime minister frederiksen accepted an interview with the european version of the american political news network "politico eu" on the sidelines of attending the united nations general assembly in new york. frederiksen reiterated the so-called "naïve" theory toward china, claiming that russia has received help from china, and called on european countries not to continue to be "naive" when dealing with relations with china to prevent continued "over-reliance" on china.

during the interview, frederiksen continued to exaggerate the cold war mentality and incited camp confrontation. he referred to china, russia, north korea and iran as the "four major powers" and said that cooperation among the four countries "has a huge impact on the world."

when talking about the conflict between russia and ukraine, she even tried to blame china. she said: "i don't think russia would have been able to launch a two-and-a-half-year all-out war without china's help. we can't let china help russia launch a war in europe without facing consequences. they have to be held accountable for their actions." she declared that china should bear the "political consequences" for this.

frederiksen then compared relations with russia to relations with china. according to her, european countries once tried to cooperate with russia, buy their natural gas and oil, and establish normal diplomatic relations, "but it didn't work. they attacked a european country"; now, european countries are working hard to negotiate with russia on different issues. china engages in normal cooperation.

she threatened: "we cannot be too naive... we cannot return to the situation before the conflict between russia and ukraine, and the same is true now for china."

after vigorously hyping the "china threat" theory, frederiksen began to reiterate the so-called "de-risking" argument, calling on eu countries to reconsider trade with china, claiming that european countries need to reduce their exposure to countries that "hold different values ​​and interests." dependence. she added here that "reducing dependence on china" has been supported by european commission president von der leyen.