Taking note of the just inked Indo-US logistics agreement, an editorial in the Global Times titled 'Geopolitical games shouldn't divert China' said that some Ameican media outlets were erroneously depicting the deal as signals of India leaning towards the US alliance system.
The editorial said that Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was planning to prioritise economic cooperation with Russia, despite the lack of progress in their long-standing territorial dispute over the Kuril Islands chain, which stretches from the Japanese island of Hokkaido to the southern tip of Russia's Kamchatka peninsula.
"The leaders of the two states are expected to work on eight economic cooperation plans," it said, adding Japan's moves can easily be viewed as imposing geopolitical pressure on China through improving ties with Russia.
"To China's south, US President Barack Obama will head to Laos for the East Asia Summit, after attending the G20 summit to be held in China's eastern city of Hangzhou over the weekend. He will be the first incumbent US president to visit Laos, and this has been interpreted as his last efforts to address his pivot to the Asia-Pacific strategy before he leaves office," it said.
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"Geopolitics in the 21st century is not like the traditional game where every piece aims to encircle the others," it said.
"China has just become a real major power. China needs to develop modern national defence, and at the same time keep long-term economic vitality and expand its vision," it said.
The Chinese military should become so strong that we can withstand any external military pressure, the state-run paper, known for its strong nationalist views, said.
"This is the primary task for China, and we should not let our attention be diverted by the clamorous geopolitical rivalry in the Asia-Pacific," it added.