The law concerns China's diplomatic relations with other countries, its exchanges and cooperation with those countries in economic, cultural and other areas, and the country's relations with the United Nations and other international organizations. It lays out China's official foreign policy goals to be:
Safeguarding China's sovereignty, national security and development interests
Protecting and promoting the interests of the Chinese people
Building China into a great modernized socialist country
It also codifies other stated Chinese foreign policy objectives such as independent foreign policy of peace, five principles of peaceful coexistence, path of peaceful development and opening to the outside world.[4][5]
Institutions
The Law explicitly states that China conducts its foreign policy "under the centralized and overall leadership" of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The CCP's Central Foreign Affairs Commission is granted the role of "policy making, deliberation and coordination relating to the conduct of foreign relations".[6][5] According to the law, the National People's Congress and its Standing Committee "ratify or denounce treaties and important agreements concluded with other countries" and conduct activities and strengthen exchanges with "parliaments of foreign countries as well as international and regional parliamentary organizations".[6] The president represents the state, the State Council "manages foreign affairs" and "concludes treaties and agreements with foreign countries", and the Central Military Commission conducts "international military exchanges and cooperation".[6] The Ministry of Foreign Affairs "undertakes matters relating to diplomatic exchanges of Party and State leaders with foreign leaders" and "enhances guidance, coordination, management and service for international exchanges and cooperation conducted by other government departments and localities".[6]
The Article 33 of the Law states that China the right to "counter and restrictive measures", though this does not create new sanction mechanisms and largely overlaps with preexisting and more specific laws such as the Anti–Foreign Sanctions Law of 2021.[5][8]
Reactions
Central Foreign Affairs Commission Office Director Wang Yi, writing an op-ed to the People's Daily, wrote that the formulation of the law is to "thoroughly implement" Xi Jinping Thought, especially Xi Jinping Thought on Diplomacy and Xi Jinping Thought on the Rule of Law.[9] He also wrote that the law was "an important measure to strengthen the Communist Party Central Committee’s centralized and unified leadership over foreign affairs".[8] The state-run Global Times called it a "key step to enrich the legal toolbox against Western hegemony".[7]
^Wang, Yi (29 June 2023). "贯彻对外关系法,为新时代中国特色大国外交提供坚强法治保障" [Implement the Foreign Relations Law and Provide Strong Legal Guarantee for Major-Country Diplomacy with Chinese Characteristics in the New Era]. People's Daily. Archived from the original on 29 June 2023. Retrieved 6 July 2023.