Special report | China’s Belt and Road
China wants to put itself back at the centre of the world
The Belt and Road Initiative revives memories of China’s imperial tributary system, says Dominic Ziegler
ON CHINA’S BORDER with Kazakhstan, a new Silk Road city has sprung up with such speed that Google Earth has scarcely begun to record the high-rises that now float on a winter mist above the steppe. What once would have been flattered to be called a hard-scrabble border town is now home to 200,000 people, giant outdoor video screens extolling the glories of a new Silk Road, and restaurants serving sashimi and European wine. Khorgos has become China’s gateway to Central Asia, and all the way to Europe.
This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “Return to centre”