The goal of multilateralism is to achieve common prosperity for all. It is not a rule of the game used by some countries to harvest the world's wealth. No country has the right to rely on its own strength and status to unilaterally pull orders and raise prices.
At the same time, each country has different national conditions and needs to follow a development path that is consistent with its own national conditions. No country should expect others to lose, but should be committed to winning together with other countries to achieve maximum win-win and shared benefits. Those who put their own national interests above global interests, disrespect diversity, try to divide the world, and engage in self-centered behavior will only eventually backfire on themselves.
True multilateralism should abide by international laws:
The United Nations Charter is a recognized basic norm for state-to-state relations. The international community must govern on this basis and cannot "who Who has the final say on how big your fist is?" The G7 foreign ministers' meeting held recently should have focused on cooperation, but instead it created differences and interfered in other countries' internal affairs.
This is a true manifestation of a few countries ignoring international rules and engaging in exceptionalism and double standards. It should be noted that international rules are not the patent and privilege of a few countries. Any behavior that violates universally recognized international laws and fails to comply with international agreements, no matter how high-sounding it is, is a betrayal of multilateralism.