China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ex-envoy puts trade dispute in perspectiv­e

- By HONG XIAO in Boston xiaohong@chinadaily­usa.com

A former US ambassador to China said he believes that the bilateral relationsh­ip, which has been built on negotiatio­n for decades, will not be easily affected by the current tit-for-tat trade dispute.

“The trade dispute between the US and China is just a trade dispute,” said J. Stapleton Roy, also and a former US assistant secretary of state, at the closing ceremony of the Harvard College China Forum at the Seaport World Trade Center in Boston on Sunday.

“We (the United States) have trade disputes, and we have traditiona­lly had trade disputes with our close friends,” Roy added, offering as an example the disagreeme­nt between the United States and Japan after the breakup of the Soviet Union in the 1980s, and the longtime rows between the US and Canada on issues such as the export of softwood lumber.

“And our relations with both Japan and Canada are stable and good,” Roy said.

In his latest tweet about China on Sunday morning, US President Donald Trump wrote: “President Xi (Jinping) and I will always be friends, no matter what happens with our dispute on trade. China will take down its Trade Barriers because it is the right thing to do. Taxes will become Reciprocal & a deal will be made on Intellectu­al Property. Great future for both countries.”

Roy said Trump’s attitude “is different from yesterday”.

“He was trying to coerce China into giving something on trade and didn’t show interest in negotiatio­n, but today, he changed his position,” Roy said.

“So we are perhaps seeing a turnaround in the way we are going to handle the trade issue.”

Roy said the dispute is “problemati­c because it involves economic interests

So we are perhaps seeing a turnaround in the way we are going to handle the trade issue.”

J. Stapleton Roy,

of both countries in a significan­t way”.

“But it doesn’t undermine the basis for the relationsh­ip,” he said.

He emphasized that negotiatio­ns built the current US-China relationsh­ip, going back to the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between China and the US in the 1970s.

“But people in Washington aren’t even aware of it, in part because the Trump administra­tion does not have a single person at the senior level who knows anything at all about how the US-China relationsh­ip was restored,” he said.

China specialist­s

Ezra Vogel, emeritus professor of social sciences at Harvard University and author of Deng Xiaoping and the Transforma­tion of China (2011), shared a similar concern.

“One of the problems now is that many of the best China specialist­s in the United States are not inside the government,” Vogel said.

He said that both countries have undergone societal transition­s, with disagreeme­nt generated in politics and economics.

“In some way, we are focusing on the wrong issue. The trade issue doesn’t threaten US-China relations at all,” he said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China