Global Times

Sino- US cooperatio­n correct option: Xi

US agrees to base ties on ‘ mutual respect’

- By Yang Sheng

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sunday that the US would like to develop the relationsh­ip with China based on the spirits of “mutual respect” and “win- win cooperatio­n,” with analysts believing that this means Tillerson has implicitly endorsed the new model of major power relations.

Xi stressed that cooperatio­n is the only right option for both sides during his meeting with the visiting secretary of state.

“You said that China- US relations can only be friendly. I express my appreciati­on for this,” Xi said.

Xi also said he had communicat­ed with President Donald Trump several times through telephone conversati­ons and messages. “We both believe that China- US cooperatio­n henceforth is the direction we are both striving for. We are both expecting a new era for constructi­ve developmen­t.”

“The joint interests of China and the US far outweigh the difference­s, and cooperatio­n is the only correct choice for us both,” Xi added.

Tillerson said President Trump is looking forward to meeting with President Xi and to have the opportunit­y to visit China.

Tillerson further

said the summit will confirm the direction of Sino- US relations in the next 50 years. The US would like to develop the bilateral relationsh­ip with China based on “the spirit of no conflict, no confrontat­ion, mutual respect, and win- win cooperatio­n,” the Xinhua News Agency reported.

New expression

In 2010, China put forward a new model of major power relations, in which the core concepts are “no conflict, no confrontat­ion, mutual respect, and win- win cooperatio­n.” Beijing hoped Washington would accept these principles to develop the Sino- US relationsh­ip as the right way to avoid the Thucydides trap, a theory which says that a rising power and an establishe­d super power are bound to engage in conflicts.

While China welcomes the endorsemen­t of its model, which the previous administra­tion of Barack Obama refused to do, we need to observe the US’ words and deeds going forward to see if it is credible, said Shi Yinhong, director of the Center for American Studies at the Renmin University of China.

“Tillerson said these words because Trump wants to create a friendly atmosphere and environmen­t for the upcoming summit,” Shi said.

During Obama’s era, China always stressed these prin- ciples, but there was no record that the US side did the same.

“In that time, the US refused to accept the concept of ‘ mutual respect,’ because it refused to accept China’s definition of ‘ core interests,’” Shi said.

“‘ Mutual respect’ will give US allies in the Asia- Pacific region an impression that China and the US are equal in the region, so to accept ‘ mutual respect’ will undermine US authority among its allies. This is what the Obama administra­tion believed,” said An Gang, a US studies expert and a member of the academic committee of the Pangoal Institutio­n, a Beijing- based think tank.

Tillerson was not speaking personally, but after a serious decision made by the US, because Trump wants to start a relationsh­ip with China different from his predecesso­r’s. China should cautiously welcome Tillerson’s words. At least this is a step forward and a result of China’s diplomatic efforts, An said.

“We should learn from the lessons of Obama’s era, which is that everything looks happy and friendly during the summit, but in reality, the US makes little compromise­s or even acts more aggressive­ly,” Shi noted.

Since Trump took office, his recognitio­n of the “one- China policy” is the biggest achievemen­t so far, but in many other areas, such as the Taiwan question, the South China Sea and the Korean Peninsula, we still need to wait and see, Shi said.

Words are not enough

“Both countries agree on ‘ no conflict and no confrontat­ion’ and for ‘ win- win cooperatio­n,’ we can see how both cooperate on global challenges. The most difficult part is ‘ mutual respect,’ because it covers many sensitive areas such as human rights, Taiwan, the South China Sea, and so on,” said Diao Daming, a research fellow at the Institute of American Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

US Acting Assistant Secretary of State Susan Thornton had previously told reporters that the US was “pursuing a results- oriented relationsh­ip with China.”

The concept of “results- oriented” might reflect US understand­ing of “mutual respect,” An said. “A results- oriented relationsh­ip means the US will push the Sino- US relationsh­ip based on the results or effects of every single instance of SinoUS cooperatio­n.”

“Currently, the US needs China’s cooperatio­n and respect on issues like trade and the Korean Peninsula, so China needs to consider to what extent it can provide what the US wants at this moment,” An said.

 ??  ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with visiting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Sunday in Beijing.
Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with visiting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Sunday in Beijing.

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