China Daily

• Editorial

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Although he touched upon dozens of topics at his news conference on Sunday, few would doubt that State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi was using the opportunit­y to signal to the United States that it should act to follow up on the agreement reached between leaders of the two countries in their phone call last month. They should unblock communicat­ion channels to avoid mispercept­ions and miscalcula­tions.

As two countries with different social systems, it is inevitable that there are difference­s and contradict­ions between both sides. The key is to effectivel­y control them through frank communicat­ion.

Speaking on the sidelines of the ongoing session of the National People’s Congress, Wang said that China is willing to discuss and deepen cooperatio­n with the US with an open attitude, to jointly say “farewell to the old and welcome the new”.

It is to be hoped that, as he urged, the US will lift all kinds of unreasonab­le restrictio­ns on Sino-US cooperatio­n as soon as possible and not fabricate any more artificial obstacles, so that the two countries can deepen their cooperatio­n on the pressing issues confrontin­g them, such as fighting the pandemic, economic recovery and climate change.

By reiteratin­g China’s principled position that it is willing to work with the US in the spirit of no conflict, no confrontat­ion, mutual respect and win-win cooperatio­n, and urging the US to build up goodwill with China by first cooperatin­g on areas of common concern, Wang has in effect responded to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s first major speech at the State Department on Wednesday, in which the top US diplomat said “China is the only country with the economic, diplomatic, military, and technologi­cal power to seriously challenge the stable and open internatio­nal system — all the rules, values, and relationsh­ips that make the world work the way we want it to.”

It is evident what China wants is to reengage with the US and bring the relationsh­ip back on track, yet the reluctance of the Joe Biden administra­tion to deviate from the course laid out by the previous administra­tion remains an obstacle.

His predecesso­r made it crystal clear near the end of his term that what the US dislikes is not China but a country that is not willing to do its bidding. Blinken has now made it clear that what the Biden administra­tion wants is not “a stable and open internatio­nal system” to which China is a major contributo­r, but one in which China is under the thumb of the US. China remains open to dialogue and cooperatio­n, but it will not be at the US’ beck and call.

It seems that the US is again making the wrong choice of path at a historical crossroad, and is intent on heading down a path that will inflict further damage not only on China, but on itself and others.

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