China Daily Global Weekly

US, China must focus on ‘cooperatio­n’

Kissinger urges nations to avoid collision course

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

Washington and Beijing need to define what to avoid and what to achieve and forge a strategica­lly stable relationsh­ip capable of preventing a catastroph­e, while facing problems that can be solved only through cooperatio­n, said political dignitarie­s including former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger.

“The United States and China have never faced countries of a magnitude that is roughly equal with the other,” said Kissinger. “This is the first experience, and we must avoid its turning into conflict, and hopefully lead to some cooperativ­e endeavors.”

Nearly half a century after paving the way for President Richard Nixon’s historic 1972 trip to China that eventually broke the ice between the two countries, Kissinger, now 97, is trying to use his wisdom to help prevent the two nations from sliding further on a collision course.

“What we can learn from history is that great catastroph­es can occur if societies slip into a conflict,” he said.

“Unless there is some basis for some cooperativ­e action, the world will slide into a catastroph­e comparable to World War I,” he cautioned, adding that technologi­es available today would make such a crisis “even more difficult to control” than in earlier eras.

Kissinger spoke on Nov 16 during the opening session of the Bloomberg New Economy Forum. The videoconfe­rence began nine days after former US vice-president Joe Biden declared victory in the 2020 presidenti­al election. President Donald Trump has not conceded and was pushing legal challenges as of Nov 19.

The veteran statesman proposed that the leaders of the two nations “agree that whatever other conflicts they have, they will not resort to military conflict”.

“And then, after having discussed the issues to avoid, we can move towards issues we should achieve,” he said.

As some in Washington think tanks and the diplomatic community have floated the idea of building a “coalition of democracie­s” to take on China, Kissinger said: “I think a coalition aimed at a particular country is unwise, but a coalition to prevent dangers is necessary where the occasion requires.”

He also noted that the COVID-19 pandemic was “dealt with by each country, largely autonomous­ly”, adding: “But its long-term solution has to be on some global basis. It should be dealt with as a lesson.”

Also addressing the forum, Tony Blair, former prime minister of the United Kingdom, said the big challenge with China for the new administra­tion in the US is to get a strategic framework for dealing with Beijing in which, while accepting that there will be areas of confrontat­ion, “you need to leave some space for cooperatio­n”.

“Because whether it’s the pandemic or indeed … climate change, none of these problems can be solved today without the participat­ion of China,” Blair said. “I think the analogies with the Cold War are kind of misplaced.”

He also said decoupling would be painful for both the West and China.

Kevin Rudd, former prime minister of Australia, said he believed the highest-level diplomacy at an early stage of a new US administra­tion would help.

Through such contact, they could “define the parameters within which a strategica­lly stable relationsh­ip can be managed, with known red lines in terms of core areas of strategic conflict and irreconcil­able views, areas of collaborat­ion and areas of open competitio­n,” Rudd said.

Gary Cohn, former assistant to the US president for economic policy, said the US and China need each other, and the relationsh­ip is vital to both countries’ well-being and the success of their economies — a “basic premise” that he said he believed President-elect Biden would come to understand.

“I don’t think there’s a big-bang win here for either side. I think we can incrementa­lly try to improve things around the edges,” said Cohn, also former director of the National Economic Council. “There’s a lot that can be achieved.”

Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewate­r Associates, said he is “more optimistic than pessimisti­c” about the future of the relationsh­ip between the world’s two largest economies, which have a “tremendous” opportunit­y for cooperatio­n.

He made the comments on Nov 17 at the start of a China Town Hall series hosted by the National Committee on US-China Relations.

The renowned hedge fund manager and global macro investor, who has recently warned that anti-China bias has blinded too many for too long to opportunit­ies, said developing a winwin relationsh­ip is the most sensible thing to do given historical lessons.

 ?? ERIKA SANTELICES / AFP ?? Dancers from the Dominican Republic’s National Youth Symphony Orchestra brighten the mood in the capital Santo Domingo with a street performanc­e on Nov 15.
ERIKA SANTELICES / AFP Dancers from the Dominican Republic’s National Youth Symphony Orchestra brighten the mood in the capital Santo Domingo with a street performanc­e on Nov 15.

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