China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Cui: Nations in same boat, shouldn’t make waves

- By DONG LESHUO in Washington leshuodong@chinadaily­usa.com

Chinese Ambassador Cui Tiankai said he believes that China and the US “remain in the same boat”, and the common challenge is to navigate uncharted waters for the benefit of both countries and the world.

Cui spoke at the second session of the 8th US-China Civil Dialogue hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace on Wednesday.

“China has its own history, culture and political and economic systems. Whatever has happened in China is an outcome of China’s long history. I don’t think that any country can really change China,” Cui said.

“And that shouldn’t be the policy goal of any country, including the US. I don’t think that was the goal of successive American presidents over the past four decades. I talked with Dr Henry Kissinger and he said that was never his goal or President Nixon’s goal when they started to reopen relations with China,” said Cui.

Cui disputed the notion that China is trying to challenge internatio­nal rules.

He said China has “joined more and more internatio­nal organizati­ons, acceded to more and more internatio­nal treaties and convention­s, and accepted more and more internatio­nal rules” in past decades.

“It took us 15 years to join the WTO (World Trade Organizati­on). We learned about its rules, adapted to them and abided by them. It is fair to say that China’s record in the WTO is open, transparen­t and faithful to our commitment to the organizati­on,” said Cui.

The US side has taken a lot of initiative­s to revise these rules, “starting maybe with Nixon’s abandonmen­t of the gold standard, which was a shock to the Bretton Woods institutio­ns. Then some 20 yeas ago, there was a kind of theory that a country can engage in humanitari­an interventi­ons in violation of the sovereignt­y of states.”

Bretton Woods was a gathering of 44 Allied nations in New Hampshire in 1944 to regulate the internatio­nal monetary and financial order at the end of World War II.

“More recently, you see the US withdraw from the Paris Agreement, Iranian nuclear deal and UNESCO (United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on). Some even propose that the US should withdraw from the WTO.

Cui said that some people are worried about China’s notion of “entering a new era of developmen­t”.

“Some are scared by the term ‘new era’. I have met with some very serious American scholars who asked me this question — does China’s new era mean the end of the American era? I have full respect to those serious scholars, including Graham Allison, with whom I had long conversati­ons. I think his book to a large extent has been misinterpr­eted. He was not advocating for the so-called Thucydides Trap. He was saying that we could avoid this trap,” said Cui.

“There are many misunderst­andings and misinterpr­etations about China’s goals and intentions. What we mean by this new era is that China has entered a new stage of developmen­t, with the major challenge being to meet the people’s ever-growing needs for a better life and address unbalanced and inadequate developmen­t. Of course, China will have to develop itself in an open environmen­t. We cannot close our door. But this new era is mainly for China’s own developmen­t, not for global dominance,” said Cui.

Cui said that the perception that over the years of economic and trade relations, the US has got all losses and China all gains is not in line with reality.

“Our economic and trade relations are interdepen­dent and mutually beneficial. We should not focus so much on the trade deficit, because there are a lot of structural reasons behind this deficit,” the ambassador said.

“Unfortunat­ely, there are those who are trying to rock the boat,” Cui said. “For instance, they are painting a distorted picture of our economic and trade relations. Some of them have even gone further by playing with fire on issues of Taiwan and others that concern China’s territoria­l integrity. These are very dangerous developmen­ts. We have to be very careful about it,” said Cui.

 ??  ?? Cui Tiankai, Chinese ambassador
Cui Tiankai, Chinese ambassador

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