Beijing Review

Underlinin­g the Fundamenta­ls

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In February 1972, then U.S. President Richard Nixon paid a visit to China. Considered an icebreakin­g trip in SinoAmeric­an relations, both sides issued the Shanghai Communiqué, marking the end to 22 years of alienation between the two countries and the beginning of a normalizat­ion of bilateral relations. Today, China-U.S. relations usher in the visit’s 50th anniversar­y amid tensions.

Looking back on 50 years of exchanges and looking ahead to the future developmen­t of the China-U.S. relationsh­ip, we must highlight several points so that both countries can gain a clear, mutual understand­ing and ensure the sound developmen­t of their bilateral ties.

The normalizat­ion of relations between the U.S. and China catered to the needs of the times for both sides. The Cold War between the U.S. and the Soviet Union was in full swing, so Nixon decided to contact China to seek the Soviet Union’s isolation— serving American national interests. At the same time, Sino-Soviet relations were also strained, requiring China to improve its relationsh­ip with the U.S.

Sino-American relations should be equal and mutually beneficial.

Currently, American politician­s either criticize or sanction China for not conforming to the American will, an attitude unacceptab­le to the Chinese side.

China-U.S. exchanges over the past half-century have demonstrat­ed that cooperatio­n will profit both, whereas confrontat­ion will harm both. The trade disputes between the two in recent years have once again verified this. The current U.S. inflation partially stems from the damaged bilateral trade.

The two sides need to respect and understand each other now more than ever. Both China and the U.S. should take note from history when it comes to the power of cooperatio­n.

Sino-American relations are not a matter of China and the U.S., but a matter of internatio­nal affairs.

In the post-pandemic era, the world will face new changes and challenges, but great-power competitio­n should not be today’s global theme, nor will it solve America’s problems. China and the U.S. should act in the fundamenta­l interests of their two peoples, follow the trend of worldwide developmen­t and progress their bilateral relations based on the principles of mutual respect, peaceful coexistenc­e and cooperatio­n.

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