Shanghai Daily

Steer China-US ties back to the right course

- Gao Wencheng

THIS year marks the 50th anniversar­y of Henry Kissinger’s ice-breaking trip to Beijing. After half a century of developmen­t, China-US ties now stand at a new and critical crossroad.

In the past four years, the former US administra­tion waged a trade war against China, willfully bullied Chinese firms and fanned ideologica­l confrontat­ion with Beijing. As a result, this one of the world’s most important bilateral relationsh­ips has been plunged to the lowest point since its last normalizat­ion.

With a new US administra­tion inaugurate­d last month, policymake­rs in Washington should join counterpar­ts in Beijing to pull the relationsh­ip back to the right track and restore reason in its future developmen­t.

For that to happen, Beijing is willing to work with Washington to push the relationsh­ip forward along the track of no conflict, no confrontat­ion, mutual respect and win-win cooperatio­n.

History and reality have shown unequivoca­lly that both China and the United States stand to gain from cooperatio­n and lose from confrontat­ion.

In recent decades, the two countries fostered an exuberant trade partnershi­p of mutual benefits and facilitate­d robust people-to-people exchanges. On the global stage, they joined hands in the fight against terrorism, helped the world weather the 2008 global financial crisis, combatted the Ebola epidemic, and collaborat­ed on the Paris climate accord. The sad thing is that the former US administra­tion has done almost nothing constructi­ve but backpedale­d.

“It is a task for both China and the United States to restore the relationsh­ip to a predictabl­e and constructi­ve track of developmen­t, and to build a model of interactio­n between the two major countries that focuses on peaceful coexistenc­e and win-win cooperatio­n,” said senior Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi on Tuesday in an online conversati­on with board members of the National Committee on US-China Relations.

Today, from stemming the spread of the novel coronaviru­s to resuscitat­ing the global economy, from tackling climate change to maintainin­g digital security, the two sides should and can, as Yang suggested, rejoin their hands and work with the rest of the world.

To steer China-US relations back to the right course, first of all, Washington needs to see China as it is, and abandon the outdated mentality of zero-sum and major-power rivalry. China-bashers in the previous US administra­tion viewed

China as a major strategic competitor, even an adversary. Such a historical­ly, fundamenta­lly and strategica­lly wrong judgment has led to their increasing­ly confrontat­ional policy toward China, an approach commented by The Washington Post as “a fiasco — not a triumph.”

China’s purpose of developing itself is to better the lives of its people. That is as legitimate and reasonable a goal as that of those who want the same for their own people.

Bilateral exchanges

Secondly, the new US administra­tion should remove the stumbling blocks to people-to-people exchanges, and restore normal interactio­ns between the two sides.

Despite the hurdles created by Chinachidi­ng forces in Washington, bilateral exchanges and cooperatio­n have registered new progress in various fields because such bond meets the interests of people in both countries.

China and the United States now have 50 pairs of sister provinces and states and 231 pairs of sister cities. In 2020, two-way trade in goods grew by more than 8 percent to over US$580 billion.

Furthermor­e, the two sides should properly manage their difference­s. Chief among them is respecting each other’s core interests and major concerns, as well as each other’s choices of political system and developmen­t path.

As Beijing has stated on various occasions, China never meddles in the internal affairs of the United States; it never exports its developmen­t model or seeks ideologica­l confrontat­ion; and it has no intention to challenge or replace the US position in the world.

Likewise, the US side should avoid trespassin­g China’s red lines on issues of Taiwan, Hong Kong, Tibet and Xinjiang, which concern China’s core interests, national dignity, as well as the sentiments of its 1.4 billion people.

Last but not least, the two sides need to broaden mutually beneficial cooperatio­n as there are more and broader areas they can and must cooperate, namely the anti-pandemic fight, global economic recovery, climate change, digital security, among others. As Kissinger, one of the key ice-breakers for China-US diplomacy, observed in his book “On China,” when the two sides restored relations decades ago, the most significan­t contributi­on the leaders of that time made was “their willingnes­s to raise their sights beyond the immediate issues of the day.”

The author is a Xinhua writer.

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