China Daily

Editorial

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Until the NATO meeting was reschedule­d, there was plenty of hullabaloo over US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson planning to skip the NATO foreign ministers meeting, originally scheduled for April 5-6, in order to attend the meeting between the Chinese and US presidents. Many interprete­rs were unanimous on one point: The Trump administra­tion was attaching more importance to relations with China than those with NATO.

While this may be an over-interpreta­tion, since the relationsh­ips are hardly comparable, it does reveal the truth that Beijing and Washington share an eagerness to ballast their ties.

From cost sharing to the future orientatio­n of the alliance, it seems the new administra­tion in Washington has a lot to talk about with its NATO allies.

But the first face-to-face meeting between President Xi Jinping and his US counterpar­t Donald Trump is charged with charting a cooperativ­e course for a relationsh­ip that is more difficult to define and manage.

Considerin­g the vicissitud­es in bilateral ties after Trump took office, including his tough talk and the phone conversati­on he had with Taiwan leader Tsai Ing-wen, the conciliato­ry tone adopted since, from himself, as well as his secretarie­s of state and defense, offers optimism the two leaders can use their meeting to eliminate any lingering sense of uncertaint­y.

A short two-day meeting may not suffice for all questions to be answered. But it can certainly contribute a clear and constructi­ve sense of direction to this crucial relationsh­ip.

Xi has on many occasions reiterated Beijing’s aspiration for a relationsh­ip of “no confrontat­ion, no conflict, mutual respect, and win-win cooperatio­n”.

Tillerson uttered the same words in Beijing, pledging commitment to a “constructi­ve relationsh­ip”, so the meeting has good foundation­s to build on.

Besides exchanging viewpoints on the potentiall­y most inflammabl­e flashpoint­s in ties, the two leaders will likely discuss the global economic situation and their trade relations.

In both these areas they may maneuver new agreements and crisis prevention mechanisms, as good communicat­ion will be essential to steer clear of misunderst­andings as the Trump team is changing some of the policies of the previous administra­tion.

Whatever ends up being discussed, the fact that Xi and Trump will compare notes in person matters.

Although they have talked twice on the phone and exchanged vows to work together for better ties, their meeting next week offers them the opportunit­y to step up to the plate and give substance to their words.

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