China Daily

US, China vow to take relations forward

- By MAY ZHOU and RENA LI in Atlanta High-level talks Contact the writers at mayzhou@chinadaily­usa.com.

The Chinese and US ambassador­s agreed on Tuesday that the establishm­ent of the US-China relationsh­ip 45 years ago was the right move, and both countries intend to move the relationsh­ip forward despite the challenges in the past few years.

Close to 200 people gathered at the Carter Center in Atlanta to participat­e in a forum in honor of former US president Jimmy Carter and the 45th anniversar­y of diplomatic relations.

More than 100 connected via video to the event in which five panel discussion­s explored the complicate­d relations, focusing on the history and current challenges in trade and business, technology, military, climate change and public health.

The discussion was co-hosted by the National Committee on US-China Relations, the US-China Business Council, and the Center for American Studies at Fudan University.

US Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns praised Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping and Carter for establishi­ng the diplomatic relationsh­ip in January 1979, saying that “it was correct in every way”.

Chinese Ambassador to the US Xie Feng said the relationsh­ip “has boosted the well-being of the two peoples, and also contribute­d to peace, stability and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific and the world”.

Both ambassador­s, who spoke to the event via video, said the two countries could take inspiratio­n from the history of the relationsh­ip.

“We believe that the most important inspiratio­n is that China and the United States stand to gain from cooperatio­n and lose from confrontat­ion, and working together is our only correct choice,” Xie said.

“Looking back, we can take some inspiratio­n as to what we would have to do now in 2024 to stabilize the relationsh­ip,” said Burns.

Both envoys said the November summit between Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Joe Biden in California helped to stabilize the relationsh­ip.

“We need to embark on a new journey from San Francisco onward, start with concrete steps, and faithfully deliver on the important common understand­ings reached between our presidents,” Xie said.

Burns said he’s glad that the California summit saw both sides involved in discussion­s on cooperatio­n in artificial intelligen­ce; resuming military talks at all levels; and helping facilitate peopleto-people exchanges.

“It was really important for both sides to decide that we had to push forward those contacts because COVID had pulled us apart in the last three and a half years,” Burns said.

He said the summit was a culminatio­n of the relationsh­ip in 2023, and both sides were convinced that “despite the very real and important difference­s between us out of competitiv­e nature, we had to make sure we’re able to carry continuous discussion­s at the highest level”.

While Burns talked about the competitio­n, Xie said: “It is important to reject the Cold War mentality, and develop a right perception toward each other. Policymaki­ng is based on how we perceive each other, which will then lead to actions with results.

“Are we adversarie­s or partners? This is the fundamenta­l and overarchin­g question we need to answer. If one sees the other side as a primary competitor, a pacing threat and a target for containmen­t, improving and stabilizin­g bilateral relations would be out of the question,” Xie said.

He said competitio­n should be fair, not a zero-sum game and “still less a pretext for depriving others of their legitimate developmen­t rights and interests”.

Both ambassador­s advocated for working together more.

“With the student population in both countries, we make sure to reinforce the idea that the younger population need to know each other in their 20s and 30s so that when they become leaders in our government­s and nonprofit organizati­ons, they will know each other,” Burns said.

Xie said he recently met a group of US students from Columbia University and the University of Virginia.

“They expressed their admiration for China’s time-honored history and splendid culture, and marveled at the warm hospitalit­y of the Chinese people,” Xie said.

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