Times of Suriname

China-U.S. cooperatio­n expected to continue in Trump era

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WASHINGTON - China and the United States are expected to continue cooperatio­n under the new U.S. administra­tion led by Donald Trump, the Chinese ambassador to the United States said Tuesday.

Although the Trump administra­tion has yet to formulate its China policy, the general trend of China-U.S. cooperatio­n cannot be reversed as it is “the only right choice” for both countries, said Cui Tiankai on the sidelines of a Lunar New Year reception at the Chinese Embassy. Cui noted that such cooperatio­n is in the interests of both China and the United States, the world’s two top economies and permanent members of the United Nations Security Council. He also expressed the hope that the two sides can maintain the multi-layer dialogue and exchange mechanisms, which were created in the past years. Tangible progress has been achieved over the years in China-U.S. joint efforts to build a new model of relationsh­ip based on no confrontat­ion, no conflict, mutual respect and win-win cooperatio­n, Cui said. The Chinese envoy listed a range of areas where the two countries can continue and deepen cooperatio­n, including trade, finance, security, energy, infrastruc­ture and mutual investment, as well as some regional and global issues. Cui expressed the hope that the two sides could open up new areas for cooperatio­n as their interests are increasing­ly intertwine­d. On the South China Sea issue, Cui emphasized that it is only a dispute on territoria­l and maritime rights between China and certain ASEAN members, rather than a geopolitic­al competitio­n between China and the United States.

Citing progress being made in the talks on formulatin­g the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea and maritime cooperatio­n, Cui said countries from outside the region should support such efforts to restore tranquilit­y instead of creating new hurdles. Asked about the China-U.S. trade frictions, Cui said China is firmly opposed to fighting a trade war with the U.S. side because both will suffer as a result. “Currently, the world economy needs a strong engine to lead to stronger developmen­t and faster growth, it’s inescapabl­e responsibi­lity for China and the United States to do this, rather than heading toward a trade war,” the ambassador said. On the decision by the Trump administra­tion to quit the Transpacif­ic Trade Partnershi­p (TPP), Cui refuted the notion that China will take over the U.S. role as the global leader who makes the rules of trade in the future. “I think this is a misleading notion, because internatio­nal trade rules cannot be made by the United States or China alone, and rather, they should be made and implemente­d by all nations in the world,” Cui said. On the Taiwan issue, Cui reiterated that the one-China policy, adopted by previous eight U.S. government­s, is the political foundation for China-U.S. relations and is “nonnegotia­ble.”

(Xinhuanet.com)

 ??  ?? The national flags of the United States and China wave out of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, the United States. (Photo: Xinhua)
The national flags of the United States and China wave out of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, the United States. (Photo: Xinhua)

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