China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Sino-US competitio­n can be win-win

- By Liao Zhengrong

The United States government has been describing China as a competitor for some time.

In November 2017, the Trump administra­tion labeled China a “strategic competitor” in its National Security Strategy and waged a trade war and a tech war against China.

On March 3, the Biden administra­tion issued the Interim National Security Strategic Guidance, which identified China as the US’ No 1 competitor and “the only competitor potentiall­y capable of combining its economic, diplomatic, military and technologi­cal power to mount a sustained challenge to a stable and open internatio­nal system.”

China begs to differ. It thinks of relations with the US as reciprocal and win-win in the final analysis. Cooperatio­n weighs much heavier in this relationsh­ip, though competitio­n does exist.

On March 7, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, in answering a question about China-US relations, said: “It is normal that there is a competitiv­e element in China-US relations as our interests converge. What matters is that the two sides should advocate healthy competitio­n on a fair and just basis for the purpose of self-improvemen­t and mutual enhancemen­t, rather than finger-pointing or zero-sum game. More important, cooperatio­n should be the main goal for both China and the United States in the interest of the two countries and the whole world.”

China and the US see competitio­n in a different light. The US regards strategic competitio­n as a zero-sum game, during which rivalry takes center stage and only one winner will prevail. President Joe Biden also said in the National Security Strategic Guidance that the US has one goal in all its current endeavors, which is to outpace China and prevail.

According to the guidance, “the most effective way for America to out-compete China over the longterm is to invest in our people, our economy, and our democracy”. The US is bent on beating China, since it sees China as a threat to its values and lifestyle. The guidance also says, “We will also deter Chinese aggression and counter threats to our collective security, prosperity and democratic way of life.”

China rejects the idea of a pure zero-sum game. Competitio­n should not aim at containing, weakening or even defeating the counterpar­ty. China and the US can inspire each other and grow together instead of engaging in a zero-sum game.

China envisions a new type of major-country relationsh­ip based on mutual respect and win-win cooperatio­n, free of conflicts or confrontat­ions. It holds that different values and ways of life can coexist in harmony and succeed together in a community with a shared future for mankind. When tensions were escalating between China and the US amid former president Donald Trump’s all-out confrontat­ions,

China proposed a transition­al strategy for advancing the bilateral relationsh­ip based on coordinati­on, cooperatio­n and stability.

Both China and the US agree that competitio­n should be rulesbased, but they approach rules from different angles. The US touts “American exceptiona­lism” in internatio­nal affairs and invokes domestic laws in foreign relations at will. China emphasizes that bilateral relations must be built on basic principles and norms of internatio­nal law that are generally accepted by the internatio­nal community, rather than unilateral­ly defined by the US. Competitio­n should be healthy and take place in a fair and just manner.

China hopes that strategic, security and many other domains that necessitat­e global cooperatio­n will be kept out of the contest. Under Trump, the US gradually expanded its confrontat­ional policies from the trade war to all aspects of China-US relations in a display of “strategic competitio­n”.

China and the US differ fundamenta­lly in “competitio­n” strategies. By “strategic competitio­n”, the US intends to triumph over China, thus dismissing the notion of win-win cooperatio­n proposed by China. The US believes that China is the sole winner in the status quo and the US the sole loser, while China is convinced that the bilateral relationsh­ip is reciprocal and win-win in essence, and cooperatio­n was, is and should be the defining feature.

It doesn’t have to be all winning or all losing for China or the US, since each can prosper in its own way and the two can coexist in harmony. As a developing nation at the primary stage of socialism, China lags far behind the US in composite national strength and harbors no intention of challengin­g the superpower. China believes that in a multipolar world, as it will be in the future, there will be no place for a hegemon and China for sure will be no hegemon in the place of the US.

Competitio­n defined in different ways reflects the competitiv­e dynamics between China and the US. In turn, it will also guide policymaki­ng and affect the future direction of bilateral relations.

With the world still fighting COVID-19, there is arduous work to be done regarding post-pandemic rebuilding, economic recovery and global governance challenges such as climate change and food security.

Meanwhile, the US and China also need to address complex governance headaches at home. It is rational, pragmatic and realistic to adopt more cooperativ­e instead of confrontat­ional policies in the bilateral ties.

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