Comment
    Sino-US ties on right track
    2010-May-21 07:52:33

    Shared concerns will trump bilateral disputes between the world's largest developed power and largest developing nation

    Sino-US relations have been on a roller-coaster in recent years and that has shaped the direction of bilateral ties although the relationship has managed to scrape past last year's political transition in Washington.

    The road to smooth ties, however, got a lot bumpier this year after the arms sale move to Taiwan and US President Barack Obama's meeting with the Dalai Lama.

    Yet now, the dark clouds seem to have lifted due to subsequent efforts by both sides.

    The Sino-US relationship is one of the most complicated in the world - increased cooperation often follows contentious issues and vice versa.

    Both have much in common though, and work side-by-side on a wide range of international and regional matters despite not seeing eye-to-eye on a variety of issues, such as Taiwan and human rights.

    On the Taiwan question, an issue central to China's concerns, the two powers share the view that there should be stability across the Straits.

    However, Beijing and Washington have long been at odds over US' weapons sales to the island.

    Similarly, their inter-dependence in the economic and trade spheres has not obliterated differences on such issues as the exchange rate of the yuan.

    Iran's nuclear program and efforts to safeguard the international non-proliferation regime are other areas of divergence.

    The two have also yet to resolve challenges stemming from the chiefly ideological confrontation between a decades-old hegemony and an emerging power.

    Sino-US ties, on the other hand, cover a wide range of regional and global issues. In recent years, almost all the issues of global significance have been top concerns of both China and the US, a tendency that some scholars have labeled the "globalization of bilateral ties".

    In a joint declaration issued during Obama's visit to Beijing in November, the two countries reaffirmed their shared concerns and mapped out bilateral cooperation in areas ranging from security, economic cooperation and climate change.

    As a key document issued in the context of globalization, the declaration was an indication of the ever-expanding foundation of Sino-US cooperation under the bilateral context.

    It also indicated deepening awareness that global issues were playing a growing role in bilateral ties and that closer cooperation will help the international community deal with looming challenges.

    In the declaration, both countries reiterated their respect for each other's sovereignty, territorial integrity and core interests and promised to deal with disputes in the spirit of equality and mutual respect, highlighting that both sides were willing to build an equal and balanced relationship.

    In the 1990s, it was a widely held belief among some scholars in Washington that China needed the US more than the latter needed Beijing.

    Things have changed now. Washington has become increasingly dependent on Beijing, as indicated by Obama's repeated stress on the importance of cooperating with China.

    The US' increasing dependence on China has been attributed to the rise of China's influence in the international arena, which has been further amplified in the context of the global financial crisis.

    Chinese citizens are, however, quite conscious of the country's wide gap with the US despite enormous progress over the past decades.

    China is still experimenting with the primary stages of socialism and that phase is expected to last longer into the future.

    As the world's sole superpower, the US' influence globally has been declining in recent years, but no single country can challenge its hegemony in the foreseeable future - China, of course, has neither the capability nor the aspiration to do so.

    It is China's long-held policy to desist from playing the world's leader. As China continues its peaceful rise, its roles and responsibilities in international affairs are also expected to go up. Even so, the country's rising international stature will not change its deep commitment to focus on domestic development.

    The media and some American scholars are so sensitive to China's utterances on topics of major concern that they often describe the nation as "tough" or "arrogant".

    To safeguard its core interests, it is quite normal for China to take a clear-cut stance, and to even say "no" on some occasions.

    The US should not regard this as China's way of demanding respect for its positions.

    Sino-US relations have not progressed on an even keel in the past, but the two have managed to clear the occasional hurdle knowing full well that shared concerns will trump bilateral disputes in the end.

    The author is a researcher at the Institute of American Studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

    (China Daily 05/21/2010 page8)

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