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Politics

Xi's U.S. visit to deepen connotation of new-model of major-country ties(2)

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2015-09-10 14:59Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

WIN-WIN INSTEAD OF ZERO-SUM GAME

"If the new model of major power relations is a frame, then actions will determine what the picture in the frame actually looks like. A framework is helpful for signaling intentions and bounding discourse, but participants also need to demonstrate the substance with actions," said Ahrens.

Douglas Paal, vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told Xinhua that Washington endorses the Chinese -proposed concept of new model of major-country ties for obvious and sensible reasons.

The top challenge for building a new-model of major-country ties between China and the U.S. is Washington's persistent skepticism toward China's strategic intentions and its reluctance to treat China as an equal, according to Qian Wenrong, a China-U.S. relations expert affiliated with Xinhua News Agency, wrote in a recent article. "Mutual trust is a key for constructing a new model of major-country ties between the two sides," he said.

However, despite all the challenges, the general picture in China-U.S. ties largely remains unchanged: common interests outweigh differences while instances of cooperation outnumber disputes.

Nowadays, with an annual bilateral trade value of 550 billion U.S. dollars, China-U.S. economic ties have never been more interdependent. The exchanges between the two peoples have never been more frequent, with more than 10,000 Chinese and Americans traveling across the Pacific every day.

Simply put, the two big countries just cannot afford to head into a zero-sum game due to their increasing convergence of interests.

Legendary U.S. investor George Soros once warned Washington in an article that "the U.S. has little to gain and much to lose by treating its relationship with China as a zero-sum game," while calling for building a strategic, mutually beneficial partnership with China.

Scholars in both countries agree that despite ideological, political, economic and social differences, the two sides can look far beyond the current disputes and manage them constructively, continue to hold dialogues and cooperate on major issues of mutual concern. They said eventually the China-U.S. relationship will maintain a momentum of steady and healthy development with win-win achievement.

VISIT TO BOOST WORLD'S CONFIDENCE

Over the past two years, guided by both President Xi and President Barack Obama, the world's two biggest economies have been taking concrete steps toward building a new model of major-country relationship and have maintained good development momentum in bilateral ties despite occasional disputes and frictions.

Experts believe that Xi's upcoming state visit will further consolidate the relationship and bring confidence to the future of the two countries and even the whole world.

"I expect that both sides will want to use the visit to extend the spirit of cooperation demonstrated in the meetings between President Obama and Xi in Beijing last November," said Robert Daly, director of the Kissinger Institute on China and the U.S. at the Wilson Center.

"Xi Jinping's state visit to the United States will be a milestone for bilateral relations," said Chen at CPC Party School, adding that it will prove to the world the China-U.S. relations are still on the normal track of development, and will continue to develop along the direction of building a new model of major-country relationship.

"I think President Xi's state visit could be quite significant if it is used not only to symbolize the importance of the relationship but also as an occasion for the two leaders to engage in a genuine exchange of views beyond the 'talking points' they will have in their briefing books," said Alan Romberg, distinguished fellow and director of East Asia Program of the Stimson Center.

He also hoped the two leaders work hard on finding a way forward in the relationship that is more trusting and more productive.

Years before the normalization of China-U.S. Relations, some U.S. diplomats once asked in a skeptical tone: what can we buy from China?

Four decades later, with Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba's listing at the New York Stock Exchange, a Chinese company's acquisition of Landmark Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City and Americans' growing dependence on "made-in-China" products, China and the United States have forged a community of common interests.

"The state visit is likely to set the tone for the next year and a half until a new administration enters office in Washington," Paal from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said.

Since the importance of China-U.S. relationship transcends the bilateral level with deep regional and global impact, Xi's U.S. visit will send a positive message of confidence to the world, according to Wu from Fudan University. Enditem

Xinhua reporters Yang Qingchuan and Liao Zhenyun in Beijing, Zhi Linfei, Zhou ErJie and Shi Yingshan in Washington contributed to the story.

Editor's note:

Later this month, Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to pay his first state visit to the United States since he took office in 2013. Starting on Thursday and through October, Xinhua is to wire a series of in-depth stories on China-U.S. relations and the historic visit.

  

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