China Daily SmartEdition

US says one thing, does the opposite

On the sensitive Taiwan question, Washington needs to honor its pledges and correct mistakes

By LI YAN Courtesy: chinausfocus.com

The presidents of China and the United States discussed bilateral relations and issues of common concern on the phone on July 28, the second time they did so since March. Needless to say, such top-level China-US exchanges are of major significance to bilateral relations and world stability in the current global situation.

The risks and challenges facing the international community have become more complicated, not least because the COVID-19 pandemic remains a threat to the health and lives of people around the globe.

Also, the global impact of the protracted Russia-Ukraine conflict is being increasingly felt across the world. The disruptions in global supply chains and adjustments to industry chains have dealt a heavy blow to systems and normal operations around the globe. And the energy and food crises, and financial risks, are intensifying in some countries.

Against such a backdrop, the global connotations of China-US relations have become even more important, so there is an urgent need to put China-US ties back on the normal track. For that, however, the two countries need to maintain regular communication and exchanges; in fact, they need to increase the frequency of candid, in-depth communication, both on bilateral and major international issues.

Indeed, communication between the two sides in different fields and at different levels has increased of late, which is good news for the world at large. But the two sides also need to shoulder their due major country responsibilities and play their respective roles as a global stabilizer.

An important premise to this is that the US needs to see China in an objective, rational manner. The last two US administrations have viewed and defined Sino-US relations from the perspective of strategic competition, continuously hyped the socalled China threat theory, and recklessly tried to contain and suppress China in various ways.

The US government’s outlook on China has led to misjudgment of China’s development goals and misreading of China’s intentions. It has also misled the international community regarding China’s initiatives and regional and global development projects. That is why Sino-US relations have deteriorated dramatically and the scope for the two countries to work together to resolve global issues has shrunk. China has pointed out the US’ strategic mistakes many a time but to no avail.

It is time the US side faithfully implements the consensuses the two countries’ leaders have reached over the years, and for US strategic circles to develop an objective, rational outlook on China. As for the Joe Biden administration, it needs to address the domestic political and economic issues and drive some sense into the anti-China forces in the US. This is the only way China and the US can cooperate to boost their economies, sustain global growth and stave off risks of turbulence and recession.

The Taiwan question will be an important test for the US, because it is the most sensitive issue in SinoUS relations and the foundation on which bilateral ties are based. But the US has been frequently playing the “Taiwan card” and gradually upgrading exchanges with Taiwan at various levels and in various fields, undermining the political foundation of Sino-US ties.

The Chinese side has repeatedly underscored the Taiwan question’s importance and sensitivity in recent dialogues with the US side. During the July 28 phone conversation, President Xi highlighted Beijing’s position on the Taiwan question, pointing out its importance and sensitivity.

Biden, on his part, did assert that the US has not changed its oneChina policy and does not support Taiwan independence. But the US side has been saying one thing and doing just the opposite, as evident from its anti-China rhetoric and actions, especially US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s stopover in Taiwan on Aug 2 on her way to the Republic of Korea.

Therefore, the US needs to honor its pledges, match its words with deeds and correct its mistakes.

Sino-US bilateral interactions have increased lately. Given the increasingly gloomy world economic outlook, the two sides should maintain close communication and coordinate their macroeconomic policies, taking inspiration from the Sino-US policy coordination during the 2008 financial crisis which helped the global economy deal with many financial and economic challenges.

Facing the challenges created by the global energy and food crises, China and the US need to strengthen collaboration through bilateral cooperation networks or multilateral platforms such as the United Nations and G20. For instance, the two sides can collaborate on projects to clear the bottlenecks of the international supply chains and provide assistance to countries suffering from shortages of grain, oil and gas, paving the way to deeper cooperation in different fields and stronger bilateral ties.

The author is deputy director of the Institute of American Studies, China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations. The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

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2022-08-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

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