|
China-US relations are developing rather smoothly
ahead of President George W. Bush's visit to Beijing this
month, despite a year of turbulence since he took office,
Secretary of State Colin Powell said on February 5.
"The relationship is back on an improving
track," Powell told the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, attributing progress to a desire by both sides to
heal the scars left by a crisis over a US EP-3 spyplane
bumping into a Chinese jet over South China Sea.
Powell stressed that despite their ideological
differences, the United States and China should cooperate in
areas where they had common interests, including Beijing's
entry into the World Trade Organisation, peace efforts on
the Korean peninsula and battling HIV/AIDS.
"On such issues we can talk, and produce
constructive outcomes," Powell said, laying out the
case for engagement with China, a school of diplomacy
favored by one of several competing camps in the Bush
administration.
Powell also acknowledged there
were areas in which the US and China "decidedly did not
see eye to eye".
"On such issues we
can have a dialogue and try to make progress. But we do not
want the issues where we differ to restrain us from pursuing
those where we share common goals," Powell said.
"That is the basis on which our relations
are going rather smoothly at present."
Since terror attacks on September 11
fundamentally altered much of its foreign policy, the United
States has praised China for its intelligence assistance
during its campaign against terrorism.
Powell
also praised that day that Beijing had played a constructive
role in his initiative to downplay tensions between India
and Pakistan.
"Beijing was not trying to
be a spoiler but instead was trying to help us alleviate
tensions and convince the two parties to scale down their
dangerous confrontation -- which now it appears they are
beginning to do."
"All of this
cooperation came as a result of our careful efforts to build
the relationship over the months since the EP-3
incident."
Bush will visit Beijing for a
day-and-a-half arriving on February 21, 30 years to the day
since then president Richard Nixon and Chinese leader
Chairman Mao Zedong held epochal talks which led to China's
emergence on the world stage.
He is due to
meet Chinese President Jiang Zemin and Premier Zhu Rongji,
on a tour of Asia which also includes stops in Seoul and
Tokyo.
(China Daily)
|
|
|