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China will stick to the principles of "honesty,
harmony and good faith" in its diplomatic activities
with the very purpose of safeguarding world peace and
advancing common development.
That was the
message from visiting Chinese President Jiang Zemin Thursday
in a long speech in English permeated with
philosophical thinking at the George Bush Presidential
Library at Texas A&M University.
Jiang
said it is China's policy to seek consensus but not
uniformity in the conduct of its foreign relations, and the
nation will work to promote peace and co-operation with its
neighbours.
He reiterated a peaceful
settlement of the Taiwan question would not only contribute
to peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region and the
world at large, but would also secure US interests in the
island.
He also promised to co-operate more
closely with the United States to maintain peace on the
Korean Peninsula, South Asia and the Middle East, and
prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
Jiang was speaking at the presidential
library, which was built in 1997 to commemorate former US
President George Bush, the father of current incumbent
George W. Bush.
During his speech, Jiang
highly praised former President Bush, calling him "an
old friend of the Chinese people."
The
Chinese president cited Confucius, who said 2,000 years ago
"a gentleman seeks harmony but not uniformity,"
when reiterating that harmony instead of sameness is the
essential factor for the concerted development of all
civilizations.
Guided by the principle, China
has resolved land boundary disputes with most of its
neighbours through negotiations, joined the Association for
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on the formulation of a code
of conduct in the South China Sea, and decided to set up a
China-ASEAN Free Trade Area within the next decade, he said.
"China stands ready to work with the
United States and other countries in the area to promote
peace and prosperity," Jiang said.
The
Chinese president reaffirmed that the Chinese mainland
"has the maximum sincerity and will exert its utmost
efforts to make peaceful reunification (of Taiwan with the
motherland) a reality."
He restated his
"eight proposals" put forward in 1995, in which
the mainland promises that after reunification Taiwan can
keep its economic system and lifestyle, manage its party,
government and military affairs on its own and the rights
and interests of people in Taiwan will be effectively
protected.
"No formula is better than
peaceful reunification and one country, two systems,"
Jiang said. "Nothing threatens peace and stability in
the Taiwan Straits more than Taiwan Independence (forces
do)."
He called on the United States to
earnestly stick to its commitments in the three Sino-US
communiques and the one-China policy.
Jiang
re-emphasized the common interests China and United States
share in the global fight against terror.
"Both China and the US are victims of
terrorism," Jiang said. "The Chinese and Americans
have stood together and carried out effective
co-operation."
China will continue
strengthening consultation and co-operation with the United
States on counter-terrorism and join the rest of the world
in the concerted fight against this common scourge.
Jiang flew to Houston from Chicago to continue
his four-day visit of the United States. On Wednesday (local
time), Jiang visited the Johnson Space Centre, the research
and development base and control headquarters of the US
manned space programme.
In the evening, Jiang
met with Houston Mayor Lee P. Brown and attended a banquet
given in his honour by the latter.
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