Building on Deng's US policy

By Yu Sui
0 Comment(s)Print E-mail China Daily, August 27, 2014
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It is true that Deng was quite unequivocal in voicing China's opposition to hegemony. But how he phrased it deserves closer attention. Deng said China opposed whoever has practiced hegemony and whoever has committed aggression. He did not fix the tag of hegemony on any country. If we need to implement the UN Charter and basic norms governing international relations and promote greater democracy in international life, we will have no choice but express our opposition to hegemony as well as terrorism.

Some say that China and the US have different social systems and it is impossible for them to stay on good terms and develop a cooperative relationship. However, this argument is not justifiable. Friends do not need to be identical; they can just share certain views and interests.

Others say the China-US relationship should be defined as one between neither friends nor enemies. China and the US are not enemies, and in a globalized world where countries are increasingly interdependent there is no reason that the two countries should be enemies. And it is not convincing to claim that China and the US are not friends. Since friends can mean different things, if you equate friends with allies, China of course is not an American ally. But if you equate friends with partners of cooperation, how could anyone say that China is not a friend of the US. One only has to look at the value of China's trade with the US, which is more than $500 billion.

Some ask, how can China and the US be described as partners of cooperation one moment and competitive rivals the next? This is because cooperation and competition are merely two sides of the same coin, with the former the prerequisite and the latter appearance. Countries can very well compete with each other amid cooperation, and cooperate with each other amid competition. Working together in good faith and competing in accordance with the rules will ensure benign interaction and win-win results for both sides.

Some vociferously assert that a rising China is a threat to the US. This is simply bizarre. When the US was in deep financial hot water, China came to its rescue by purchasing a huge amount of US treasury bonds. So much so that then US secretary of state Hillary Clinton likened China-US relations to passengers riding in the same boat.

Not long ago, at the Fourth Summit of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia, President Xi Jinping called for a new Asian Security Vision characterized by common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security, as well as an Asian security path that all can share and benefit from. These can also serve the US' interests in the Asia-Pacific.

The author is a professor at the China Center for Contemporary World Studies.

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