Obama upbeat about Sino-US ties

 
0 CommentsPrint E-mail Xinhua, November 16, 2009
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US President Barack Obama said in Shanghai Monday the US-China cooperation enables both countries to be more prosperous and more secure and that young people are the best ambassadors.

U.S. President Barack Obama delivers a speech at a dialogue with Chinese youth at the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum during his four-day state visit to China, Nov. 16, 2009.[Pei Xin/Xinhua]

US President Barack Obama delivers a speech at a dialogue with Chinese youth at the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum during his four-day state visit to China, Nov. 16, 2009.[Pei Xin/Xinhua] 



Obama had a dialogue with 500-strong Chinese college students Monday afternoon in the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum, a highlighted activity in the first stop of his four-day maiden trip to China since taking office in January.

He covered a wide range of topics, notably the outlook of Sino-US cooperation and youth exchanges between the two countries, while delivering opening remarks and answering questions from the students and Chinese Internet users.

Positive Sino-US ties

Obama said China is a nation that encompasses both a rich history and a belief in the promises of the future and that the same can be said of the relationship between the two countries. The Shanghai Communique signed 37 years ago opened the door to a new chapter of engagement between the governments and the people of the two countries, he said.

"Today we have a positive, constructive and comprehensive relationship that opens the door to partnership on the key global issues of our time: economic recovery, development of clean energy, stopping the spread of nuclear weapons and the surge of climate change, and the promotion of peace and security in Asia and around the globe," Obama said.

"We have seen what is possible when we build on our mutual interests and engage on the basis of mutual respect."

The success of that engagement depends on understanding, on sustaining an open dialogue and learning about one another and from one another, he said.

"Our relationship has not been without disagreement and difficulties. But the notion that we must be adversaries is not predestined," Obama said, noting that the two countries "share much in common" while they are "different in certain ways."

He said one country's success need not come at the expense of another.

"That is why the United States insists we do not seek to contain China's rise; on the contrary, we welcome China as a strong and prosperous and successful member of the community of nations, a China that draws on the rights, strengths and creativity of individual Chinese like you," Obama said to the students.

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