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“You believe deeply in your system, and we believe just as deeply in our system. It is not our common beliefs that have brought us together here, but our common interests and our common hopes.”Senior Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi quoted these words from a speech by U.S. President Richard Nixon during his ice-breaking 1972 trip to China in a recent article.
Yang, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, called for true commitment to mutual respect and equality in China-U.S. ties. An edited version of the article, Respect History, Look to the Future and Firmly Safeguard and Stabilize China-U.S. Relations, follows:
The relations between China and the United States are among the most important bilateral relationships in the world. To safeguard and stabilize China-U.S. relations concerns the welfare of the Chinese and American people and people in the world. It also bears on peace, stability and development in the world.
President Xi Jinping pointed out, back in 2014, that past and current experiences show that China and the U.S. stand to gain from cooperation and lose from confrontation. China and the U.S. working together can make great things happen for the two countries and the world at large, while China and the U.S. stuck in confrontation spells disaster for the two countries and beyond.
It is important for both China and the U.S. to stand high and look far, and work together to increase cooperation. Commitment to cooperation and non-confrontation between China and the U.S. brings benefi t to both countries and to all in the global community.
In the exchange of congratulatory messages between the two presidents on the 40th anniversary of China-U.S. diplomatic ties, President Xi pointed out that over the past four decades, the bilateral relations have made historic progress despite twists and turns, delivering tremendous benefits to their peoples and contributing significantly to world peace, stability and prosperity. History has made it abundantly clear that there is no better option than cooperation for both countries. The U.S. also recognized the enormous progress in the relations achieved over the decades.
The world is now going through major changes unseen in a century, and peace and development remain the overriding theme of the times. To uphold world peace and promote development for all is the shared mission and responsibility of China and the U.S. What it requires is the two countries viewing and handling their relationship in a proper manner and seeking a way of peaceful coexistence despite differences. Based on such a recognition, China and the U.S. agreed to work together toward a new model of major-country relations featuring nonconfl ict, non-confrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation. It was also based on this recognition that the two sides, after the current U.S. administration took offi ce, agreed to jointly promote a China-U.S. relationship based on coordination, cooperation and stability.
Nonetheless, for some time, some politicians in the U.S. have kept making false statements and groundless remarks against China, attacking the CPC and China’s political system. They have deliberately distorted and even attempted to write off the history of China-U.S. relations for the past nearly 50 years. What they are up to is to stitch up lies to blind the American people and fool international public opinion.
For the international community, it is clear that the U.S. administration has chosen unilaterally to be provocative. The erroneous words and moves by the administration constituted interference in China’s internal affairs. They undermined China’s interests and disrupted China-U.S. relations, putting the relationship in a most complex and grave situation since the establishment of diplomatic ties.
In response to the U.S. move, the Chinese Government has expounded its position in a comprehensive manner and reacted resolutely to defend China’s sovereignty, security and development interests and safeguard and stabilize China-U.S. relations.
A sound and stable China-U.S. relationship affects the wellbeing of China, the U.S. and the world at large, both now and in the future. It is what the people of both countries and the wider world expect to see. We must never allow a handful of self-serving U.S. politicians to push the relationship into serious jeopardy.
The Chinese and American people have a long history of friendly exchanges. They fought shoulder to shoulder during the World AntiFascist War. In 1949, under the leadership of the CPC, the Chinese people gained liberation and founded the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Chairman Mao Zedong solemnly declared that the Chinese people had since stood up.
After the founding of New China, diplomatic relations were established between China and countries after countries on the basis of equality and mutual benefi t, and mutual respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity. However, the wrong U.S. policy not to recognize the PRC kept the two countries in mutual estrangement and hostility. Yet, the progress of history and the advancement of the times could not be stopped. The Chinese and American people had always cherished friendly sentiments toward each other, and had never stopped making efforts to seek friendly exchanges and cooperation for mutual benefi t. In 1970, in his meeting with the U.S. journalist Edgar Snow, Chairman Mao said, “China and the U.S. will establish diplomatic relations anyway. How can the two countries stay out of diplomatic ties for 100 years?” President Nixon observed in the same year that “it is certainly in our interest, and in the interest of peace and stability in Asia and the world, that we take what steps we can toward improved practical relations with Peking (Beijing).”
Chairman Mao and Premier Zhou Enlai demonstrated strategic insight with their decision and personal commitment to launch “pingpong diplomacy,” and Dr. Henry Kissinger made a secret visit to China in July 1971. The momentum for normalization of China-U.S. relations was built.
In February 1972, President Nixon paid an ice-breaking visit to China at the invitation of Premier Zhou, when they had a “handshake that crossed the vast Pacifi c Ocean.” Addressing the welcoming banquet at the Great Hall of the People, President Nixon said that he had come for U.S. interests. “You believe deeply in your system, and we believe just as deeply in our system. It is not our common beliefs that have brought us together here, but our common interests and our common hopes.” He added,“There is no reason for us to be enemies.” “This is the day for our two peoples to rise to the heights of greatness which can build a new and a better world.”
Chinese leaders emphasized that China and the U.S. needed to be clear-minded about their differences and work hard to find common ground in order for the relationship to make a new start.
The Shanghai Communiqué, issued during President Nixon’s visit, acknowledged the common ground while spelling out the differences. It pointed out that “there are essential differences between China and the United States in their social systems and foreign policies. Yet, the two sides agreed that countries, regardless of their social systems, should conduct their relations on the principles of respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states, non-aggression against other states, non-interference in the internal affairs of other states, equality and mutual benefi t, and peaceful coexistence.” The two sides stated that progress toward normalizing China-U.S. relations served the interest of all countries.
This historic document kept an explicit account of the important common understanding that the two sides were ready to approach their relations on the principles of mutual respect, equality and seeking common ground while shelving differences. The Shanghai Communiqué fully refl ected the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and conformed to the basic norms of international relations. From Dr. Kissinger’s secret trip to President Nixon’s offi cial visit, an important step was taken toward normalization of China-U.S. relations. That was followed by the Jimmy Carter administration’s acceptance of the three principles proposed by China, namely the U.S. must sever“diplomatic relations” and abrogate its “mutual defense treaty” with Taiwan and U.S. forces must withdraw from Taiwan. On such basis, the U.S. reached an agreement with China on the proper handling of the Taiwan question.
In the joint communiqué issued on December 16, 1978 on the establishment of diplomatic ties, the U.S. recognized the Government of the PRC as the sole legal government of China. The U.S. side went on to state that within that context, the people of the U.S. would maintain cultural, commercial and other unofficial relations with the people of Taiwan. On January 1, 1979, China and the U.S. entered into diplomatic relations.
From the ice-breaking visit to the normalization of relations and to the establishment of diplomatic ties, leaders and statesmen of the older generation in China and the U.S., Mao, Zhou and Deng Xiaoping on the Chinese side, and Nixon, Carter and Kissinger on the American side, acted in the fundamental interests of the two peoples and made the political decision of historic signifi cance with their exceptional strategic vision and political courage to rise above the differences in ideology and social systems.
The Shanghai Communiqué, the Joint Communiqué on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations, and the 1982 Joint Communiqué that focused on addressing the question of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, something left over from history, identifi ed the One China principle and established the principles of mutual respect, equality and seeking common ground while putting aside differences as the guiding principles in conducting China-U.S. relations. They form the political foundation of China-U.S. relations.
The fact of history is, China has always upheld the leadership of the CPC and steadfastly followed the path of socialism. From the outset of the normalization process, China-U.S. relations have always been based on the common understanding that both sides recognize and respect each other’s different social system.
Some U.S. politicians claim that in engaging and entering into diplomatic relations with China, the original U.S. purpose was to change China, and that the U.S. policy of engagement with China has become a total failure. They portray China as having tried over all these years to fool and deceive the U.S. Their allegations are fanfare for ideological confrontation and the Cold War mentality. They are nothing short of discredit to the enormous efforts and contributions made throughout past decades by people across the two societies to promote the development of China-U.S. relations. Yet, fact is fact, and history cannot be tampered with. We need to take an attitude that is responsible to history and to the people. We need to stand up for what is right and set the record straight. We need to jointly safeguard the foundation of China-U.S. relations and protect the friendship between the Chinese and American people. Any attempt otherwise will fail the test of history and people’s expectation.
After the establishment of diplomatic ties, and thanks to concerted efforts on both sides, China-U.S. relations have made historic progress despite ups and downs along the way. It has brought enormous benefi ts to the two peoples and contributed significantly to world peace, stability and prosperity. Cooperation between China and the U.S. has always been conducted for mutual benefi t. For the past 41 years, China and the U.S., and for that matter all countries in the world, have benefi ted from the development of China-U.S. relations.
Since reform and opening up started, the hardworking and talented Chinese people have, under the leadership of the CPC, achieved phenomenal progress. China’s rapid development over the decades, which benefi ted from interactions and cooperation with countries around the world, has in turn provided the U.S. and other countries with sustained growth impetus and important opportunities. The volume of trade between China and the U.S. has increased more than 200 times over the early days of diplomatic ties, and two-way investment has taken off from scratch to reach nearly $240 billion. Made-in-China goods, nice and inexpensive, are best buys for American consumers. China’s vast market and sound business environment offer a source of tremendous profi ts for U.S. fi rms.
The exchange of visits between the Chinese and American people jumped from several thousand to over 5 million visits per year. More than 400,000 Chinese students are studying in the U.S. Fifty pairs of sister provinces/states and 227 pairs of sister cities have been forged between the two sides. In the face of natural disasters, from hurricane Katrina in 2005 to the Wenchuan earthquake in 2008, our two peoples felt for each other and lent each other a helping hand. When the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) struck, Chinese and Americans from all walks of life rushed to each other’s assistance. Chinese provinces, cities, enterprises and institutions have donated masks, protective gowns and other medical supplies to affected populations, communities, cities and states in the U.S. They have also provided the U.S. with large quantities of virus containment materials. China and the U.S., together with the rest of the world, have been committed to upholding world peace, security and development. The two countries have had close communication and coordination on regional hotspots such as the Korean Peninsula, Afghanistan and the Middle East, and have worked with relevant countries to advance a political settlement of these issues. China and the U.S. have had productive cooperation in counter-terrorism, non-proliferation, narcotics control, disease prevention and containment, poverty alleviation, peacekeeping, and the fi ght against the abuse and traffi cking of fentanyl, among others.
In 2001, when the U.S. was hit by the September 11 terrorist attack, the Chinese Government and people immediately expressed their sympathies to the American Government and people, and the two countries strengthened coordination and cooperation on counter-terrorism and non-proliferation.
In the meantime, China has called for rejecting double standard or even multiple standards in countering terrorism.
During the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the 2008 global financial crisis, China and the U.S. worked with the rest of the world and made signifi cant contributions to safeguarding international fi nancial stability and kick-starting global recovery. The joint efforts of China, the U.S. and other countries have led to the signing of the Paris Agreement, providing a strong impetus for global cooperation on climate change. The two countries have also carried out trilateral cooperation on food security in Timor-Leste, conducted joint training for Afghan diplomats and helped Africa to fi ght Ebola, setting a prime example of them working together to facilitate capacity-building in a third country.
That said, the past 41 years have not all been smooth sailing for China-U.S. relations. There have been ups and downs and even major setbacks on the way. However, the two countries have always approached their relationship from a historical perspective and with the bigger picture in mind. They have managed differences and disagreements, properly handled sensitive issues, and safeguarded the momentum of steady growth in their relations. What has happened shows that no obstacle is insurmountable for China and the U.S. The key lies in true commitment to mutual respect, equality and seeking common ground while shelving differences. It lies in the courage to take up the responsibility for history and the people.
The history of China-U.S. relations over the past 41 years teaches a lot. First, China and the U.S. must always approach and handle their relations by keeping in mind the common interests of the two countries and all countries in the world, as well as the future of all humanity. Such an approach will benefi t not only the two countries but countries around the world. Second, China and the U.S. must always keep to the right direction in the relationship, and bear fi rmly in mind that their common interests far outweigh their differences.
Third, China and the U.S. must always manage their differences in a constructive manner, abide by the principles and spirit of the three joint communiqués, and respect each other’s core interests and major concerns.
Fourth, China and the U.S. must always work to expand cooperation in a win-win spirit, and bring greater benefi ts to the two countries and the world at large. These valuable experiences have proved effective in the past. They remain effective now and will continue to be effective in the future.
China-U.S. relations are now faced with a new international and domestic environment. To safeguard and stabilize the relationship against this backdrop, the right attitude is to respect history, keep pace with the times, and build on past achievements, and not to distort and deny history, or turn back the wheel of history.
The once-in-a-century major shift in the world landscape is picking up speed. Instability and uncertainties in the international situation are growing markedly. COVID-19 and the like pose new challenges to the security and development of all countries. In the meantime, countries are interconnected economically. Progress is made in science and technology with each passing day. Mankind shares a common future in a world that has become a global village where countries are interdependent on each other. No country can handle all this on its own.
As President Xi pointed out in his speech at the UN Office at Geneva in 2017, there is only one Earth in the universe, and we mankind have only one homeland; caring for and cherishing the Earth is the only option for mankind. All countries should work for a new type of international relations and build a community with a shared future for mankind.
We live in a diverse world. Countries have different histories, cultures, political systems and development models, and each follows a development path suited to its national conditions. We respect the paths chosen by other countries and wish them all success.
China is firmly committed to the path of socialism with Chinese characteristics. The CPC’s leadership is the defining feature of socialism with Chinese characteristics. In pursuing this path, China has made tremendous achievements, and contributed signifi cantly to safeguarding world peace and stability and promoting common development of all countries. Some U.S. politicians, out of arrogance and ignorance, have acted in violation of the UN Charter and basic norms governing international relations, and have willfully and blatantly interfered in the internal affairs of other countries.
But U.S. attempts to smear and slander China’s political system and drive a wedge between the CPC and the Chinese people are doomed to fail. They should have known that the leadership role of the CPC is a choice of history and of the people, and the CPC enjoys firm support of the 1.4 billion Chinese people. For the CPC, the goal is always to meet the aspiration of the people for a better life. And that is the fundamental reason why it has won the wholehearted endorsement and support of the people.
The harder the U.S. politicians try to sever the strong bond between the CPC and the Chinese people, the greater indignation they will arouse among the Chinese people. And the Chinese people will forge ahead with even greater resolve under the strong leadership of the CPC.
It must be pointed out that in the information age, the Chinese people have clear and profound knowledge of the world and the U.S. They are capable of making the right judgment, and are not easily misguided by some in the U.S. China has no interest in meddling in U.S. domestic politics. Likewise, the U.S. should respect China’s choice of development path. The Chinese people’s legitimate rights to pursue national development and a better life should be respected. Any attempt to take away from the Chinese people their right to development is a daydream. The Chinese people have strong confidence, and the international community sees this clearly as well.
Today, the Chinese people are rallying closely around the CPC Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping at its core, and are making unremitting efforts toward the Two Centenary Goals. China is fi rmly committed to the path of peaceful development, and hopes that other countries will also follow the path of peaceful development. China is firmly committed to fostering a new type of international relations, building a community with a shared future for mankind, and bringing about an open, inclusive, clean and beautiful world with lasting peace, universal security and common prosperity. China is fi rmly committed to deepening reform and opening up, and will open its door even wider to the world. China is fi rmly committed to enhancing mutually benefi cial cooperation with other countries, jointly promoting high-quality Belt and Road cooperation, promoting a Silk Road of Health through collective efforts, and building a global community of health for all. In the first half of this year, the Chinese economy outperformed expectations in spite of the grave COVID-19 situation around the world. This is a telling example of the resilience and potential of the Chinese economy. As President Xi pointed out, “The Chinese economy is not a pond, but an ocean. Big winds and storms may upset a pond, but never an ocean.” We welcome companies from around the world, including the U.S., to continue to invest in China. We will continue to improve the business environment for them.
On developing relations with the U.S., China has all along pursued a consistent policy stance, and showed great stability and continuity. We are committed to developing a China-U.S. relationship featuring non-conflict, nonconfrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation. In the meantime, we are resolved to safeguard our sovereignty, security and development interests. The fundamental goal of China’s development is to bring about a better life for the Chinese people and contribute more to regional and global peace, stability, development and prosperity.
Dialogue and cooperation between China and the U.S. does not just benefit one side, nor is it a favor granted by one side to the other. It features equality and mutual benefit. China values principles, reason and credibility as well as mutual respect and win-win cooperation.
The international community has made it clear that it hopes to see a healthy and stable China-U. S. relationship and does not want to see confrontation or conflict between the two countries. Some U.S. politicians, out of self-serving interests, have resorted to coercive means to force other countries to take sides. This is deeply deplorable to the international community, and those politicians will never get their way.
China and the U.S. should assume a strategic height and long-term perspective, and keep their relations in the right direction with a sense of responsibility for history and the people. They should bear in mind the fundamental interests of the Chinese and American people and the whole world, and strengthen engagement, dialogue and communication. The U.S. should work with China to develop a bilateral relationship based on coordination, cooperation and stability, so as to bring China-U.S. relations back to the right track.
The international community should strengthen cooperation in fighting COVID-19. Infectious diseases respect no borders or ethnicity, and they are the common enemy of mankind. Unity and cooperation is the most powerful weapon. Only when the international community joins hands can the war be won against COVID-19. China supports greater international cooperation against COVID-19 under the leadership of the World Health Organization to defeat the virus at an early date. The Chinese people sincerely hope that the virus will be contained in the U.S. as soon as possible to minimize its impact on the American people. Some U.S. politicians should immediately stop politicizing and stigmatizing the virus and scapegoating China. The U.S. should fulfi ll its duty to its own people, live up to its international responsibility as a major country, and work with the international community to promote global cooperation in COVID-19 response and to save lives.
China and the U.S. should respect each other’s core interests and major concerns. Issues related to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Tibet and Xinjiang concern China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and bear on China’s core interests. We urge the U.S. to handle relevant issues with prudence and immediately stop interfering in China’s internal affairs. In response to U.S. words and actions that undermine China’s core and major interests, we have taken, and will continue to take, firm and necessary counter-measures. China’s resolve to defend its sovereignty, security and development interests is unshakable.
China and the U.S. should avoid strategic miscalculation and manage well their differences. Cooperation and win-win is the only right choice for the two countries. The U.S. must abandon its Cold War mentality and the misguided zero-sum game approach. The two countries need to engage in dialogue and communication in all areas. China is always open to dialogue and communication with the U.S. The two sides should enhance cooperation through communication, and address differences through dialogue.
China and the U.S. should expand mutually benefi cial cooperation in all fi elds. China hopes that the U.S. will work with China to foster enabling conditions for the implementation of the phase one trade agreement. The U.S. must stop bullying Chinese companies, and provide a fair, open and non-discriminatory environment for their operation and investment. The two sides need to expand exchanges and cooperation in energy, law enforcement and counter-narcotics as well as sub-national cooperation and peopleto-people exchanges. The two militaries need to enhance exchanges and make full use of the confi dence-building mechanisms to make the mil-to-mil relationship a stabilizing factor in bilateral relations.
The two sides should also engage in close coordination and cooperation on the Korean Peninsula, Afghanistan, the Middle East, cybersecurity, climate change, public health and other international and regional issues, so that the Chinese and American people and the whole world can benefit more from cooperation among China, the U.S. and other countries. China and the U.S. should cement popular support for their relations. Friendship between the Chinese and American people is a bond forged by the dedication of the two peoples over the past decades, and must be cherished all the more. Yet some anti-China elements in the U.S. are abusing the concept of “national security” to deliberately obstruct the normal interactions between the two countries and to mislead the American people in an attempt to cause irreversible damage to China-U.S. relations.
People from all sectors with vision and insight in the U.S. understand deeply the importance of safeguarding China-U.S. relations and the friendship between the two peoples. And more and more of them have come forward to express opposition to the regressive moves by the anti-China elements. The friendly exchanges between the Chinese and American people cannot be cut off by some U.S. politicians through political maneuvering. The Chinese side welcomes more American people from all walks of life to China to see and experience the country for what it really is. China will continue to encourage and support exchanges and cooperation between the two peoples in education, science, technology, culture, sports, youth, the media and other areas.
To safeguard and stabilize China-U.S. relations is the call of the people and the trend of the times. We urge U.S. decision-makers to respect facts of history, recognize the trend of the times, heed the visionary calls in the U.S., and listen to the voice of the international community. We urge them to redress mistakes and change course, and work with China to manage differences on the basis of mutual respect, expand cooperation on the basis of mutual benefi t, and bring China-U.S. relations back to the track of sound and steady development.
Yang, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, called for true commitment to mutual respect and equality in China-U.S. ties. An edited version of the article, Respect History, Look to the Future and Firmly Safeguard and Stabilize China-U.S. Relations, follows:
The relations between China and the United States are among the most important bilateral relationships in the world. To safeguard and stabilize China-U.S. relations concerns the welfare of the Chinese and American people and people in the world. It also bears on peace, stability and development in the world.
President Xi Jinping pointed out, back in 2014, that past and current experiences show that China and the U.S. stand to gain from cooperation and lose from confrontation. China and the U.S. working together can make great things happen for the two countries and the world at large, while China and the U.S. stuck in confrontation spells disaster for the two countries and beyond.
It is important for both China and the U.S. to stand high and look far, and work together to increase cooperation. Commitment to cooperation and non-confrontation between China and the U.S. brings benefi t to both countries and to all in the global community.
In the exchange of congratulatory messages between the two presidents on the 40th anniversary of China-U.S. diplomatic ties, President Xi pointed out that over the past four decades, the bilateral relations have made historic progress despite twists and turns, delivering tremendous benefits to their peoples and contributing significantly to world peace, stability and prosperity. History has made it abundantly clear that there is no better option than cooperation for both countries. The U.S. also recognized the enormous progress in the relations achieved over the decades.
The world is now going through major changes unseen in a century, and peace and development remain the overriding theme of the times. To uphold world peace and promote development for all is the shared mission and responsibility of China and the U.S. What it requires is the two countries viewing and handling their relationship in a proper manner and seeking a way of peaceful coexistence despite differences. Based on such a recognition, China and the U.S. agreed to work together toward a new model of major-country relations featuring nonconfl ict, non-confrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation. It was also based on this recognition that the two sides, after the current U.S. administration took offi ce, agreed to jointly promote a China-U.S. relationship based on coordination, cooperation and stability.
Nonetheless, for some time, some politicians in the U.S. have kept making false statements and groundless remarks against China, attacking the CPC and China’s political system. They have deliberately distorted and even attempted to write off the history of China-U.S. relations for the past nearly 50 years. What they are up to is to stitch up lies to blind the American people and fool international public opinion.
For the international community, it is clear that the U.S. administration has chosen unilaterally to be provocative. The erroneous words and moves by the administration constituted interference in China’s internal affairs. They undermined China’s interests and disrupted China-U.S. relations, putting the relationship in a most complex and grave situation since the establishment of diplomatic ties.
In response to the U.S. move, the Chinese Government has expounded its position in a comprehensive manner and reacted resolutely to defend China’s sovereignty, security and development interests and safeguard and stabilize China-U.S. relations.
A sound and stable China-U.S. relationship affects the wellbeing of China, the U.S. and the world at large, both now and in the future. It is what the people of both countries and the wider world expect to see. We must never allow a handful of self-serving U.S. politicians to push the relationship into serious jeopardy.
Setting the record straight
The Chinese and American people have a long history of friendly exchanges. They fought shoulder to shoulder during the World AntiFascist War. In 1949, under the leadership of the CPC, the Chinese people gained liberation and founded the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Chairman Mao Zedong solemnly declared that the Chinese people had since stood up.
After the founding of New China, diplomatic relations were established between China and countries after countries on the basis of equality and mutual benefi t, and mutual respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity. However, the wrong U.S. policy not to recognize the PRC kept the two countries in mutual estrangement and hostility. Yet, the progress of history and the advancement of the times could not be stopped. The Chinese and American people had always cherished friendly sentiments toward each other, and had never stopped making efforts to seek friendly exchanges and cooperation for mutual benefi t. In 1970, in his meeting with the U.S. journalist Edgar Snow, Chairman Mao said, “China and the U.S. will establish diplomatic relations anyway. How can the two countries stay out of diplomatic ties for 100 years?” President Nixon observed in the same year that “it is certainly in our interest, and in the interest of peace and stability in Asia and the world, that we take what steps we can toward improved practical relations with Peking (Beijing).”
Chairman Mao and Premier Zhou Enlai demonstrated strategic insight with their decision and personal commitment to launch “pingpong diplomacy,” and Dr. Henry Kissinger made a secret visit to China in July 1971. The momentum for normalization of China-U.S. relations was built.
In February 1972, President Nixon paid an ice-breaking visit to China at the invitation of Premier Zhou, when they had a “handshake that crossed the vast Pacifi c Ocean.” Addressing the welcoming banquet at the Great Hall of the People, President Nixon said that he had come for U.S. interests. “You believe deeply in your system, and we believe just as deeply in our system. It is not our common beliefs that have brought us together here, but our common interests and our common hopes.” He added,“There is no reason for us to be enemies.” “This is the day for our two peoples to rise to the heights of greatness which can build a new and a better world.”
Chinese leaders emphasized that China and the U.S. needed to be clear-minded about their differences and work hard to find common ground in order for the relationship to make a new start.
The Shanghai Communiqué, issued during President Nixon’s visit, acknowledged the common ground while spelling out the differences. It pointed out that “there are essential differences between China and the United States in their social systems and foreign policies. Yet, the two sides agreed that countries, regardless of their social systems, should conduct their relations on the principles of respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states, non-aggression against other states, non-interference in the internal affairs of other states, equality and mutual benefi t, and peaceful coexistence.” The two sides stated that progress toward normalizing China-U.S. relations served the interest of all countries.
This historic document kept an explicit account of the important common understanding that the two sides were ready to approach their relations on the principles of mutual respect, equality and seeking common ground while shelving differences. The Shanghai Communiqué fully refl ected the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and conformed to the basic norms of international relations. From Dr. Kissinger’s secret trip to President Nixon’s offi cial visit, an important step was taken toward normalization of China-U.S. relations. That was followed by the Jimmy Carter administration’s acceptance of the three principles proposed by China, namely the U.S. must sever“diplomatic relations” and abrogate its “mutual defense treaty” with Taiwan and U.S. forces must withdraw from Taiwan. On such basis, the U.S. reached an agreement with China on the proper handling of the Taiwan question.
In the joint communiqué issued on December 16, 1978 on the establishment of diplomatic ties, the U.S. recognized the Government of the PRC as the sole legal government of China. The U.S. side went on to state that within that context, the people of the U.S. would maintain cultural, commercial and other unofficial relations with the people of Taiwan. On January 1, 1979, China and the U.S. entered into diplomatic relations.
From the ice-breaking visit to the normalization of relations and to the establishment of diplomatic ties, leaders and statesmen of the older generation in China and the U.S., Mao, Zhou and Deng Xiaoping on the Chinese side, and Nixon, Carter and Kissinger on the American side, acted in the fundamental interests of the two peoples and made the political decision of historic signifi cance with their exceptional strategic vision and political courage to rise above the differences in ideology and social systems.
The Shanghai Communiqué, the Joint Communiqué on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations, and the 1982 Joint Communiqué that focused on addressing the question of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, something left over from history, identifi ed the One China principle and established the principles of mutual respect, equality and seeking common ground while putting aside differences as the guiding principles in conducting China-U.S. relations. They form the political foundation of China-U.S. relations.
The fact of history is, China has always upheld the leadership of the CPC and steadfastly followed the path of socialism. From the outset of the normalization process, China-U.S. relations have always been based on the common understanding that both sides recognize and respect each other’s different social system.
Some U.S. politicians claim that in engaging and entering into diplomatic relations with China, the original U.S. purpose was to change China, and that the U.S. policy of engagement with China has become a total failure. They portray China as having tried over all these years to fool and deceive the U.S. Their allegations are fanfare for ideological confrontation and the Cold War mentality. They are nothing short of discredit to the enormous efforts and contributions made throughout past decades by people across the two societies to promote the development of China-U.S. relations. Yet, fact is fact, and history cannot be tampered with. We need to take an attitude that is responsible to history and to the people. We need to stand up for what is right and set the record straight. We need to jointly safeguard the foundation of China-U.S. relations and protect the friendship between the Chinese and American people. Any attempt otherwise will fail the test of history and people’s expectation.
Valuable experiences
After the establishment of diplomatic ties, and thanks to concerted efforts on both sides, China-U.S. relations have made historic progress despite ups and downs along the way. It has brought enormous benefi ts to the two peoples and contributed significantly to world peace, stability and prosperity. Cooperation between China and the U.S. has always been conducted for mutual benefi t. For the past 41 years, China and the U.S., and for that matter all countries in the world, have benefi ted from the development of China-U.S. relations.
Since reform and opening up started, the hardworking and talented Chinese people have, under the leadership of the CPC, achieved phenomenal progress. China’s rapid development over the decades, which benefi ted from interactions and cooperation with countries around the world, has in turn provided the U.S. and other countries with sustained growth impetus and important opportunities. The volume of trade between China and the U.S. has increased more than 200 times over the early days of diplomatic ties, and two-way investment has taken off from scratch to reach nearly $240 billion. Made-in-China goods, nice and inexpensive, are best buys for American consumers. China’s vast market and sound business environment offer a source of tremendous profi ts for U.S. fi rms.
The exchange of visits between the Chinese and American people jumped from several thousand to over 5 million visits per year. More than 400,000 Chinese students are studying in the U.S. Fifty pairs of sister provinces/states and 227 pairs of sister cities have been forged between the two sides. In the face of natural disasters, from hurricane Katrina in 2005 to the Wenchuan earthquake in 2008, our two peoples felt for each other and lent each other a helping hand. When the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) struck, Chinese and Americans from all walks of life rushed to each other’s assistance. Chinese provinces, cities, enterprises and institutions have donated masks, protective gowns and other medical supplies to affected populations, communities, cities and states in the U.S. They have also provided the U.S. with large quantities of virus containment materials. China and the U.S., together with the rest of the world, have been committed to upholding world peace, security and development. The two countries have had close communication and coordination on regional hotspots such as the Korean Peninsula, Afghanistan and the Middle East, and have worked with relevant countries to advance a political settlement of these issues. China and the U.S. have had productive cooperation in counter-terrorism, non-proliferation, narcotics control, disease prevention and containment, poverty alleviation, peacekeeping, and the fi ght against the abuse and traffi cking of fentanyl, among others.
In 2001, when the U.S. was hit by the September 11 terrorist attack, the Chinese Government and people immediately expressed their sympathies to the American Government and people, and the two countries strengthened coordination and cooperation on counter-terrorism and non-proliferation.
In the meantime, China has called for rejecting double standard or even multiple standards in countering terrorism.
During the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the 2008 global financial crisis, China and the U.S. worked with the rest of the world and made signifi cant contributions to safeguarding international fi nancial stability and kick-starting global recovery. The joint efforts of China, the U.S. and other countries have led to the signing of the Paris Agreement, providing a strong impetus for global cooperation on climate change. The two countries have also carried out trilateral cooperation on food security in Timor-Leste, conducted joint training for Afghan diplomats and helped Africa to fi ght Ebola, setting a prime example of them working together to facilitate capacity-building in a third country.
That said, the past 41 years have not all been smooth sailing for China-U.S. relations. There have been ups and downs and even major setbacks on the way. However, the two countries have always approached their relationship from a historical perspective and with the bigger picture in mind. They have managed differences and disagreements, properly handled sensitive issues, and safeguarded the momentum of steady growth in their relations. What has happened shows that no obstacle is insurmountable for China and the U.S. The key lies in true commitment to mutual respect, equality and seeking common ground while shelving differences. It lies in the courage to take up the responsibility for history and the people.
The history of China-U.S. relations over the past 41 years teaches a lot. First, China and the U.S. must always approach and handle their relations by keeping in mind the common interests of the two countries and all countries in the world, as well as the future of all humanity. Such an approach will benefi t not only the two countries but countries around the world. Second, China and the U.S. must always keep to the right direction in the relationship, and bear fi rmly in mind that their common interests far outweigh their differences.
Third, China and the U.S. must always manage their differences in a constructive manner, abide by the principles and spirit of the three joint communiqués, and respect each other’s core interests and major concerns.
Fourth, China and the U.S. must always work to expand cooperation in a win-win spirit, and bring greater benefi ts to the two countries and the world at large. These valuable experiences have proved effective in the past. They remain effective now and will continue to be effective in the future.
Firm commitment
China-U.S. relations are now faced with a new international and domestic environment. To safeguard and stabilize the relationship against this backdrop, the right attitude is to respect history, keep pace with the times, and build on past achievements, and not to distort and deny history, or turn back the wheel of history.
The once-in-a-century major shift in the world landscape is picking up speed. Instability and uncertainties in the international situation are growing markedly. COVID-19 and the like pose new challenges to the security and development of all countries. In the meantime, countries are interconnected economically. Progress is made in science and technology with each passing day. Mankind shares a common future in a world that has become a global village where countries are interdependent on each other. No country can handle all this on its own.
As President Xi pointed out in his speech at the UN Office at Geneva in 2017, there is only one Earth in the universe, and we mankind have only one homeland; caring for and cherishing the Earth is the only option for mankind. All countries should work for a new type of international relations and build a community with a shared future for mankind.
We live in a diverse world. Countries have different histories, cultures, political systems and development models, and each follows a development path suited to its national conditions. We respect the paths chosen by other countries and wish them all success.
China is firmly committed to the path of socialism with Chinese characteristics. The CPC’s leadership is the defining feature of socialism with Chinese characteristics. In pursuing this path, China has made tremendous achievements, and contributed signifi cantly to safeguarding world peace and stability and promoting common development of all countries. Some U.S. politicians, out of arrogance and ignorance, have acted in violation of the UN Charter and basic norms governing international relations, and have willfully and blatantly interfered in the internal affairs of other countries.
But U.S. attempts to smear and slander China’s political system and drive a wedge between the CPC and the Chinese people are doomed to fail. They should have known that the leadership role of the CPC is a choice of history and of the people, and the CPC enjoys firm support of the 1.4 billion Chinese people. For the CPC, the goal is always to meet the aspiration of the people for a better life. And that is the fundamental reason why it has won the wholehearted endorsement and support of the people.
The harder the U.S. politicians try to sever the strong bond between the CPC and the Chinese people, the greater indignation they will arouse among the Chinese people. And the Chinese people will forge ahead with even greater resolve under the strong leadership of the CPC.
It must be pointed out that in the information age, the Chinese people have clear and profound knowledge of the world and the U.S. They are capable of making the right judgment, and are not easily misguided by some in the U.S. China has no interest in meddling in U.S. domestic politics. Likewise, the U.S. should respect China’s choice of development path. The Chinese people’s legitimate rights to pursue national development and a better life should be respected. Any attempt to take away from the Chinese people their right to development is a daydream. The Chinese people have strong confidence, and the international community sees this clearly as well.
Today, the Chinese people are rallying closely around the CPC Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping at its core, and are making unremitting efforts toward the Two Centenary Goals. China is fi rmly committed to the path of peaceful development, and hopes that other countries will also follow the path of peaceful development. China is firmly committed to fostering a new type of international relations, building a community with a shared future for mankind, and bringing about an open, inclusive, clean and beautiful world with lasting peace, universal security and common prosperity. China is fi rmly committed to deepening reform and opening up, and will open its door even wider to the world. China is fi rmly committed to enhancing mutually benefi cial cooperation with other countries, jointly promoting high-quality Belt and Road cooperation, promoting a Silk Road of Health through collective efforts, and building a global community of health for all. In the first half of this year, the Chinese economy outperformed expectations in spite of the grave COVID-19 situation around the world. This is a telling example of the resilience and potential of the Chinese economy. As President Xi pointed out, “The Chinese economy is not a pond, but an ocean. Big winds and storms may upset a pond, but never an ocean.” We welcome companies from around the world, including the U.S., to continue to invest in China. We will continue to improve the business environment for them.
On developing relations with the U.S., China has all along pursued a consistent policy stance, and showed great stability and continuity. We are committed to developing a China-U.S. relationship featuring non-conflict, nonconfrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation. In the meantime, we are resolved to safeguard our sovereignty, security and development interests. The fundamental goal of China’s development is to bring about a better life for the Chinese people and contribute more to regional and global peace, stability, development and prosperity.
Dialogue and cooperation between China and the U.S. does not just benefit one side, nor is it a favor granted by one side to the other. It features equality and mutual benefit. China values principles, reason and credibility as well as mutual respect and win-win cooperation.
The international community has made it clear that it hopes to see a healthy and stable China-U. S. relationship and does not want to see confrontation or conflict between the two countries. Some U.S. politicians, out of self-serving interests, have resorted to coercive means to force other countries to take sides. This is deeply deplorable to the international community, and those politicians will never get their way.
The call of the people
China and the U.S. should assume a strategic height and long-term perspective, and keep their relations in the right direction with a sense of responsibility for history and the people. They should bear in mind the fundamental interests of the Chinese and American people and the whole world, and strengthen engagement, dialogue and communication. The U.S. should work with China to develop a bilateral relationship based on coordination, cooperation and stability, so as to bring China-U.S. relations back to the right track.
The international community should strengthen cooperation in fighting COVID-19. Infectious diseases respect no borders or ethnicity, and they are the common enemy of mankind. Unity and cooperation is the most powerful weapon. Only when the international community joins hands can the war be won against COVID-19. China supports greater international cooperation against COVID-19 under the leadership of the World Health Organization to defeat the virus at an early date. The Chinese people sincerely hope that the virus will be contained in the U.S. as soon as possible to minimize its impact on the American people. Some U.S. politicians should immediately stop politicizing and stigmatizing the virus and scapegoating China. The U.S. should fulfi ll its duty to its own people, live up to its international responsibility as a major country, and work with the international community to promote global cooperation in COVID-19 response and to save lives.
China and the U.S. should respect each other’s core interests and major concerns. Issues related to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Tibet and Xinjiang concern China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and bear on China’s core interests. We urge the U.S. to handle relevant issues with prudence and immediately stop interfering in China’s internal affairs. In response to U.S. words and actions that undermine China’s core and major interests, we have taken, and will continue to take, firm and necessary counter-measures. China’s resolve to defend its sovereignty, security and development interests is unshakable.
China and the U.S. should avoid strategic miscalculation and manage well their differences. Cooperation and win-win is the only right choice for the two countries. The U.S. must abandon its Cold War mentality and the misguided zero-sum game approach. The two countries need to engage in dialogue and communication in all areas. China is always open to dialogue and communication with the U.S. The two sides should enhance cooperation through communication, and address differences through dialogue.
China and the U.S. should expand mutually benefi cial cooperation in all fi elds. China hopes that the U.S. will work with China to foster enabling conditions for the implementation of the phase one trade agreement. The U.S. must stop bullying Chinese companies, and provide a fair, open and non-discriminatory environment for their operation and investment. The two sides need to expand exchanges and cooperation in energy, law enforcement and counter-narcotics as well as sub-national cooperation and peopleto-people exchanges. The two militaries need to enhance exchanges and make full use of the confi dence-building mechanisms to make the mil-to-mil relationship a stabilizing factor in bilateral relations.
The two sides should also engage in close coordination and cooperation on the Korean Peninsula, Afghanistan, the Middle East, cybersecurity, climate change, public health and other international and regional issues, so that the Chinese and American people and the whole world can benefit more from cooperation among China, the U.S. and other countries. China and the U.S. should cement popular support for their relations. Friendship between the Chinese and American people is a bond forged by the dedication of the two peoples over the past decades, and must be cherished all the more. Yet some anti-China elements in the U.S. are abusing the concept of “national security” to deliberately obstruct the normal interactions between the two countries and to mislead the American people in an attempt to cause irreversible damage to China-U.S. relations.
People from all sectors with vision and insight in the U.S. understand deeply the importance of safeguarding China-U.S. relations and the friendship between the two peoples. And more and more of them have come forward to express opposition to the regressive moves by the anti-China elements. The friendly exchanges between the Chinese and American people cannot be cut off by some U.S. politicians through political maneuvering. The Chinese side welcomes more American people from all walks of life to China to see and experience the country for what it really is. China will continue to encourage and support exchanges and cooperation between the two peoples in education, science, technology, culture, sports, youth, the media and other areas.
To safeguard and stabilize China-U.S. relations is the call of the people and the trend of the times. We urge U.S. decision-makers to respect facts of history, recognize the trend of the times, heed the visionary calls in the U.S., and listen to the voice of the international community. We urge them to redress mistakes and change course, and work with China to manage differences on the basis of mutual respect, expand cooperation on the basis of mutual benefi t, and bring China-U.S. relations back to the track of sound and steady development.