Photographs: Jason Reed/Reuters B Raman
As Chinese President Hu Jintao arrives in Washington, DC, on his four-day state visit, senior analyst B Raman takes a closer look on the attempts to redefine the relations between the two most powerful nations in the world.
China has emerged as a leading economic power next only in importance to the United States. It is seeking to achieve a military capability commensurate with its economic strength, but its military capability cannot equal that of the US for many years to come.
The US has no reason to fear China's growing military strength. Both can have their space in the Pacific without threatening each other. Hopes of a greater sense of realism and a greater comfort level between the two countries after Barack Obama assumed office in January 2009 have been belied.
The expectations created after Obama's visit to China in November 2009 remain unfulfilled. The time has come for mid-course corrections in their policies towards each other by the two countries.
President Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao should address this question during their talks in Washington, DC.
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It's a good time for US to declare that China isn't a foe
Photographs: Hyungwon Kang/Reuters
These are broadly the themes voiced by governmental and non governmental personalities in China as Hu set out on his current bilateral visit to the US -- his second since he took over as Chinese president. The first was in April 2006, when George Bush was the US president.
His only engagement on the day of his arrival was a private dinner with Obama. The state visit starts on Wednesday.
The Global Times wrote: 'As the two most powerful countries in the world, China and the US should clarify their relationship, and lay speculations to rest. It is not easy to give this bilateral relationship a clear definition, but perhaps they can start from what it is not. The US has been running the table on how to position Sino-US relations. Former President Bill Clinton declared it a constructive strategic partnership. But it has retreated from those heady days.
'The word "partnership" is still mentioned, but no longer recorded in official documents, replaced by terms such as "constructive cooperation" or "stakeholders.'
It shows the US' misgivings in taking China as a friend. But is China a foe of the US? US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates openly stated that China is not a potential enemy of the US.
Attempts to drive a wedge between the two countries have not gained traction in the US and the West. President Hu's visit will be placed under a global microscope.
It is good timing for Washington to declare that China and the US are not enemies today, and will not be in the future. This clarification will remove many uncertainties that may jeopardise global stability, the editorial stated.
The two sides appear to be as far apart as ever
Image: Demonstrators voice their message for Chinese President outside the White House in Washington on TuesdayPhotographs: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
As Hu arrived, comments from US officials would not have been very encouraging for the Chinese.
The emphasis was not on a strategic partnership, but on achieving a "workable" relationship. A curtain-raiser commentary on the visit by the Agence France Presse said: "The White House has minutely planned the visit, with top members of Obama's national security team, frankly laying out areas of disagreement -- though also stressing the vital nature of workable relations to America's future.
Washington has also made clear it wants to talk to China about moderating its ally North Korea's belligerence, and officials said they believe their pressure on Beijing on the issue might be beginning to show results.
On Tuesday, the White House was forced to defend the decision to offer a state visit to Hu, despite the fact that the two sides appear to be as far apart as ever on crucial human rights questions.
"We will continue to have difficult conversations, but necessary conversations that have to be had with China and we'll do that again tomorrow," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told mediapersons.
"In order to make progress on certain issues you've seen the two countries work together, despite, again, continuing to have differences on things like continued economic growth and human rights," Gibbs added.
Attempt to redefine Sino-US ties
Image: President Hu Jintao receives flowers upon his arrival at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington for a state visitUS Vice President Joe Biden is at rearPhotographs: Jason Reed/Reuters
The remarks of Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, on the relations between China and the US made last week would not have been music to the ears of the Chinese.
She was quoted as saying: "This is not a relationship that fits neatly into the black and white categories like friend or rival. We are two complex nations with very different histories, with profoundly difficult political systems and outlooks."
The call for a re-definition of the relationship to restore its importance in the US foreign policy making has come not only from Chinese analysts and sections of the Chinese media such as the Global Times.
It has also come from former US policy-makers such as Zbigniew Brzezinski, former National Security Adviser, and Henry Kissinger, former National Security Adviser and Secretary of State.
The Chinese have been highlighting with considerable nostalgia that Hu's visit coincides with the 40th anniversary of the first secret visit of Kissinger to China in July 1971, which set the ball rolling for a rapprochement between the US and China which benefited the US greatly in its cold war with the USSR.
Obama's inadequate understanding of China resulted in worsening ties
Image: The cover of a wallet bearing an image of US President Barack Obama's face, in place of the usual image of China's late Chairman Mao Zedong, is pictured at a souvenir shop inBeijing on TuesdayPhotographs: Jason Lee/Reuters
The Chinese have also been recalling wistfully a reported remark of Kissinger during one of his visits to China that all US Presidents understand the importance of China, but do not have a proper understanding of China when they come to office.
Beijing does not seem to understand that whatever be the warm words used by Obama and others during his visit to Washington, the question mark over China has become even bigger in the eyes of the Americans due to their assertiveness in the South and East China Seas, their unwillingness to pressure North Korea to behave, their accelerated military-build-up and the growing signs of the increasing role of the People's Liberation Army in external policy making -- particularly with regard to relations with the US.
Will Hu be able to carry conviction?
Image: A man walks past a portrait of China's President Hu Jintao by artist Ye Zhifu outside a gallery in Beijing on TuesdayPhotographs: Jason Lee/Reuters
The Chinese action in holding the first test flight of their stealth aircraft when Robert Gates, the US Defence Secretary, was on a visit to Beijing from January 9 to 12 to improve military-military relations has added to the concerns of the US regarding China's real military intentions.
It has been seen as a blatant Chinese attempt to flaunt their growing military might when Gates was in Beijing.
This was an extremely insensitive action on their part which has made the Americans ask themselves even more intensely than in the past: Is China a friend or foe?
Hu wants to reassure the Americans that whatever it might or might not do, China is a friend of the US. Will he be able to carry conviction?
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