Kevin Rudd, a former prime minister of Australia and president of the Asia Society Policy Institute, New York, said a new strategic architecture for a sustainable China-US relationship is now needed.
During high-level communication between the two sides, there should be an absolutely clear understanding of the red lines that exist, Rudd said at Thursday's forum.
"By red lines, I mean a core understanding about absolutely core interests, both in the military sphere but also in terms of future large-scale financial market actions as well," he said. "Within this framework, we also need a bilateral mechanism in place to ensure that these red lines are managed."
Fu Ying, former vice-foreign minister and chair of the Center for International Strategy and Security at Tsinghua University, said a better prospect for China-US relations is that they can form a competitive and cooperative relationship-a new type of relationship for major countries that involves "controllable competition and necessary cooperation".
Over the past months, ties between China and the US have been deteriorating as the two countries have been at odds on issues such as dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, Washington's interference in issues related to Hong Kong, Xinjiang, Tibet and Taiwan, which China considers as its domestic affairs and core interests, as well as disputes in areas such as trade and technology.
Mustafa Hyder Sayed, executive director of the Pakistan-China Institute, said that the larger context should be considered when talking about US actions toward China.
"Whether it's Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong, Taiwan or Huawei, there is a shared pattern of the Washington establishment. And that is to confront and contain China and to contain the peaceful rise of China," he said in a video interview with China Global Television Network.
The US administration labeled China as a strategic competitor in its National Security Strategy report in 2017. However, China has said on many occasions that the two countries with two different systems could coexist peacefully through cooperation.
During a telephone conversation with US President Donald Trump on March 27, President Xi Jinping said China-US relations are at a crucial juncture. He reiterated that both countries benefit from cooperation and lose from confrontation, and cooperation is the only right option for them.
Li Bin, a professor of international politics and economics at Tongji University in Shanghai, said China's basic economic system allows no fundamental system conflicts with Western countries including the United States, and on the contrary, it has the solid foundation to develop win-win cooperation in the global economy.
China has been emphasizing that it does not export its system to others and its political system only serves to uphold its social stability and development, Li said. If China's system brings about competitive edges in the international market, conflicts come ultimately only from allocation of interests, which can be resolved by rebalancing these interests through dialogue and negotiations, he added.
Since the trade disputes took place in 2018 due to the US administration's protectionism and "America First" policy, calls for decoupling between the US and Chinese economies have been rising among some US politicians.
Douglas H. Paal, vice-president of the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said complete decoupling is impossible. "We will sever some sources of connection, but most are integrated into the lives of both sides," he said.
Cooperation unstoppable
Vice-Foreign Minister Le Yucheng, during a video dialogue on China-US relations on Wednesday, reiterated that the trend toward China-US cooperation is unstoppable as the past 40-plus years have witnessed the deep integration of the Chinese and US economies, represented by a more than 250-fold increase in bilateral trade.
Although the flow of people between China and the US has paused due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the flow of goods has bucked the trend and continues to grow. In April, bilateral trade rose to $41.2 billion, again making China the largest trading partner of the US. The figure continued to grow in May to $46.5 billion, according to the Foreign Ministry.
Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow and trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said "common sense is the strongest force and both countries gain a lot from commercial exchanges".
The most important step is for leaders to change their tone, so that Americans no longer hold such an unfavorable view of China, and vice versa, Hufbauer said. "Goodwill diplomatic meetings at the highest level, cultural exchanges and sporting events would be a start."
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