Latest News:  

English>>Foreign Affairs

Obama could build a legacy by boosting trust with China

By Yang Qingchuan (Xinhua)

10:30, January 21, 2013

BEIJING, Jan. 21 (Xinhua) -- After his inauguration for a second term on Sunday, U.S. President Barack Obama has little time to celebrate. Among the tough tasks would be the management of Washington's hugely complex yet extremely important relationship with China.

Historically, the relations between the world's two largest economies and between a dominant power and an emerging one had never been easy, and such relationships were subject to deterioration to a point where the world's very survival was put at risk.

It was against this background that some U.S. politicians have always looked at their country's assumed closest rival with much unease, and most recently, they have seen China's emerging role on the world stage with a sense of anxiety.

However, for Obama, the "China challenge" is at the same time a hidden opportunity for his second term and he actually has a good chance of helping shape a new paradigm of inter-power relations and thus making it part of his legacy.

Obama's re-election last year was coincided with China's leadership change, a phenomenon that happens only once in two decades and brings an opportunity for fresh thinking on the relations between the two countries.

China has proposed to build a new type of inter-power relations between Beijing and Washington, based on win-win cooperation, mutual trust and favorable interaction.

It signals an attempt of Beijing to break the cycle of on-again, off-again ties between the two nations and change the historical pattern of the seemingly inevitable conflict between a rising power and an established one.

China has made the first move and now the ball is in the U.S. court.

Now unconstrained by the pressure for re-election, Obama has more leeway in foreign policy. Moreover, the ever deepening economic and people-to-people ties between the two nations would also give him more channels and resources to fine-tune his China policy.

Based on the record of his first term, one can be cautiously optimistic that the president is leaning toward the idea of enhancing the U.S.-China relationship rather than seeking confrontation.

For example, he has said for many times that Washington welcomes China's rise and that Washington believes a strong and prosperous China can help bring stability and prosperity to the region and the world.


【1】 【2】

We Recommend:

Unwise foreign policy turns Japan into its own enemy

Observe China through diplomatic hot words

China to surpass U.S. by 2049: report

BRICS remain engines for global economic growth

Can Abe's tortuous diplomacy contain China?

Cold War mentality fuels U.S. satellite export prejudice

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:姚春、张茜)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. WZ-8 armed helicopters in training

  2. UN's equipment verification

  3. Mumbai in lens

  4. Lanterns fly from low to high

  5. Photos: Chinese Style in 2012

  6. They made 2012 warm and beautiful

  7. Miss Chinese Africa beauty contest

  8. Scenery of Wuyuan at dawn after rainfall

  9. Most transparent multinationals

  10. Cute animals enjoy thier toys

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Will Rahul Gandhi secure a 3rd term in power
  2. U.S. sends wrong signal over Diaoyu Islands issue
  3. Labor shortage hits cities as holiday nears
  4. Reaching out to sympathetic Japanese
  5. The fall and rise of James Bond
  6. Intervention in Mali
  7. Proposal to help Chinese 'gay wives' stirs debate
  8. Tax wrong weapon to combat home prices
  9. What you may not know about studying abroad
  10. Reliance on land sales 'must be reformed'

What’s happening in China

Photos: Chinese Style in 2012

  1. Highly educated cleaners start jobs in Harbin
  2. Statistician suggests "scientific" population policy
  3. 11 injured in N China fireworks store explosion
  4. Railway police nab 5,144 drug smugglers
  5. Seven dead in Foxconn bus accident