What China and the US must do in 2017 to improve relations
Wang Jisi says the Sino-US relationship has entered a new normal, with cooperation and competition both increasing, leading to a repeated pattern of escalation and de-escalation of tensions
A fundamental and urgent issue for leaders in both Washington and Beijing is how to reduce strategic distrust. A popular view among Chinese political elite is that the US intends to undermine Chinese Communist Party leadership by supporting dissidents; spreading US ideology in Chinese society; and encouraging pro-independence or separatist tendencies in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Tibet ( 西藏 ) and Xinjiang (新疆). Another strong belief in China is that the US is working to contain China internationally by consolidating US security alliances and military arrangements, and by involving itself in territorial disputes between China and some neighbouring countries.
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These mutual suspicions are real and have served to intensify the strategic competition between the two countries. However, we should not let them overshadow the many common interests the two countries share.
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It is important to remember the numerous positive developments in the China-US relationship over the past several years. Most importantly, the two have avoided direct conflict and serious crisis. The two militaries have begun to build multifaceted and multilayered dialogues and crisis management mechanisms. Bilateral trade is on its way to surpass China’s trade with the European Union and US trade with Canada, making each the largest trading partner to the other. Chinese investment in the United States is rising rapidly, as are economic ties between some Chinese provinces and cities and their US counterparts. Cultural and educational exchanges have continued to expand, and bilateral tourism is booming – travel has become increasingly convenient for visitors from both countries.
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The challenge for Chinese and US leaders is that relations have now entered a “new normal”, one in which both competition and cooperation are growing simultaneously. Domestic issues are also playing a greater role in the relationship and will constrain policy leaders managing bilateral affairs. Recognising this reality, it is important that we work to reshape the philosophy behind the China-US relationship.
Over the years, the US has adopted both a cooperative and a hedging approach towards China. On the one hand, it has active economic engagement with China; on the other, it expects and encourages domestic political changes and constrains China’s international space. This duality of cooperation and hedging has become a fact of life in China-US relations. It is like a curse, featuring a repeated escalation and de-escalation of tensions, and cooperation intertwined with confrontation, which the two countries find difficult to escape.
In reshaping the philosophy of China-US coexistence, we need to go beyond this dualistic thinking and come to a more coherent definition of the relationship. As a Chinese proverb goes, “A man without distant care must have near concern”. If the United States wavers between treating China as a rival or a partner, or considers China as a partner in selected areas while treating it as a rival more generally, it will be difficult for the two countries to build trust and cooperation, even in light of the deepening bilateral relationship. In the era of the internet, our differences are often magnified. If not properly managed, they may eventually lead our relationship in a direction that serves neither of our interests.
China and the United States are very different and will need to work hard to bridge the large gaps between them. The US needs to re-evaluate its assumptions that “China will change its political system once it prospers economically”, or “China will vie with the United States for leadership once it becomes powerful”. Meanwhile, China needs to better explain to the American public and the world at large its long-term goals and intentions.
On some issues, the two countries can perhaps develop a new philosophy of agreeing to disagree. By approaching each other with more empathy and open minds, China and the United States can begin to acknowledge and respect the places where they have divergent interests, and accept win-win rather than zero-sum outcomes.
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This will not be easy in today’s environment. Both Chinese and American societies are experiencing noticeable tides of populism and nationalism, which make blaming each other for one’s own domestic weaknesses all the more appealing. While popular sentiments should be treated seriously, Chinese and US leaders should also be more proactive in working to lead public opinion about China-US relations in a more positive and realistic direction.
In fact, in the past 44 years since president Richard Nixon visited Beijing, the two governments have been rather successful in managing their differences and safeguarding the overall China-US relationship. Given today’s politically charged environment, both sides need to expend more effort on clearly explaining to their domestic constituencies the strategic importance of avoiding conflict and confrontation, as well as their willingness to cooperate, which both governments have repeatedly communicated to each other, so as to form a broader political consensus for the relationship at home.
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With a Trump administration entering the White House in January, Beijing and Washington should quickly find opportunities to establish new trust and confidence in each other. When President-elect Donald Trump assumes office, his team should move quickly to establish direct connections with their respective Chinese counterparts and jointly suggest a priority list and work schedule for 2017.
One top priority, of course, is to make sure that the two heads of state meet in person as soon as possible and that there is good chemistry between them. The two sides may also want to find a way to sustain the top-level China-US Strategic and Economic Dialogue held annually since 2009.
In light of the uncertainties ahead, non-government experts and think tanks can also play an important role. They will need to work even more intensively than before to exchange views on critical issues and provide policy advice to their governments.
Beyond more active dialogue, the two sides also have a number of substantive issues they should work to address. In upcoming bilateral dialogues between Beijing and Washington, the two sides should candidly discuss and clarify their long-term intentions on sensitive issues such as the South China Sea, denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula, stability across the Taiwan Strait, and cybersecurity.
To allow economic cooperation to be a continued “ballast stone” and “booster” in the bilateral relationship, the two sides also need to find practical ways to cope with problem areas such as currency exchange rates, business environments, trade regimes and legal disputes. There are also numerous opportunities for economic cooperation. For example, Trump emphasised the need to improve infrastructure in the United States, in which Chinese companies could invest. China, for its part, is seeking financial and technological cooperation from industrialised countries in building its “One Belt, One Road” initiative and would certainly welcome American support for this endeavour.
Dr Henry Kissinger proposed in his book, On China, that China and the US should establish a relationship of “co-evolution”, in which “both countries pursue their domestic imperatives, cooperating where possible, and adjust their relations to minimise conflict”. I think “co-evolution” also means “peaceful competition”. Focusing on handling domestic affairs and satisfying their constituencies at home is the most meaningful competition that China and the United States could pursue.
With both Beijing and Washington likely to be more focused on domestic priorities in 2017 and beyond, we can hope that they will be able to approach their relationship in this spirit of cooperation and peaceful competition, to help stabilise this important relationship for the years ahead.
Wang Jisi is president of the Institute of International and Strategic Studies at Peking University. This post originally appeared in The Asia Society Policy Institute briefing book, Advice for the 45th US President: Opinions from across the Pacific