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Saving the Sino-US joint statement
By Emerson Chang ±i¤l´
Tuesday, Feb 23, 2010, Page 8
After the US government announced its arms sales package to Taiwan at the end of
last month, US-China relations face a predicament that could engender a vicious
cycle of retaliation and undermine the joint statement issued by US President
Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao (JÀAÀÜ) two months ago.
Some believe the reason for the increased tension is that China, which sees
itself as a rising power, will no longer remain in the shadows, while others
blame a return of US unilateralism. More likely, the tensions were caused by the
US having excessive expectations, as well as misunderstandings and regrets.
First, the US administration¡¦s expectations of Obama¡¦s visit to China in
November were too high, increasing US-China tensions. Since coming into office,
Obama has distanced himself from the previous administration¡¦s foreign policy
and has made ¡§smart power¡¨ his guiding principle, emphasizing listening,
negotiation and contact. He has also stressed the importance of pragmatism and
flexibility in mending the US¡¦ international image and relations with other
countries.
Before his trip to China, Obama said he was happy to see improved relations
between the US and Russia, as well as European, Middle Eastern, Latin American
and Southeast Asian countries. During a speech in Tokyo on his way to China,
Obama said the US would no longer try to contain Beijing and that China¡¦s rise
was beneficial to global security and prosperity. In one fell swoop, Obama ended
talk about China as a threat, while strongly legitimizing China¡¦s peaceful
development. These comments could be viewed as the biggest gift a US leader has
made to China since diplomatic relations were established between the two
countries.
The US hopes China will stick to the promises made in the Hu-Obama joint
statement that included collaborating ¡§to build a positive, cooperative and
comprehensive China-US relationship for the 21st century. We also agreed to take
concrete actions to steadily grow a partnership between the two countries to
meet our common challenges in order to contribute to world peace, stability, and
prosperity.¡¨
Obama hopes to use goodwill and reconciliation to build a friendly and
cooperative partnership with China. The first test of this was whether China
would stick to the agreement made in the joint statement, which said that the
final document issuing from the Copenhagen climate change meeting should state
that China will ¡§provide for full transparency¡¨ on its measures to implement
carbon dioxide emissions cuts.
The US views transparency as a Chinese ¡§duty¡¨ and interpreted this to mean that
China had made a major concession in the run-up to the UN Copenhagen climate
change conference by accepting an international mechanism for monitoring
emission reductions. However, China translated the phrase as ¡§maintaining
sufficient transparency,¡¨ which means that it views it as a ¡§responsibility¡¨
rather than a ¡§duty.¡¨
As a result of this disparity, during the conference China refused to accept
monitoring by an international mechanism, which ultimately led to a disagreement
between the US and China.
These differences in interpretation of ¡§duty¡¨ and ¡§responsibility¡¨ led the US to
misconstrue Beijing¡¦s promises while also creating a domino effect. The failure
of the Copenhagen talks compounded the popular belief that Obama is ¡§too soft¡¨
and makes too many concessions to China. This gave Obama a taste of what it
feels like to lose face and made him want to be tougher on China.
Google¡¦s recent threats about leaving the Chinese market showed that Obama is
not being soft on China, while the US Department of State¡¦s announcement of
arms sales to Taiwan and the way it has ignored the three Sino-US Communiques
show how Obama regrets his joint statement with Hu.
However, this also means China has been compelled to step up the level of
protest against such issues, also to keep face.
Given this atmosphere, the US and China will need to avoid conflict involving
their core interests. This is essential for relations to cool down and
eventually improve.
In addition, the US visit Hu had planned this April will have no real
significance if China and the US do not make efforts to follow the text and
spirit of the joint statement.
For China, the joint statement is a clear: formal recognition by the US of
China¡¦s position as a strong power. For the US, it underscores the belief that
China accepts its promises about its international responsibilities and duties.
Whether the US and China can get the statement back up and running will not only
influence the quality of relations between the two countries, it will also
influence the situation in the Taiwan Strait and the future international power
structure.
Emerson Chang is director of the Department of International
Studies at Nan Hua University.
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