US' misconception hinders cooperation
US President Barack Obama was in Beijing from Nov 10 to 12 to attend the 22nd APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting followed by a second state visit to China. The Chinese and the US governments made intense and full preparations for the visit to ensure it provided a substantial boost to the health and stability of bilateral ties in general and the building of a new model of major-country relations in particular.
It should be acknowledged that the China-US relationship is now at a crucial juncture when both sides face the consequential choice between cooperation or confrontation. With heightened awareness of history and the accountability to the future, the Chinese government initiated the formulation of a new type of major-country relations for China and the United States based on three principles: no conflict and confrontation, mutual trust, and win-win cooperation. The Obama administration, after a few rounds of internal assessment, also put forward the US' vision for a new type of relationship sustained by the two pillars of "practical cooperation" and "constructively managing disagreements and disputes".
China's three principles and the US' two pillars share something in common but they also differ in many aspects. Given the growing regional and global impact of their relations, both China and the US emphasize the importance of strengthening cooperation on major economic and security issues at the bilateral, regional, and global levels. And despite the conflicting interests and conceptual divergence between the two on bilateral and international issues, the US' "constructive management of disagreements and disputes" and China's "no conflict and confrontation" coincide.