Chinese President Hu Jintao will travel to the United States this week aiming 
to build trust and convince Washington that China's rise is not a threat. 
"We hope this visit can push forward both sides to look closely at the 
importance and necessity of developing Sino-US relations from a strategic and 
long-term perspective," Vice Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told reporters in a 
briefing Friday. 
 
 
 |  Chinese President Hu 
 Jintao will travel to the United States this week aiming to build trust 
 and convince Washington that China's rise is not a threat. 
 [AFP]
 | 
The April 18-21 trip, Hu's first visit to 
the United States as president, will take him to the Boeing and Microsoft plants 
in Seattle and then to Washington where he will hold a summit with President 
George W. Bush and meet with US politicians and business leaders. 
While trade and world affairs will likely dominate discussions, the two 
nations will also grapple with what kind of relationship they want to build at a 
time when distrust mixes with a recognition of the need to work together. 
The trip comes as the world's largest economy and its biggest developing 
country face growing trade disputes, especially over China's currency. 
Washington believes the yuan is undervalued, giving Chinese exports an unfair 
advantage and contributing to its record trade deficit with Beijing. 
US senators have postponed but still threaten a vote on a bill to impose 
tariffs on Chinese exports unless Beijing reforms its currency regime. 
China, with its export-oriented economy, will try to convince the United 
States, its second-largest trade partner, to keep buying Chinese goods, while 
allowing China to buy what it wants -- high-tech US products -- and to make 
investments in the US to narrow the trade gap, analysts said. 
More importantly, Hu will seek to dispel US fears of China's rising might, by 
reassuring Washington that Beijing is a responsible global partner. 
"China believes mutual trust is lacking and that is at the root of tensions 
between the two countries, be it trade, military spending or human rights," said 
Tsinghua University analyst He Maochun. 
"It believes the United States still views China from a Cold War perspective 
and that it sees China as a threat. China meanwhile is suspicious the US wants 
to contain China." 
The United States for its part will urge Beijing to increase the value of its 
currency, further open its massive and lucrative market to US companies and 
products, and crack down on piracy to reduce the record 202 billion dollar 
deficit, analysts said. 
It would also request help from Beijing, one of five permanent members on the 
UN Security Council, to deal with international issues, including the nuclear 
standoffs with Iran and North Korea and the humanitarian crisis in Sudan, they 
said. 
Eager to fend off pressure, China preceded Hu's visit with a US shopping 
spree last week, signing contracts worth 16.2 billion dollars, including the 
purchase of 80 Boeing aircraft. 
This could persuade US politicians to stop beating on China, at least for 
now, said Paul Harris, a Sino-US relations expert at Hong Kong's Lingnan 
University. 
"Money talks," said Harris. "They're targeting the spending in the industries 
and geographic constituencies that really matter." 
There is also speculation that Beijing may widen the trading band for the 
yuan, which appreciated only slightly following a 2.1 percent revaluation under 
pressure from the US last July. 
On Taiwan, Yang indicated Friday Hu will seek further reassurance from Bush 
that the US will discourage Taiwanese "president" Chen Shui-bian from pushing 
his pro-independence agenda. 
"We hope that the United States ... will not send any wrong signals to Taiwan 
secessionist forces," Yang said. 
As a rapidly-growing China scours for energy in traditional US spheres of 
influence including Latin America, raising US eyebrows, Yang said China also 
wants to discuss ways to cooperate with the United States on energy, adding 
there were "opportunities" to work together. 
Chinese officials expressed optimism about the trip, but analysts were less 
hopeful. 
"The differences won't be narrowed, but the two countries could find more 
channels to resolve their differences and will have more experience in solving 
future problems," He said.