The White House has revealed what the United States cares most when President 
George W. Bush meets Chinese President Hu Jintao on Thursday: partnership to 
deal with world security issues, and a more balanced bilateral trade 
relationship. 
 
 
 |  Chinese President Hu 
 Jintao (L) shakes hands with US President George W. Bush in New York in 
 this September 13, 2005 file photo. 
[Xinhua]
 | 
Bush will ask his Chinese counterpart 
to step up pressure on both Iran and North Korea to help end nuclear standoffs, 
and also, will bring up the topic that China needs to move faster on its 
currency, the Associated Press report quoted senior administration officials as 
saying on Monday. 
In discussing Iran, Bush will raise China's role as a permanent member of the 
United Nations Security Council when the two leaders meet at the White House, 
said Dennis Wilder, a National Security Council official who overseas Asian 
affairs. 
Bush will emphasize "that we need the Iranian government 
to assume a more responsible posture in relations to its nuclear ambitions," 
Wilder told a White House briefing to preview Hu's visit. The U.N. Security 
Council has demanded that Iran cease uranium enrichment work, which the United 
States and some of its allies suspect is meant to produce weapons. Russia and 
China have opposed punishing Iran. 
 
 
 
 
 
President Hu was to be in Seattle on Tuesday. 
"We will also be urging China to help us get the North Koreans to return to 
the six-party talks ... so that the people on the Korean peninsula have a future 
that's free from nuclear weapons," Wilder said. 
Separately, Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick said Chinese officials 
"need to be more than a mediator" in the negotiations, which had been held in 
Beijing until the current 6-month-long deadlock began. "They need to be a 
participant that recognizes that they have an interest in trying to solve this 
problem," Zoellick told a foreign policy forum. 
An informal gathering last week in Tokyo of the six countries involved in 
talks to get North Korea to give up its nuclear program failed to produce a 
breakthrough in the stalled negotiations.
Zoellick also said China was 
saying the right things about wanting to more fully open its currency, the yuan, 
to market forces. "But the process of change seems agonizingly slow," he said. 
Another senior administration official told White House reporters that, while 
Bush would raise the currency issue with President Hu, the administration did 
not expect any concessions on it from the Chinese leader at Thursday's meeting. 
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to 
speak publicly on the matter, the Associated Press reported. 
Meanwhile, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada asserted that, more 
than five years into Bush's presidency, the administration "still has no 
coherent strategy for managing this nation's relationship with China."
In 
a letter to the president, Reid urged Bush to do more to protect U.S. economic 
and trade interests with China, and to ask Beijing to do more to improve human 
rights. 
Dennis Wilder said Taiwan and China's defense policy would also be on the 
agenda. 
"There is no auto pilot in U.S.-China relations, but relations have matured 
to the point where neither is this a terribly unusual meeting," Wilder 
said.