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Obama vows to boost Sino-US relations, says Carter
By Li Xiaokun and Peng Kuang (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-01-13 07:32

The US delegation now visiting China to celebrate the 30th anniversary of that historic event include key figures that helped forge the ties, such as former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger, former national security advisors Brent Scowcroft and Zbigniew Brzezinski, and some former US ambassadors.


Chinese President Hu Jintao (R) shakes hands with former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as former U.S. president James Carter looks on during a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing January 12, 2009. Carter and Kissinger are in China to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of U.S. China diplomatic relations, which began on January 1, 1979. [Agencies]

Hu told Carter: "For a long time, irrespective of whether you were in office or had retired, you have made great efforts to build the friendship between the two countries and develop ties. I appreciate those efforts highly."

Carter said: "For all American citizens, particularly for these leaders, this is a wonderful occasion to celebrate."

Developing a constructive partnership is in the fundamental interest of the two countries, Hu said. They should increase exchanges, deepen mutual trust, expand cooperation and promote durable bilateral ties.

"As the biggest developing nation and the biggest developed nation, China and the US shoulder the common responsibility of world peace and development The importance and impact of China-US ties go beyond bilateral relations," Hu said.

Expressing his wonder at the rapid change in China, Carter said: "All of us including Deng Xiaoping ... would have been amazed 30 years ago at the great changes that have taken place not only in your own country, but in the relationship between our two nations."

Vice-President Xi Jinping hosted a banquet last night to welcome the US delegation.

Xi said the two countries should abide by the three Sino-US joint communiqus and respect each other's core interests.

Carter responded that the Sino-US relationship "is the most important diplomatic relationship in the world today".

The 84-year-old Carter's relationship with China began 60 years ago - on October 1, 1949, to be precise - the day the People's Republic of China was founded. Carter visited China as a submarine officer on that day, when he turned 25.

"Deng Xiaoping thought fate had brought me to the Chinese people and I thought the same way," he said earlier at a seminar to mark the 30th anniversary.

In 1978, Carter decided to normalize ties with China and "bring about this enormous change", even though he was still president-elect and had not stepped into the White House.

After assuming the US presidency in January 1979, Carter invited Deng to visit the US. "To my surprise, he accepted and said 'I'll be there in two weeks'."

Deng reached the US on Jan 28. "One of the most unforgettable events was on the stage at the Kennedy Center, when Deng Xiaoping appeared along with little American children who had learned his favorite songs, and they sang these songs in Chinese," Carter said. "And as he kissed the little children, including my 9-year-old daughter, many people in the audience wept It was one of those glorious events that no one would ever forget."

That was a "very great turning point" in his personal life and in the life of Americans and Chinese, he said.

This is Carter's eighth visit after leaving the White House. Before departing for Beijing this time, he said establishing diplomatic ties with China was the "wisest" decision he had ever made.

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