The United States and China should enhance economic cooperation, rather than engage in trade conflicts. Cooperation creates huge benefits especially for the US, said Zhou Shijian, a senior China-US expert.
The dramatic ups and downs in China-US ties since Obama took office indicate they are standing at a historical crossroads.
When US President Barack Obama hosts President Hu Jintao at the White House on Jan 19, it will be the 12th full summit meeting between American and Chinese presidents since former US president Richard Nixon made his historic visit to Beijing in 1972.
China has become a profit center for enterprises from the United States. Statistics from the Ministry of Commerce of China indicate that by the end of 2010, US companies had invested $65.22 billion in more than 59,000 projects in China.
Experts from both sides of the Pacific weigh in on the hottest issues likely to be front and center when the two leaders meet during the Chinese president's four-day visit to the United States
Western media were quick to call Chinese President Hu Jintao's comments on the US dollar unusually blunt. But there is real value to earnest words, though sometimes unpleasant to the ear.
Diplomat Nicholas Platt has an insider's insight on the developing relationship between China and the US. Chen Weihua reports.
President Hu Jintao on Monday praised China-US relations, highlighted recent progress in ties and called for both sides to "abandon the zero-sum Cold War mentality" for a better future.
For Stephen Orlins, president of the National Committee on United States-China Relations, two images from the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games remain unforgettable.
President Hu Jintao embarks on his long-expected four-day state visit to the United States on Tuesday, with the number of bilateral and global issues on the agenda putting it firmly in the international spotlight.
Hu sets vision for strong ties $600 m deals Special: President Hu to visit US
As US President Barack Obama prepares to host his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao this week, his fellow Americans increasingly see Asia as the region of the world most important to US interests and want to build stronger Sino-US ties.
The survey, released prior to Chinese President Hu Jintao's state visit to the US, starting on Wednesday, aims to shed light on the attitudes of the Chinese people toward the US.