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A pioneering endeavor

By Chen Yonglong and Xue Junying | China Daily | Updated: 2013-07-26 09:18

The key to a harmonious relationship is finding common purpose and common ground while shelving or defusing differences. This will be a major test for the leadership in China and the US. Chinese President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Barack Obama have already reached a consensus on building a new type of relationship between an existing power and a rising power in principle, it is now a case of putting flesh on the bone. If that momentum can be maintained, the recent Sunnylands Summit between Obama and Xi will prove to be of great historical significance.

For the present, in-depth communication between the two leaders has been established in an easy and lively form. Isn't this the way to overcome differences and learn from one another?

After all dialogue is essential, as there are no examples to follow. The attempt to build a new type of relationship between major countries is a pioneering endeavor. Raising the proposal fully reflects the broad-minded strategic ambition and pragmatic attitude of the leaders of the two countries, which has put positive energy into the healthy development of the bilateral relationship.

Just think, who would have imagined, even just a few years ago, that relations between China and the US, countries which have totally different systems and whose relations have experienced many chills over the past 40 years, would be at this point today. In this sense, China-US relations have set a good example for others to follow.

Kissinger said recently, that the US and China came together because they shared a common enemy. Today they come together because of a shared vision of a better world in the future. They believe that the relationship between China and the US will become a new type of partnership featuring some competition, but characterized by cooperation. This is because their shared vision of a new type of relations between major powers offers benefits for both sides.

Two things can happen in the context of commons and differences: one is principle issues which allow no concessions; the other is some issues that are so sensitive that they can be mistaken for principle issues related to bilateral relationship. In fact, neither of these need result in a deadlock in relations.

Chen Yonglong is director of the US Center of the China Foundation for International Studies. Xue Junying is a researcher at the US Center of the China Foundation for International Studies. www.chinausfocus.com

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