Trust vital for strong relations
Updated: 2012-02-14 15:28
By Ariel Tung (China Daily)
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Stephen Orlins says understanding between the United States and China will make the world a better place. [Ariel Tung / China Daily] |
Better understanding will improve Sino-US ties, business cooperation
NEW YORK - Forty years after it hosted the visit of a Chinese ping-pong team in the United States, the National Committee on US-China Relations is still opening doors to communication.
"Better understanding between the US and China will strengthen bilateral ties further and make the world a better place," said Stephen Orlins, president of the committee.
On Wednesday, the committee will co-host a luncheon for Vice-President Xi Jinping during his visit to Washington.
"The single greatest impediment to constructive relations is the mistrust between China and the US," he said.
"If I had a magic wand and could wave it, I want more trust from China to America, and from America to China. I wish they could trust each other more."
Set up in 1966, the National Committee on US-China Relations has evolved over the years.
It first briefed US government officials on China at a time when there were no diplomatic relationships between the two nations.
In 1972, after former secretary of state Henry Kissinger's visit to China, the committee hosted the Chinese ping-pong team in the US. It was the foundation of a people-to-people relationship that has blossomed in the past four decades.
"Because of our nearly 45-year-old association with China, we have been able to hold discussions on many sensitive topics that even the American government could not," said Orlins, who worked for the US State Department, and was part of the legal team that helped establish diplomatic relations with China.
"We have conducted economic dialogue on subjects that both governments are wary of discussing. We are franker than the governments could be. We had a discussion with the People's Liberation Army about security issues. We had human rights discussions with the State Council of the People's Republic of China and China Foundation for Human Rights Development," Orlins said.
Even though there have been several impressive strides, Orlins still sees some impediments in Sino-US ties. He agrees with some experts' predictions that trade tensions between China and the US will worsen this year because of the bleak financial outlook and US election season.
"The economic outlook creates risk to the trade relationship, and that is worsened by the fact that elections portray China to be a very negative force in US job losses. The candidates are saying Chinese trade policy - its currency valuation - is a significant cause for unemployment in the US. So the response will be further trade actions against China," he said.
"If you ask whether there are going to be problems in the relationship, the answer is yes. Will there be problems with trade issues? Yes. Will there be problems on US criticism of China's human rights policy? Yes. Will there be problems relating to how we deal with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and Iran? Yes."
While China and the US face similar threats such as terrorism, climate change, piracy and financial crisis, cooperation is "something that will occur" between the two, he said. Fundamentally, the two countries' interests are complementary, and not conflicting.
Orlins said that when he decided to learn Chinese at Harvard University in the 1970s, there was no inkling that Sino-US ties would become an integral part of global diplomacy.
Born in 1950, Orlins was raised believing that the American government had given his immigrant family an extraordinary opportunity to get ahead in the US. His paternal grandparents came from Russia, while his mother hailed from France.
"I needed to understand why the American government, which my parents idolized, did this bad thing - to fight an unjust war. I decided to study Asia to understand the reasons behind the Vietnam War," Orlins said.
Little did he realize then that his life would be intertwined with China. He said he has had a "virtually uninterrupted contact with China" over a 40-year period.
After graduating magna cum laude, the young Orlins went to work for the US State Department, first in the Office of the Assistant Legal Advisor for Political-Military Affairs and then for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. During his State Department stint, Orlins was part of the legal team that helped establish diplomatic relations with China.
Over the next few decades, he dabbled as an investment banker, a lawyer and an investor with ties in Asia. He first came to Beijing as a lawyer, and then stayed on in Hong Kong as an investment banker. He worked as the president of Lehman Brothers Asia in Hong Kong from 1987 to 1990. He then moved on to Beijing to work as an investor before becoming the head of the largest NGO dedicated to US-China relations.
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