Identifying the Underlying Causes of Sino-U.S. Frictions
To treat China as a partner will do the U.S. and its people much more good than to look at China as a competitor.
To treat China as a partner will do the U.S. and its people much more good than to look at China as a competitor.
Over 10 flight missions have been scheduled for the two-year construction period of Tiangong, including the launch of the core module and the two lab capsules, plus four manned spaceships and four unmanned cargo crafts.
China’s principled advocacy for a community with a shared future for all mankind, underwritten by common and inclusive development, collective security and universal peace, solicits global goodwill across political and ideological divide to safeguard and preserve mankind’s common home, Earth.
These are the sorts of things the world would like to see the U.S. and China take on together, because they want them to not just focus on zero-sum competition, but also work together on managing global challenges.
The meeting between the two leaders, rationally speaking, is more a gesture of mutual goodwill to improve their relations rather than anything else.
The time calls for the U.S. to make atonement for the greenhouse gases it has emitted over the past 100 years and hopefully the Biden administration will truly honor its promises through demonstrable action, rather than verbal ambition.
From the ASEAN perspective, no foreign political agenda could ever override its concerted aspiration to reinvigorate its floundering economies, left devastated by the deadly contagion.
The guidance of socialism with Chinese characteristics and the adherence to the policy of reform and opening up help China to transition from poverty to prosperity and from weakness to strength.
The open and all-inclusive cooperation championed by China and many other members in the Industry 4.0 era is vital to better economic integration and post-pandemic recovery.
This global geopolitical shift means an end to 70 years of U.S. warmongering hegemony.
An agreement among these governments—followed by specific actions—can change the global trajectory on climate change.
The correct way out of this precarious setting—peaceful reunification—will ensure economic prosperity and social stability in Taiwan, and conforms to the overall interests of the Chinese nation to the largest extent.