China Outlines Bottom Lines for the U.S.
Where this important relationship will be headed is vital for the wellbeing of the Chinese and American peoples and for the future of the world.
Where this important relationship will be headed is vital for the wellbeing of the Chinese and American peoples and for the future of the world.
The most important thing is to keep up with the courage and work hand in hand among all sectors, and build on our collective synergy and intelligence to combat the uncertainties.
As Qin Gang, the newly appointed Chinese ambassador to the U.S., arrived in New York City, relations between the two powers are truly at a “critical juncture.”
Relations between China and the Republic of Cyprus are steadily improving creating new opportunities for economic collaboration.
Pakistan’s bilateral trade with China has also continued to grow year upon year. On this premise, no short-term disruptions can unhinge the long-term vision of the CPEC, which is jointly embraced by both countries.
China’s independence, and the efforts of other nations in the South to find their own independent ways, arduous as they are, ultimately are not compatible with Washington’s intensely ideological American-centric globalism.
China embraces market dynamics in its economy, but it does not embrace the principle that the market dictates and overrules the interests of society as a whole to the point it becomes hugely detrimental.
In the coming years, Pudong is supposed to focus on the coordination of various systems and try to carry out reform by taking into account the overall process of business and industrial development.
China has actively pushed for denuclearization on the peninsula; it does, however, remain firmly against any injustice under hegemony.
By 2035, the new forms and models shall push China’s foreign trade to the next level, with the full-fledged support of a stronger legal system.
Only by collaborating more openly as a region with a shared future can this area of the globe prosper, and it must, in turn, counter politics of unilateralism, hegemonism and geopolitical confrontation striving to divide, politicize, blame and cut the globe up into blocs.
Today, China is the second-largest contributor to the UN peacekeeping budget and has sent more peacekeepers to UN missions than any other permanent member of the Security Council.