China, US to ponder over issues: Envoy

DM Monitoring

Washington: China-US relations have changed a great deal, and the international community expects that China and the United States should work together on global challenges, Chinese Ambassador to the United States Cui Tiankai has said.
“It has expanded, it has deepened, and it has gotten more complicated, more comprehensive and more complex. We have opened up many new areas for cooperation, areas which we may not have imagined about early on,” he said in a recent interview with former U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson.
“So we have opened up many areas for cooperation, and we have also handled the differences in a constructive and pragmatic way,” he said during the podcast program “Straight Talk with Hank Paulson.”
Even during the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been a good degree of cooperation between China’s provinces and cities and American states and cities, between companies and institutions of the two countries, and the two countries have also handled issues like climate change, international terrorism and epidemics like Ebola in Africa, Cui said.
“To be fair, some of the differences will remain with us for many years to come. We have to recognize that there will always be differences between us because we are two different countries with very different historical heritages, different cultures, and different political and economic systems,” he said.
“But we have to manage the differences in a constructive way. We have to keep in mind that our common interests and mutual needs always outweigh whatever differences we have. We are faced with so many global challenges. Neither China nor the United States can handle them all by itself, whether the pandemic or climate change or natural disasters,” he said.
“But we do have a very complex relationship. Sometimes we have disputes over these issues. Fortunately, so far we have managed them quite well,” Cui said.
“But now the current situation is making us very concerned and even alarmed. There are some clear attempts in this country to cross what people call the red line with very serious consequences. So I hope people can really draw experience and good lessons from the past few decades,” he said.