To develop Sino-US relations, the United States must let go of its obsession with containing and suppressing (bells)

  To grasp the right direction of the development of China-US relations, we should show a big picture and shoulder great responsibilities.

The U.S. government should view China-U.S. relations from a broader, more inclusive, and more responsible perspective, instead of continuing to engage in confrontation with China

  On May 26, US Secretary of State Blinken delivered a speech on China policy at George Washington University.

Although Blinken once again stated that the United States has no intention of launching a "new Cold War" against China and does not seek conflict with China, it has been spreading false news, exaggerating the "China threat", interfering in China's internal affairs, and smearing China's domestic and foreign policies, reflecting the United States' adherence to the Cold War mentality, The obsession to contain and suppress China and maintain U.S. hegemony.

This obsession of the United States will not help China-US relations out of the current predicament, but will only increase tension and increase risks to world peace and stability.

  The speech claimed to strengthen domestic investment in strength and strengthen cooperation with allies abroad, so as to win the so-called "competition" with China.

The US insists on using its understanding of "competition" to define Sino-US relations, which deviates from the essence of Sino-US relations and runs counter to the common expectations of the two peoples and the international community for Sino-US relations.

Judging from the recent actions of the United States to intensively interfere in China's internal affairs and try to cobble together a "small circle" to contain China, the so-called "competition" of the United States is not a fair and healthy healthy competition based on the universally recognized basic norms of international relations, but a winner and a loser. Zero-sum game, unscrupulous suppression and containment.

The reason why Sino-US relations have fallen into serious difficulties in recent years is precisely because the US is obsessed with containing and suppressing China.

  The strong confrontational tone of the so-called "competition" of the United States with China has long aroused widespread concern in the international community.

In order to confuse the public and shirk responsibility, the United States is keen to play up the "China threat".

In this speech, the United States continued its usual arrogance and domineering, regarded the right to define and interpret the international order as its own "private property", and baselessly claimed that China was "the most serious long-term challenge to the international order" in order to suppress and contain China. Find excuses.

This is a complete inversion of black and white.

China is one of the founders of the post-war international order and will be a staunch defender of the international order in the past, present and future.

China upholds the international system with the United Nations at its core, the international order based on international law, and the basic norms governing international relations based on the purposes and principles of the UN Charter.

  The so-called "rules-based international order" that the U.S. has always talked about is nothing but "family rules" formulated by the U.S. and a few countries, and it is nothing but a hegemonic tool to maintain U.S. global dominance.

The United States has always placed American-style hegemony above the international order, and it is the biggest destroyer of the international order.

The U.S. spares no effort to provoke camp confrontation around the world and promotes "America First" pseudo-multilateralism, which is the biggest threat to the international order.

The US concocted "Indo-Pacific strategy" and claimed to "change China's surrounding environment" is the latest example of its destruction of international order and rules.

The United States itself has a lot of debts and bad records in terms of democracy and human rights, but it tries to monopolize the right to define democracy and human rights, and continues to act as a "teacher".

  The United States has frequently created incidents on issues concerning China's core interests, exposing its true intentions to use Taiwan, Xinjiang, Hong Kong, and Tibet-related issues to interfere in China's internal affairs, smear China, and hinder China's development.

The Taiwan issue concerns the political foundation of China-US relations and is an insurmountable red line. The Chinese government has no room for compromise or concessions on the Taiwan issue.

The United States verbally says it does not support "Taiwan independence", but in fact it has repeatedly violated its own political commitments, trying to hollow out the one-China principle and fuel the arrogance of the "Taiwan independence" forces.

The United States itself is the changer of the status quo in the Taiwan Strait, but it wants to impose the so-called "unilateral change of the status quo in the Taiwan Strait" on China, in order to cover up the harm caused by its attempt to "play the Taiwan card" and "use Taiwan to control China" to the peace and stability of the Taiwan Strait. threaten.

This self-deception trick can't deceive others.

China will continue to unswervingly defend its national sovereignty, security and development interests, and resolutely retaliate against all acts of interfering in China's internal affairs and provoking pressure on China.

China's legitimate actions will surely continue to be supported by all forces of justice in the international community.

  The current U.S. administration continues the previous administration’s erroneous policy toward China, but it plays two-sided tactics. On the one hand, it is deliberately trying to contain and suppress China.

In response to global challenges, China-US cooperation is an objective necessity, but it is the US that really hinders the normal cooperation between the two sides.

China has shown the greatest sincerity and goodwill in bringing China-U.S. relations back on track, discussing the correct way for China and the U.S. to get along with each other, and better playing the role of a major power in addressing global challenges.

However, because it cannot accept the peaceful rise of a major country with different social systems, historical culture and development stages, the United States has always played the role of "pretending to be asleep".

Recently, many constructive voices in the United States have emphasized that the United States should pay more attention to fundamentally re-examine its relations with China and put cooperation in a more important position in its China policy.

Anne-Marie Slaughter, former head of policy planning at the US State Department, pointed out that "global leadership in this century does not come from defeating China," but from addressing a range of global challenges, which often requires cooperation with China. cooperating.

The U.S. government should listen to these rational voices and view China-U.S. relations from a broader, more inclusive, and more responsible perspective, instead of continuing to engage in confrontation with China.

  To grasp the right direction of the development of China-US relations, we should show a big picture and shoulder great responsibilities.

China has no intention of competing with the US, and is committed to developing Sino-US relations on the basis of mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation.

The U.S. government should meet China halfway, show strategic courage and political courage, abandon zero-sum game thinking, let go of its obsession with containing and suppress China, and take concrete actions to bring China-U.S. relations back to the right track of healthy and stable development, so as to contribute to world peace. Development should play its due role as a major country.