It has been nearly a year and a half since the Biden administration took office, but China-US relations have not yet "bottomed out."

In his recent speech on China policy, US Secretary of State Blinken even threw out the rhetoric of "investment, coordination and competition". Who is seriously undermining the international order?

How should the U.S. policy toward China take a new path?

  Earlier this month, news broke from the White House that the United States was considering adjusting some of the "irresponsible" tariffs imposed on Chinese products.

Neil Ferguson, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a historian, recently wrote in an article that U.S.-China relations have reached a "moment to restart the strategic de-escalation of the 1970s."

Why is it that the United States should take the lead in taking the first step in the strategic de-escalation towards China?

  Recently in China News Agency's "East-West Question, China Dialogue", Chen Dingding, professor of Jinan University and dean of Haiguo Tuzhi Institute, Dr. Hu Yishan, chief consultant of Malaysia Pacific Center and senior researcher of Singapore Institute of International Affairs, and American "Chinese Journal of Political Science" Joseph Gregory Mahoney, associate editor and professor at the School of Politics and International Relations at East China Normal University, had a dialogue on this.

Responsible editor: [Ji Xiang]