Special Report:
30th Anniversary of Sino-U.S. Diplomatic
Relations
BEIJING, April 14 -- America should develop a
"win-win" partnership with China because the countries need each other, the head
of an American think tank said.
"America should break its conventional thinking in
its economic and foreign policies to avoid conflicts and sustain the peace and
prosperity," John Milligan-Whyte, from the Center for America-China Partnership,
said in Beijing on Friday.
The center is the first American think tank to
combine "America-centric" and "China-centric" perspectives.
Milligan-Whyte said the blueprint of a new framework
aligning China's and America's economic success and national security was
essential to transcend gaps in American and Chinese perception and
communication.
"Only through reciprocal respect, reciprocal
globalization, reciprocal solutions and collaborative equilibrium will the U.S.
and China create the collaboration of the American and Chinese civilizations and
dissolve geopolitical problems", Milligan-Whyte also wrote in his newly
published White Paper for the Presidents of America and China.
New U.S.-China relations will not only benefit the
U.S., they will prove "beneficial" to the rest of the world, which is
particularly significant amid the global financial crisis, a worse crisis than
that experienced in the 1930s.
America and China should therefore build a new
partnership to seek reciprocal solutions, he said, noting the new administration
of President Barack Obama is providing "a golden opportunity" to implement a
rational foreign policy during a time of financial crisis.
Milligan-Whyte lauded China's "win-win thinking" as
represented in its principles of peaceful coexistence, which he labeled as
"China exceptionalism", with its counterpart of "American exceptionalism"
represented by America's audacity of dream.
"America and China are undoubtedly mutually needed in
cooperation in many areas," Milligan-Whyte said.
He said the 'China Threat' in the thinking of U.S.
policymakers is ungrounded, and peace and harmony should be cultivated in both
country's foreign policy.
"(The) 'China Threat' now still in the thinking of
many American decision-makers should be eliminated in the new thinking as
defined by the new era," he said.
(Source: China Daily)
