podesta-emails
NOT time sensitive: Revised US - China Draft from Rudy
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John-
Revised draft on the recent White House summit between President Obama and
President Xi below from Rudy deLeon.
Rudy wanted you to be aware that they have an updated draft ready for
review but it's totally *u**p to you how quickly you want to process this*--
it can easily wait until next week when you're back in to the office.
Rudy will continue to let the China side know that we are working on this,
but he has not committed to a specific timeline for completion.
__________________________________________________________________
Milia,
Would you share with John this revised draft on the recent White House
summit between President Obama and President Xi. The original draft from
the China side was almost 8 pages long, and reflected positions that do not
reflect current opportunities and challenges in US-China relations. Our
current draft is less than 3 pages.
After John and you offer comments, we will forward to our counterparts.
Rudy.
Revised
*September 2015 White House Summit: Opportunities*
*And Challenges as US-China leaders meet*
By John Podesta, Tung Chee Hwa,
Wang Jisi, and Rudy deLeon
October 2015
This past month -- September 2015 -- has seen another important exchange in
US – China relations as President Barack Obama and President Xi Jinping
completed their summit meeting at the White House in Washington. Building
on earlier high level exchanges, the two leaders announced further progress
on climate change, established a new high level dialogue on cybercrime, a
set of principles for information technologies including protections of
intellectual property in the electronic domain, and conducted discussions
on national security issues offering the different perspectives of each
country with an effort to improve communication.
Earlier in the month, there were ceremonies commemorating the seventieth
anniversary of the end of World War II. Both America and Chinese were
reminded of the common sacrifice and service in those times by renewing
stories of the American Flying Tigers in the CBI, recognizing the Chinese
people who gave shelter to the Jewish refugees of Europe and protected them
in the Shanghai Ghetto, and remembering the common commitment of the
allies, their veterans and the citizens who sacrificed so much.
Seventy years later, many of those same allies were recently joined by a
peaceful Germany in negotiations to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons
to Iran, a display of diplomatic agreement that now must be enforced with
resolution and vigor. For China, its constructive participation in the P5
+ 1 talks was further evidence of its growing experience and recognition of
its important role in global diplomacy.
President Obama and President Xi, even as they deal with domestic and
economic concerns, make the effort to demonstrate that these two leaders
can work together to join the other nations of the Asia-Pacific region in
charting policies that will build upon the current dynamic during the next
seventy years in the Asia-Pacific region that blossomed in the post war
period.
The American President, in his remarks at the White House noted, “the
United States welcomes the rise of a China that is stable, prosperous and
peaceful -- because that benefits us all. Our work together -- to increase
our trade, boost the global economy, fight climate change and prevent Iran
from obtaining a nuclear weapon -- shows that when the United States and
China work together, it makes our nations and the world more prosperous and
more secure. Even as our nations cooperate, I believe -- and I know you
agree -- that we must address our differences candidly. The United States
will always speak out on behalf of fundamental truths. We believe that
nations are more successful and the world makes more progress when our
companies compete on a level playing field, when disputes are resolved
peacefully, and when the universal human rights of all people are upheld.”
In the joint press conference in the Rose Garden, President Xi noted that
“with 36 years of development, the interests of China and the United States
are deeply interconnected, and we have greater responsibilities for world
peace and human progress. There are broad areas that the two sides should
and can work together. The Chinese side stands ready to work with the
United States to uphold a spirit of perseverance, and advance bilateral
relations to seek further progress to the better benefits of the Chinese
and American people and the people in the world.”
In September 2013, the Center for American Progress and the China-U.S.
Exchange Foundation convened a distinguished group of American and Chinese
experts for a high-level track II dialogue in Beijing to discuss and
explain the momentum of China-U.S. relations. In a Washington program that
followed the two sides presented their recommendation on how the US and
China can construct in the 21st Century a security and economic model that
will be unique and constructive.
Despite the constructive developments and expectations mentioned,
pessimistic observations of U.S.-China relations seem to be on the rise
among policy analysts, opinion leaders, and the media in both countries. In
several instances there are valid reasons why tensions exist. With regular
dialogue now in place on economic and national security questions, the top
leaders on both sides will need to steady the political questions that
exist between the two countries.
As veteran participants in U.S.-China relations we remain hopeful that the
common interests between our two peoples are strong enough to move us
forward rather than backward, and that the leaderships of our two nations
have enough wisdom to avoid the human errors that precipitated earlier
powers into mistakes and miscalculations.
To be sure, there are opportunities and challenges in the US-China
relationship. But the bilateral ties have weathered many ups and downs
since Mao Zedong and Richard Nixon shook hands in 1972 and broke the
barrier between our two great nations. There is reason to believe that with
such a degree of mutual understanding, shared stakes, and extensive
communication, and with the personal connections and friendship accumulated
over the past 43 years, the cooperative relationship will continue to move
forward.
In his recent book “On China,” Dr. Henry Kissinger notes that the
relationship between China and the U.S. should not be a zero-sum game but
be defined as “co-evolution. . . It means that both countries pursue their
domestic imperatives, cooperating where possible, and adjust their
relations to minimize conflict.”
We believe that the two countries have unique domestic needs, even as both
are faced with daunting tasks at home, including foundations that will
maintain economic strength, opportunity for the middle class, strengthening
the social safety net, generate environmental improvement, developing clean
energy, balancing budget priorities, and providing security. In most of
these issue areas, there are increasing opportunities for the two countries
to further their cooperation that reflects the “benefits” and
“responsibilities” that the two Presidents discussed at the September
Summit in Washington.
--
Milia Fisher
(858) 395-1741
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