Tue,
November 17, 2009 9:50 AM
President Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao emerged from
hours of intense talks Tuesday determined to marshal their combined
clout on crucial issues, but still showing divisions over economic,
security and human rights issues that have long bedeviled the two
powers.
"The relationship between our two nations goes far beyond any
single issue," Obama said in a joint appearance with Hu that
followed about 2 1/2 hours of formal, closed-door conversations.
Both leaders spoke in bold terms
of the growing relationship between the countries. They emphasized
cooperation on the economy, climate change, energy and to varying
degrees the nuclear threats of Iran and North Korea. In a minor
agreement, the two set a date for resuming a long-stalled dialogue
on human rights early next year.
But differences remained, underscoring that tensions would hardly
be erased in Obama's first, high-profile visit to China.
Hu put in a barb about recent U.S. levies on imports of Chinese-made
tires and steel, calling for a stronger joint stand against protectionism.
Obama reiterated that human rights were universal and need to be
respected by all.
These differences came carefully muffled amid talk of cooperation,
a sign that both leaders acknowledge that as China continues to
grow in power it and the U.S. must find ways to work together to
avoid conflict.
Obama spoke at length about the nations' joint interests and said,
"I do not believe that one country's success must come at the
expense of another." Both leaders repeated their new official
description of relations as "positive, cooperative and comprehensive."
Obama and Hu said they agreed on restarting the collapsed six-nation
effort to rid North Korea of its nuclear programs. The Chinese said
the effort was essential to "peace and stability in northeast
Asia."Skip over this content
Beijing has supported sterner sanctions against
Pyongyang for its continued nuclear weapons program, though it has
done little to enforce them against its neighbor and ally.
On Iran, where the U.S. needs China's clout to help pressure the
nation to give up any of its own nuclear weapons positions, Obama
spoke with sterner language than Hu.
"Iran has an opportunity to present and demonstrate its peaceful
intentions, but if it fails to take this opportunity, there will
be consequences," the U.S. president said. Hu made no mention
of consequences, saying the Iran conflict is important to resolve
through negotiations.
China has significant economic ties with Iran, and Beijing has appeared
less willing to endorse a tougher approach to restrict Tehran's
uranium enrichment and suspected pursuit of atomic bombs.
The Chinese president also called on the U.S. to respect China's
"core interests" — code for ending support for Taiwan
and for the Dalai Lama, in his Tibetan government-in-exile. Obama
obliged by saying that Tibet was part of China, but urged China
to restart talks with the Dalai Lama's representatives — something
Hu did not mention.
On climate, Obama said the United States and China are looking for
a comprehensive deal during next month's climate change summit that
will "rally the world."
Obama said the goal at the Copenhagen meeting should be an agreement
that has "immediate operational effect," not just a political
declaration. As the world's two largest consumers and producers
of energy, Obama said the United States and China must play a key
role in negotiating an agreement. Hu committed to helping, but only
within China's capabilities.
Obama said China has helped the United States pull out of the worst
recession in a generation. He said a revised economic approach will
help increase U.S. exports and create jobs while helping bring about
higher living standards in China.
Obama came to China seeking help with an array of global troubles.
He and Hu sought to strike a balance between trading partners and
competitors during Obama's trip to China during his Asia tour.
A day before, Obama prodded China about Internet controls and free
speech during a forum with students in Shanghai. His message was
not widely heard in the country; his words were drastically limited
online and shown on just one regional television channel.
He also suggested that China, now a giant in economic impact as
well as territory, must assume a larger role on the world stage
— part of "burden of leadership" it shares with
the United States.
Eager to achieve a successful summit, the two leaders avoided spats
on economic issues. With America's budget deficit soaring to a yearly
record of $1.42 trillion, China is the No. 1 lender to Washington
and has expressed concern that the falling price of the dollar threatens
the value of its U.S. holdings.
In the U.S., American manufacturers blame China's own low currency
value for contributing to the loss of 5.6 million manufacturing
jobs over the past decade. During that time, America's trade gap
with China has soared.
With sightseeing in Beijing's Forbidden City sandwiched in between
their talks, the two leaders' day was to end at a lavish state dinner
in Obama's honor.
Topmost on Obama's ambitious agenda with Hu is the so-far elusive
search for global agreement on a new climate change pact, stymied
by disagreement between rich nations like the U.S. and developing
nations such as China. Wealthier countries want legally binding
greenhouse-gas reduction targets for themselves as well as for energy-guzzling
developing nations such as China, India and Brazil. Those poorer
nations say they will set only nonbinding goals and they demand
assistance to make the transition to harder targets.