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China Tones Down Anti-U.S. Rhetoric After Setbacks

CHARLES HUTZLER   04/11/10 10:15 PM ET   AP

China Us Hu Jintao
Chinese President Hu Jintao.

BOAO, China — China is softening its recent muscular global posture, muting criticisms of the U.S. at a time of delicate negotiations with Washington and simmering economic troubles at home.

The rhetorical respite comes as President Hu Jintao heads to Washington this week, after months of friction with the U.S., and was in full evidence this weekend at an international meeting designed to showcase China's growing reach as an economic and diplomatic powerhouse.

Senior Chinese officials repeatedly sidestepped major issues roiling the global economy. Asked about the Chinese currency – which Washington wants to see rise in value to right trade imbalances – the central bank governor said now was not the time to discuss it. When it comes to regulating the risky Wall Street practices that contributed to the global economic meltdown, China's chief banking regulator sheathed his former critiques and instead called for teamwork and more financial prudence.

"I don't want to poke my nose into other people's courtyards," banking regulator Liu Mingkang said Sunday at the Boao Forum for Asia, a government-sponsored annual gathering for the political and economic elite on tropical Hainan island.

The meeting featured the now usual Chinese calls against trade protectionism in the West, including one from China's vice president and presumptive next leader, Xi Jinping.

But the tenor was a far cry from last year's Boao meeting, held at the depths of the economic crisis. Then, Liu and others directed barbs at the U.S., calling for a new financial world order and indirectly threatening that China might stop buying U.S. Treasury notes that help finance Washington's growing deficit. The elbowing continued for much of the year as Beijing resisted U.S. and European calls to halt North Korea's and Iran's nuclear programs and take bolder steps to curb the threat of climate change.

While the turnaround in Beijing's attitude may be temporary, the change points to indecision among the leadership about China's role in the world, especially its crucial but fraught ties with the U.S., and about keeping the Chinese economy humming amid a still anemic global recovery.

"We are in a time of reassessment by Beijing about China's foreign policy," said Russell Leigh Moses, a Beijing-based political analyst. "There is no overarching slogan or concept guiding the decision-making process in foreign affairs these days here."

Though Washington likely welcomes the toned-down rhetoric, China's overall reticence befuddles the U.S. and others looking to Beijing to provide constructive leadership. The country's economy, after all, will soon be the second largest and is increasingly entwined in the world order.

Though China warded off the worst of the economic turmoil, it now feels the aftereffects of its remedies, $1.8 trillion in bank lending and government stimulus.

With the economy awash in money, housing prices are soaring and inflation is rising. The domestic demand created by supercharged investment may flag as the stimulus eases, leaving China still partly in need of export markets in the U.S. and Europe. The Chinese currency – which the government pegged to the U.S. dollar at the start of the crisis – has been attacked by the U.S., Europe and other trading partners as undervalued, thereby allowing China to flood the world with cheap exports.

Worries are growing, too, that some of the bank loans may sour. Liu, the banking regulator, announced an aggressive plan Sunday to assess the safety of loans to local government-backed investment companies.

Those problems loom as Chinese President Hu arrives in Washington on Monday to attend a summit on nuclear safety. It's an issue Beijing dislikes being out front on. With a nuclear arsenal estimated at about 100 warheads, China says the U.S. and Russia should lead on disarmament, given their huge stockpiles. Beijing has also been reluctant to push ally and neighbor North Korea or trade partner Iran, a willing supplier of oil and gas to China.

Yet the economic disputes are also tricky for Hu. Calls have risen in Congress to punish China if it does not revalue the yuan. Though U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner briefly stopped in Beijing last week to take some of the heat out of dispute, China also does not like to be seen bowing to foreign pressure. The value of the yuan, Chinese officials and economists repeatedly said at the Boao forum, was a matter of national sovereignty.

At the Boao meeting, senior Chinese officials parried calls from Geithner's predecessor, Henry Paulson, among others to mount a higher-profile, energetic response to global problems. Central bank governor Zhou Xiaoquan said Beijing still followed three-decade-old policy guidance "to keep a low profile" on foreign affairs.

"The Chinese voices may become higher and higher," Zhou said. "But we respect the global players from other countries."

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BOAO, China — China is softening its recent muscular global posture, muting criticisms of the U.S. at a time of delicate negotiations with Washington and simmering economic troubles at home. Th...
BOAO, China — China is softening its recent muscular global posture, muting criticisms of the U.S. at a time of delicate negotiations with Washington and simmering economic troubles at home. Th...
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
06:37 PM on 04/12/2010
Yeah, the politicians play nice, but they're still teaching the country's children negative things about the US.
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ChicagoBob
Save the Earth-It's the only planet with chocolate
09:01 PM on 04/12/2010
No really. The US of A is held in high regard by most students. It is also the first choice of places to study for students who want to go abroad for college and graduate school.
05:29 PM on 04/12/2010
The Chinese communist regime doesn't want to offend the U.S. because it's going to rob more jobs from this country.
QuietLightTraveler
Scientist, Teacher, Naturalist, Photographer
09:19 PM on 04/12/2010
The robbing of jobs is something the blockheads in our government should have done something about some time ago. But what did they do?? Nothing. Why not ?? Because they are idiots and the very reason this country has the problems it has today. We have a government that can't get out of its own way. They only know how to make headlines when the two parties have a dispute. Between their ideological bickerring and their taking bribes from corporations they have no grit left (if they ever had any in the first place) to solve the practical problems of this country. We say "God bless America".
Well, unfortunately, he has naever answered that prayer as is evidenced by the pathetic government we now have.
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12:48 PM on 04/12/2010
The Chinese toned down their anti-American rants? I didn't pay any attention to the rants. Who cares? China is on the bubble and they don't even know it. They're about to find out how much fun a financial meltdown is.
12:20 PM on 04/12/2010
I am basically illiterate when it comes to international finance and it's mechanics. But what I assume is that when I spend my money in my own backyard on products and services made and provided by people in my own community then that money is recirculated locally and supports the structure of the community I live in. Having seen so many good paying jobs outsourcred to the rest of the world where both labor and the enviroment are less protected and more exploited makes buying locally seem like a no brainer. That added to the fact that in many instances imported products have such a low level of quality that in the long run I often end up spending more on repeated purchases than I would have had I paid for a higher quality product initially. The restructuring of trade policies over the last 35 or so years has led to a significant decline in our standard of living. Who has this restucturing benefited? My guess is the owners and investors of Multi-National corporations. Help me out here people. What is wrong with tariffs and some form of job and industry protectionism? As a working class person I can't help but think that we are being sold out for the enrichment of a very few.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
03:43 PM on 04/12/2010
Your notion that supporting local businesses will keep your community vital is agreed by many, many people, who increasingly are trying to live that philosophy. When it comes to locally produced consumer goods, there are almost no such choices left. Multi-national corporations will argue that you could not afford locally produced goods, so your standard of living went up, not down. They are right about prices. They've been extraordinarily quiet about the degradation in quality and the occasional shocking substitution (lead paint on toys, killer heparin, melamine laced pet food, etc.). We have to assume from the outcry of certain politicians every time somebody suggests tariffs -- labeling it protectionism and speaking of it as the ultimate evil -- that lobbyists have them convinced that you and I won't know the difference if wages stagnate but we can still buy lots of imported stuff. They themselves are a little perturbed that our trading partners have not employed practices that allow us to sell much to them. I have thought these notions were misguided from the beginning, but I am nobody. In the meantime, I buy as little as possible from the importers and make comments on Huffington Post.
12:18 PM on 04/12/2010
if your opponent is self destructing, why bother to point it out
11:29 AM on 04/12/2010
"Partly in need of exports"?

Please.

China is beholden on exports. And the reality is that China is facing a backlash from the EU, the US, from Latin America, Asia and even Africa.

The fact that China holds about 900 billion in US debt means zero.

It actually means that WE nhave them by the balls if we inflate our currency.
It's nice to see that the Communists realize who really controls the world economy.

OK.....all you haters on Huffpo......take your best shot at the world order (and me )...........and argue otherwise.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
11:48 AM on 04/12/2010
We have been inflating our currency big time. And the Chinese have taken quite a hit. The Euro was at parity to the dollar not that many years ago, and it is now at 1.36. a 36% decline brought to you by George W. Bush. The Chinese stuck with us during that rout or it would have been a lot worse.

The decline in the value of the dollar is the reason why the American standard of living has fallen so far compared to other countries.

China needs the US to buy its products. The US needs China to give us our fix on credit. Dealer/addict - a match made in heaven.
12:04 PM on 04/12/2010
Nobody can rule the world consistantly, learning some old wisdoms.
10:43 AM on 04/12/2010
China is interesting, they quietly move the international chess pieces around through proxies and I believe that there are thousands of non Asians, from their western territories, stirring the pot international for China

Another interesting fact is that Obama's half brother lives in China and President Hu's daughter lives in the US ... mutual hostages?
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Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
11:49 AM on 04/12/2010
There is even a branch of Democrats Abroad in Beijing. Proof positive of your hypothesis.
12:53 PM on 04/12/2010
Hay, I'm a Democrate, everybody doesn't have to walk in lock step and I don't like China. Chins with the help of big multinational corporations sucked all the jobs out of America.
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10:35 AM on 04/12/2010
If history is any guide, China's rise is temporary.
China is one of the most brutal and authoritarian regimes in the world. Such systems of government can succeed in the short term, but they eventually fall apart.
In the short term, such regimes succeed by using innovations and breakthroughs of others. Once they reach a certain level of growth, they must then innovate themselves. But, lacking the ingenuity that comes from people working in freedom, they then stagnate or decline.

China cannot forever rely on exploiting its people, by paying them nothing to produce wealth for the State or a few at the top. If they do that, they face internal turmoil. If they start sharing the wealth, they lose their biggest advantage: cheap labor.

India is on a more solid and sustainable path to economic prosperity.
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Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
11:51 AM on 04/12/2010
I would challenge your hypothesis that China is one of the most brutal and authoritarian regimes in the world. In the mid 60s, at the peak of the cultural revolution, yes. Most Chinese would laugh at you for such a statement.
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John Kennedy
12:54 PM on 04/14/2010
Without a free press, without the ability for a person to express their opinions and with the largest number of dissidents in prison in the world -your assertion that China is not oppressive and their people agree is an impossible statement.
11:55 AM on 04/12/2010
because india embraces the US economic model, india is on a solid path?

hahahahahahahaha.
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Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
11:59 AM on 04/12/2010
It is tough to have a decent economy in a tropical climate. It gets to 130 degrees there in the summer. There is a reason why all prosperous countries (except tiny Singapore) are in temperate climates. You even see the same effect in the US, with the South significantly underachieving.
10:06 AM on 04/12/2010
does us even need to be criticized anymore, given what has all happened
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chiodo08
...come off your front foot for a "change"...
10:34 AM on 04/12/2010
...good point
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
09:57 AM on 04/12/2010
The most enlightened concept I ever learned about business negotiations and relationships is that if you come away the glorious winner, celebrating how you took your opposition to the cleaners, really stuck it to those fools, absolutely cleaned the clock of those idiots -- in other words, if you are abusive in your dealings -- then your wonderful deal will somehow come undone. The contract will never be signed, or the project will be forever delayed, or the invoices will never be paid, or the assumptions will suddenly turn out to be all wrong.

China is showing signs of understanding this. Wall Street hasn't got it yet.
10:51 AM on 04/12/2010
Understand China. Promise the world, do no more than they can make you. Then you win.
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John Kennedy
09:50 AM on 04/12/2010
"Then, Liu and others directed barbs at the U.S., calling for a new financial world order and indirectly threatening that China might stop buying U.S. Treasury notes that help finance Washington's growing deficit. "

This has been referred to as the "nuclear dollar." China has threatened to stop buying our debt in the past and eventually could follow through on this action.

Nixon's opening of China, Pro-business, Republican policies have brought us to the brink of disaster. Our government has sold us out to enrich companies and fleece our country of its wealth. We have given our worst enemy all our money and now are borrowing it back. We sent millions of jobs and entire industries to China, along with technology transfers which have further strengthened our enemy and weakened us.

America may be the most stupid country in the history of the world.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
10:05 AM on 04/12/2010
The U.S. Treasury debt owed to China is "only" about $800 billion. In the grand scheme of things, they do not have us over a barrel.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
11:56 AM on 04/12/2010
Given that most of the rest of our debt is owned to the social security system they basically hold your future in their hands. If we had to pay them off the only way to do it is to print money, destroying the value of the dollar, doubling prices overnight. Mortgage interest rates would climb to 20%.

Fortunately it is not going to happen. They know better than to kill the mark.
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John Kennedy
12:46 PM on 04/14/2010
and yet if China were to stop buying our debt, the "nuclear dollar" would explode and we would be in a depression like we have never experienced in history. I would call that having us over a barrel.

China has so many financial options to destroy us that the only leverage we have is that what is bad for the USA is going to be bad for China. Sort of "nuclear dollar" detente.
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Haditup2here
8 Years of Insanity and now you're mad?
10:20 AM on 04/12/2010
I don't know about your last statement. However, we did have the most st.upid leader in the history of the world from 2000-2008.
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chiodo08
...come off your front foot for a "change"...
10:36 AM on 04/12/2010
...not only "st00pid"...but that redne*k hubris that has rooted itself as America's brand on so many levels.
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09:49 AM on 04/12/2010
China is killing themselves laughing at the dumb Americans while they poison us with the lead and other toxic substances they put in the goods they make there and ship here, tax free, thanks to Bush, to sell.

Now, after the 1978 lead ban, children are being tested for lead at the pediatricians office. Our landfills are full of toxic china crap. The stuff they make is cheap, and breaks easily and the dumps are growing out of control with their junk.
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RichieB
Science is true whether you believe it or not
10:52 AM on 04/12/2010
In addition to lead paint on toys, they put melamine in dog food, disregard US patents, engage in industrial espionage and cyber attack the pentagon on a regular basis. Many of the products they send to the US are made with what amounts to slave labor and they are the biggest polluters on earth. Somebody remind me why we continue to conduct business as usual with China.
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progressivestance84
The Right is Wrong.
12:18 PM on 04/12/2010
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$!

Nuff said.
09:31 AM on 04/12/2010
Apparently it has not occurred to many that maybe China is changing to a softer stance because that's what it always does. Not everyone wants to pick fights all the time. Politicians do what they have to do and bash other countries when they need to gain support from the right, but that doesn't mean that they will shift their policies all that much afterward.

The US media has been hyping the US-China conflict because people like to hear this sort of news. China's the country Americans love to hate because it helps them to find a target to blame. The reality is that US is in this mess because of the policy decisions made by its own politicians and not from external pressures. The recent "conflicts" are hardly news. US has been selling arms to Taiwan and supporting Tibet for decades now. China always throws a fuss and then move on. Whenever the US gets really upset, China just releases a few noted "freedom fighters" to show that it's making progress in Human Rights, and everything is all good again.

Aside from these two issues China and US has been more dependent on each other than ever before.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chuckie Corra
09:54 AM on 04/12/2010
After Mao's reign came to an end, Deng Xiaoping really turned things around, especially with the partially free market economic system.
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den1953
The best politicians are for free!
08:39 AM on 04/12/2010
It is time for the United States to set aside it's own finger pointing and figure out how it will proceed with the economic wealth of it's own country, Americans need jobs to move forward. The Chinese are well in advance of the US in research and development and this country is still fighting a civil war, the political hate and arguments are pushing this country backwards enough to give other countries the edge in technology and economic advantage! So while we fight each other over who will take advantage politically in the fall and 2010 China and countries like India are laughing at us all the way to the bank, when countries like China come calling on our debt our country will still being spewing hate and ignorance toward each other!
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chillmonster
I speak clearly for those that can't hear me.
08:27 AM on 04/12/2010
I love the naive arrogance of some posters. China's leaders are pulling their country forward by any means necessary. This change in tone is a move toward something more productive for the Chinese people, and they will continue to move forward - eventually overtaking the US if we don't figure out how to get Washington to work primarily for the benefit of the people once again.
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Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
08:31 AM on 04/12/2010
They do put country first. They tend to behave too much like republicans, who don't care what their policies do to the rest of the world. Too much me first. They are starting to realize that their newfound prosperity includes responsibility. You can't just sell and not clean up the messes.
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StJames
In absentia luci tenebrae vincunt
08:38 AM on 04/12/2010
Good Morning or evening...Amalek...To bad the U.S. never really understood what that responsibility entails.
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StJames
In absentia luci tenebrae vincunt
08:37 AM on 04/12/2010
You understand the situation!