Sunday, May 09, 2010

This Week in CQ Researcher

U.S.-China Relations by Roland Flamini,
May 7, 2010


Is a future confrontation looming?


Disputes that have bedeviled relations between the United States and China for decades flared up again following President Obama's decision to sell weapons to Taiwan and receive Tibet's revered Dalai Lama. From the U.S. perspective, China's refusal to raise the value of its currency is undermining America's – and Europe's – economic recovery.


Beijing also rebuffed Obama's proposal of "a partnership on the big global issues of our time." In addition, the Chinese insist on tackling their pollution problems in their own way, and have been reluctant to support U.S. diplomatic efforts to impose tough sanctions on nuclear-minded Iran. With the central bank of China holding more than $800 billion of the U.S. national debt in the form of Treasury notes, and their economy speeding along at a 9 percent growth rate, the Chinese are in no mood to be accommodating.


  • Is a U.S.-China partnership actually possible?
  • Is a confrontation with China inevitable, as some predict?
  • Has China's "market authoritarian" model of government emerged as an alternative to Western democracy?


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