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Top Beijing official says US views on China 'simple'

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 9, 2011
A senior Chinese official on Monday described US views of his country as "simple" and said that a Middle East-style democracy uprising would not erupt against Beijing.

Vice Premier Wang Qishan, in a rare foreign television interview during high-level talks in Washington, said that most US media did not cover China much and showed a bias when they did.

"It is not easy to really know China because China is an ancient civilization and we are of the Oriental culture," Wang told "The Charlie Rose Show" on public television, according to a transcript.

"The United States is the world's number one superpower, and the American people, they're very simple people," he said.

"If they're asked to choose to understand a foreign country, their first choice would be the European countries, and the South American countries may come second," he said.

Wang said that China's foreign ministry has frequently contacted the State Department to explain its position on protest movements.

"I don't think it is possible for events like Arab Spring to take place in China," he said.

China has rounded up dozens of writers, lawyers and other perceived critics in recent weeks amid the wave of pro-democracy uprisings in the Middle East.

It is one of China's most sweeping clampdowns on dissent since authorities in 1989 crushed student-led pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square.

Wang is in Washington for the two-day Strategic and Economic Dialogue with the United States.

Opening the talks on Monday, Vice President Joe Biden said that the United States had "vigorous disagreement" with China on human rights and encouraged respect for freedom of speech.

President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also raised human rights concerns in private meetings with Wang and Chinese State Council Dai Bingguo, US officials said.

But Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, in a joint interview with Wang on "The Charlie Rose Show," said: "We have to recognize we come from different political traditions."

"As you heard the vice president and the secretary of state say today, and you've heard the president say in the past, we convey our concerns on these issues as you'd expect us to do," he said.

"But our part of these discussions are about the broader economic and financial challenges facing the global economy," Geithner said.

Geithner, who has lived throughout Asia and speaks Mandarin, politely disagreed with Wang's characterization of Americans as simple.

"We took on this huge role in the world well ahead of the understanding of Americans about what's happening in the world, and that's changing now," Geithner said.

"You're starting to see a much greater investment by Americans in understanding, you know, not just China but all the countries that are so important to our interests," he said.

Geithner and Wang are leading their countries' delegations for the economic track of the two-day talks, while Dai and Clinton are meeting on the political side.



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The United States told China on Monday that improvements in human rights and economic reforms would serve Beijing's own interests and promised it was not seeking to contain the Asian power's rise. Launching two days of talks, Vice President Joe Biden predicted that the relationship between the world's largest economies would shape the 21st century and said: "A healthy competition, in our vie ... read more







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