|
Increasing US exports key to trade balance
|
Experts insisted that the way to balance Sino-US trade was not to
reduce China's exports but to increase US exports to China.
2005 is witnessing rapid growth in exports and imports between
China and the United States.
According to China General Administration of Customs, two-way
trade between the two countries climbed 25.6 per cent year-on-year to
US$153.5 billion in the first nine months this year and the United
States remains China's second largest trade partner.
Behind ...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Symposium.(China's military build up and the United States)(Statistical Data Included)
Insight on the News
; Q: Is China's rapid military buildup threatening U.S. interests in East Asia? YES: China's propensity for settling disputes with the use of force poses a direct threat to U.S. interests in the region. LARRY M. WORTZEL China's policies on weapons proliferation--the supplying of missiles, weapons of
|
|
symposium.(Kenneth R. Timmerman and Mark A. Groombridge discuss United States relations with China)
Insight on the News
; Q: Has Clinton's China policy put U.S. national security at risk? Yes: Under lax export controls and reckless sharing of information, Clinton/Gore have armed a new enemy. When Bill Clinton and A1 Gore came to power in January 1993, the United States was at the apex of its power. The People's
|
|
HKW: Olympic women's ice hockey: United States 12 China 1
AAP Sports News (Australia)
; 00-00-0000 HKW: Olympic women's ice hockey: United States 12 China 1 United States 12 China 1 United States: 3 - 5 - 4 - 12 China: 0 - 1 - 0 - 1 1st period Goals - United States (Granato assist. Wendell, assist. Darwitz) 01:19; United States (Looney assist. Bailey, assist. Baker) 07:04; United
|
|
A strong China: is the United States ready?
Brookings Review
; East Asians don't know quite what to make of China these days. Their expanding involvement in China's rapidly growing economy is making them rich. But it is also helping to make China strong. Leaders in Beijing are already claiming border areas and offshore islands with a new assertiveness and
|
|
symposium.(relations between China and the United States)
Insight on the News
; Q: Would a modernized Chinese military threaten the United States? Yes: China's new weapons growth could be deflected by a U.S. military buildup in Asia. As a battered American surveillance plane is being stripped on a Chinese runway, its American crew being held hostage for further American
|
|
How to talk to China.(United States-China relations)
The Nation
; Now that the Clinton Administration has at last landed its own ambassador in Beijing--former Tennessee Senator James Sasser--it appears to be cautiously reconsidering U.S.-China policy. One of the things that has long bedeviled Sino-U.S. relations is Washington's chronic indecisiveness about
|
|
U.S. urges China to clean up its act on human rights The United States will speak out even when it makes friends and allies uncomfortable
Chicago Sun-Times
; The other day Secretary of State Colin Powell said that relations between the United States and China have never been better. This is a major accomplishment for President Bush and his emissaries. At the beginning of the Bush administration, our relations with China were chilly indeed. In April
|
|
Wayne Bert. The United States, China and Southeast Asian Security: A Changing of the Guard?(Book Review)
China Review International
; Wayne Bert. The United States, China and Southeast Asian Security: A Changing of the Guard? New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. 272 pp. Hardcover $75.00, ISBN 0-333-99565-1. The author of this text reminds us that one of the most important debates in American foreign relations is the policy toward
|
|
WILLIAM J. CLINTON PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES WEBWIRE-DELIVERS REMARKS ON U.S.-CHINA RELATIONS AT THE VOICE OF AMERICA
Washington Transcript Service
; 00-00-0000 PRESIDENT CLINTON DELIVERS REMARKS ON U.S.-CHINA RELATIONS AT THE VOICE OF AMERICA OCTOBER 24, 1997 Elapsed Time 00:00, Eastern Time 14:48 SPEAKER: WILLIAM J. CLINTON, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES CLINTON: Thank you. (APPLAUSE) Thank you very much. Thank you very much, Ambassador
|
|
'The United States also sells weapons': China's president sees a double standard. (Yang Shang-kun on U.S-Chinese relations, includes excerpts from interview with Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin) (interview)
U.S. News & World Report
; ... met this month in Beijing's Great Hall of the People with U.S. News Editor-in-chief Mortimer B. Zuckerman, Contributing Editor Emily ... secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, recently met with U.S. News in Beijing's Zhongnanhai leadership compound. Excerpts from his ...
|