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Washington: The US today said that it is not trying to "hold China down", despite crucial differences over issues like supplying arms to Taiwan and was trying to "manage" differences with the "global power".
Defence Secretary Robert Gates expressed his satisfaction over the level of relationship between Washington and Beijing.
"We are not trying to hold China down. China has been a great power for thousands of years. It is a global power and will be a global power," Gates told reporters travelling with him enroute to Singapore, according to a transcripts provided by the Department of Defense.
"So the question is, how we work our way through this in a way that assures that we continue to have positive relations in areas like economics and other areas that are important to both of us and manage whatever differences of view we have in the other areas?" he said.
The US is very satisfied with the progress of the relationship. "My first visit to China in this job was in the fall of 2007. I laid out a fairly ambitious agenda for developing our military-to-military relationship," he said.
We've obviously hit snags and obstacles along the way, but I think we're in a pretty good place now, pretty realistic," he said.
If anything, what all of this has sort of suggested to me is we need more of what is almost always in short supply when it comes to the United States and its government, and that is patience, that these relationships take time to develop, Gates said.
China a global power US
Defence Secretary Robert Gates expressed his satisfaction over the level of relationship between Washington and Beijing.
"We are not trying to hold China down. China has been a great power for thousands of years. It is a global power and will be a global power," Gates told reporters travelling with him enroute to Singapore, according to a transcripts provided by the Department of Defense.
"So the question is, how we work our way through this in a way that assures that we continue to have positive relations in areas like economics and other areas that are important to both of us and manage whatever differences of view we have in the other areas?" he said.
The US is very satisfied with the progress of the relationship. "My first visit to China in this job was in the fall of 2007. I laid out a fairly ambitious agenda for developing our military-to-military relationship," he said.
We've obviously hit snags and obstacles along the way, but I think we're in a pretty good place now, pretty realistic," he said.
If anything, what all of this has sort of suggested to me is we need more of what is almost always in short supply when it comes to the United States and its government, and that is patience, that these relationships take time to develop, Gates said.
China a global power US