China, US must find a new path, says Xi Jinping

Zee News
China, US must find a new path, says Xi Jinping Washington: Amidst hacking row and US' push in the Pacific region, President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping today discussed a host of prickly issues, including cyber security and ...

Julie Pace, Associated Press | 13/06/09 2:00 PM ET
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — President Barack Obama used an unusually lengthy and informal desert summit to present Chinese President Xi Jinping with detailed evidence of intellectual property theft emanating from his country, as a top U.S. official declared Saturday that cybersecurity is now at the “center of the relationship” between the world’s largest economies.

While there were few clear policy breakthroughs on cybersecurity, U.S. officials said Obama and Xi were in broad agreement over the need for North Korea to be denuclearized. And both countries expressed optimism that the closer personal ties forged between the two leaders during the California summit could stem the mistrust between the world powers.

Still, Obama’s national security adviser Tom Donilon said resolving cybersecurity issues would be “key to the future” of the relationship.

Obama told Xi that “if it’s not addressed, if it continues to be this direct theft of United States property, that this was going to be very difficult problem in the economic relationship and was going to be an inhibitor to the relationship really reaching its full potential,” Donilon said during a briefing with reporters following the summit.

June 08, 2013 |Reuters
RANCHO MIRAGE, California (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, called on North Korea to get rid of its nuclear weapons and agreed not to recognize the North as a nuclear-armed state, Obama's national security adviser said on Saturday.

"They agreed that North Korea has to denuclearize, that neither country will accept North Korea as a nuclear-armed state and that we would work together to deepen cooperation and dialogue to achieve denuclearization," Thomas Donilon told reporters after two days of informal talks in California.

  

 

 
 






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    China's ascension onto the world stage as a world power is causing the United States and other nations to develop new strategies and adaptations as trading partners. Those nations that become knowledgeable on "all things China" will be able to relate, react, invest and profit, from trade with China and other emerging countries such as India and Pakistan. Careful planning and austerity practices will be absolutely necessary. "Austerity practices" will have to include a revamp of Employer-Union Agreements, which make it hard for U. S. manufacturers to compete with other nations.
"ALL THINGS CHINA"
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