Friday, December 3, 2010

China Marches to the Beat of Their Own Drummer

American politicians have been trying for years of work, China will abide by the United States, but China has more resistance, acting in their interest to Helene Cooper, The New York Times.

"A key element of U.S. relations with China is becoming a question, that is, at its heart, an impossible conundrum: How is he moved to Beijing that its leaders do not think they are good for for their country, "they wrote.

Not only are desperate for China's cooperation on many foreign policy issues such as nuclear proliferation in Iran and North Korea's aggression against its southern neighbor, but also a number of economic issues in the United States.

Since Obama administration took office, officials have tried to use pressure China to change its currency, the agreement more or less, on coal export controls and better protection of intellectual property - anything that China has resisted.

"Beijing has been reluctant to let its currency rise, as the yuan is cheap economy based on exporting difficult race," wrote Cooper. "China has been reluctant to harsh sanctions against the nuclear ambitions of Iran's execution, allowing access to Iranian oil and gas to fuel its growth. Beijing wants no carbon dioxide emissions curbs because of its ability to hundreds of millions of people in the elevator of the middle class in the coming years can be connected directly to the increased use of energy. "

China has always acted in the interest, but is stronger now that rival the United States as one of the largest superpower in the world. Not militarily or economically powerful as the United States, China is about or has already passed the U.S. in several key categories, including production and investment in clean energy technologies.

And China has stuck to his new position with the United States in the eyes. At the recent Summit of the G-20, U.S. officials hoped that other Member States to persuade China to exert pressure on trade balance better and stop manipulating its currency. Instead, rounded up enough support to give China, the United States to protect a language in its policy of quantitative easing.

"You do the background, the U.S. China, which the U.S. wants to do," said Rodger Baker, vice president of strategic intelligence at Stratfor, a firm geopolitical risk analysis. "We want to ensure that it remains the world as the U.S. wants to see the world. This means that China make us slaves, in some cases.

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