2009-09-24 | Administration's Vision of the U.S.-China Relationship
Administration's Vision of the U.S.-China Relationship
September 24, 2009
DEPUTY SECRETARY STEINBERG: Well, thank you, Nate, for that kind introduction.
It’s
a great pleasure to be back and to be here at this CNAS event. It’s
great to see, although I had no doubt about it, that CNAS is still
thriving despite the Obama Administration’s best efforts to deprive you
of each and every one of your leading lights. And every meeting I go to
seems to be populated by so many of the good people – not only Kurt and
Michele, obviously, but Jim Miller and so many others who made CNAS so
successful, and the really remarkable achievement in such a short
period of time that CNAS has become an indispensable feature on the
Washington landscape, no mean feat with the number of competitors that
you all have out here, including some that I used to work for. And I
think that this study that you’re launching today really is a
reflection of the continued critical role that CNAS plays in creative
and timely work that you do.
Obviously, as everyone in this
audience knows, and we will be seeing a lot of it in the coming week or
so, this year marks the 60th anniversary of the founding of
the People’s Republic of China, which, of course, is part of the reason
you scheduled this event now. As we think back on those 60 years, for
about half of them – for about 30 – the relationship between the United
States was not exactly the best, ranging from hostile at its worst, to
nonexistent through much of the time.
And so in some ways,
from a policymaker’s perspective and from a U.S. perspective, the more
significant and momentous anniversary is not so much the 60 years since
the founding of the PRC, but the 30 years since the United States and
China normalized relations under President Carter and Deng Xiaoping in
1979. And I think it’s not entirely coincidental that if you look for a
date, that you could roughly time the rise of China and its remarkable
transformation – it’s about that time as well that the rise began –
part of which having to do with the bilateral relationship and
obviously largely to do with decisions China made about its own
internal developments.
I think it’s fair to say that
despite – I know, the great ambitions and hopes of Kurt and Michele, I
don’t think even they, perhaps, would have guessed how far CNAS has
come. And in the same way, I think those who were present in 1979
probably could not imagine how far China has come in those 30 years.
It’s really truly a remarkable story. And for those of us who have been
visiting China over the years, it’s just amazing, each time you visit,
how much change you see happening right before our eyes.
It
is a remarkable period to reflect back on and the decisions that were
made during that period and the transformation of the U.S.-China
relationship, and the great insight that began with President Nixon and
followed through by President Carter was the fundamental recognition
that the long-term interests of the United States were better served
not by trying to thwart China’s ambitions, but rather to explore the
possibility of whether China could become a partner with the United
States. And while the motivations for those decisions in the 1970s were
largely rooted in the dynamics of the Cold War, when we were focused on
getting Chinese help encountering the Soviet Union, it is even more
important in today’s reality that we recall that basic insight.
Secretary
Clinton described that reality recently in her Council on Foreign
Relations speech as a reality characterized by two inescapable facts,
and I’m quoting her: “First, no nation can meet the world’s challenges
alone,” and “Second, most nations worry about the same global threats.”
In
this world, and under those circumstances, the logic of international
cooperation is overwhelming. Countries have a great deal to gain if we
can work together, and much to lose if we don’t. But applying this
insight to our relations with China poses a fundamental conundrum.
Given China’s growing capabilities and influence, we have an especially
compelling need to work with China to meet global challenges. Yet
China’s very size and importance also raises the risk of competition
and rivalry that can thwart that cooperation.
Now, you all
know I’m a part-time academic and so I can’t resist this part of the
speech, but historians since Thucydides have pointed to a long string
of conflicts generated by the emergence of rising powers that disturb
the old order and challenge the existing power structure and predict
the same gloomy future for China’s rise. Political scientists and IR
theorists talk darkly of security dilemmas that lead nations to take
actions to protect their own security against potential adversaries,
and that, by taking those actions, fuel the very conflicts they were
hoping to avert.
These academic perspectives obviously have
strong resonance in the political debates we hear not only in the
United States, but in China today. So how do we square this circle?
Adapting to the rise of China, as well as other emerging powers like
India and Brazil, while protecting our own national interests. This, I
believe, is one of the key strategic challenges of our time. And the
key to solving it is what I would call strategic reassurance.
Strategic
reassurance rests on a core, if tacit, bargain. Just as we and our
allies must make clear that we are prepared to welcome China’s
“arrival”, as you all have so nicely put it, as a prosperous and
successful power, China must reassure the rest of the world that its
development and growing global role will not come at the expense of
security and well-being of others. Bolstering that bargain must be a
priority in the U.S.-China relationship. And strategic reassurance must
find ways to highlight and reinforce the areas of common interest,
while addressing the sources of mistrust directly, whether they be
political, military or economic.
Now part of this
reassurance comes from sustained dialogue. It’s important to recall,
and Secretary Kissinger just reminded me of it a few days ago, that we
began the new era of our relationship with China with some 25 hours of
extended dialogue between Henry Kissinger and Zhou Enlai. And the
importance of broad-ranging dialogue is at the core of our decision to
elevate and broaden the strategic and economic dialogue between the
United States and China. Part of achieving strategic reassurance comes
from enhancing transparency.
But if our efforts are truly
to be successful, they must go beyond words to actions that reassure.
We must each take specific steps to address and allay each other’s
concerns. The first eight months of the Obama Administration, building
on the important efforts of our predecessors – and I want to stress the
importance of continuity in the U.S.-China relationship, which has
brought us to this very important stage today – have provided solid
evidence that there is a reason to believe that this approach can bear
fruit.
When Secretary Clinton traveled to China in February
on her first trip as Secretary of State, she set out to demonstrate our
commitment to this objective. When President Obama and President Hu met
on the margins of the London G-20 in April, they pledged to work
together to build a positive, cooperative, and comprehensive
relationship for the 21st century. And we have seen in the
subsequent meetings, including just the other day in New York and in
the President’s planned visit to China, our determination to sustain
this momentum.
Now the global financial crisis has offered
a clear example – both the importance of the United States and China
working together and the real benefits that come from that cooperation.
China and the United States have implemented the two largest stimulus
packages in history – coordinating them with one another and with other
governments around the globe. And as China leads the way with renewed
growth, the good news is not just that we are seeing the beginnings of
a turnaround in much of the world, but we are also beginning to see a
new effort to find greater global structures to assure that this
doesn’t happen again. Just as we have said about getting our own house
in order, China understands that it too must play its part by becoming
a more important source of global consumption. There is a common
commitment to putting growth on a stronger foundation, and we’ll see
this in the discussions in Pittsburgh.
Of course, this
effort takes more than just the combined efforts of the United States
and China, and that’s why our global cooperation is so important. But
without the United States and China working together effectively, the
prospects of success would be much dimmer. We’re building towards the
same kind of cooperation on addressing climate change, driven by the
knowledge that the United States and China are the two biggest emitters
of greenhouse gases. We in the United States acknowledge our historic
responsibility for the emissions that have created the dangers of
climate change, the indispensability of our taking strong actions here
at home, and the need to accommodate China and other developing
countries’ legitimate development goals.
At the same time,
China is increasingly acknowledging that it must find a way to mitigate
the climate effects of its continued development. A memorandum of
understanding signed at the Strategic and Economic Dialogue
demonstrated a joint commitment to expanding cooperation on low carbon
growth and forging a successful international agreement on climate
change, a task that we will pursue together in Copenhagen. And the
statements of both President Obama and President Hu at the UN Climate
Summit, I think, reinforced this sense of mutual commitment.
Our
cooperation has also been an essential in forging a common front in
response to North Korea’s recent missile and nuclear tests. Working
with our partners in the Six-Party Talks, we forged a unified position
leading to a presidential statement after the missile test, and UN
Security Council Resolution 1874 following the nuclear test. And since
the adoption of that resolution, we have worked effectively together to
implement strong measures, which we hope will lead to a resumption of
Six-Party Talks and the North Koreans’ recommitment to complete
denuclearization.
Now, it will be important for us to
demonstrate the same possibility of cooperation in dealing with Iran’s
nuclear programs through the P5+1. China has also played an active role
in fostering security and stability along its western border in
Pakistan and Afghanistan, and I’m not just talking about the economic
investments that China has made, such as the Aynak copper mine. It’s
also played a role in training Afghans as well as Iraqis to diffuse
landmines, and helping to work to encourage the Pakistan Government to
step up its efforts against dangerous extremists.
China is
demonstrating its willingness to play a constructive role in securing
the global commons by contributing its destroyers to anti-piracy
efforts off the Horn of Africa.
We’ve worked together to
address the threat of transnational terrorism, and China has begun to
do more to support the international nonproliferation regime, starting
by joining the Nuclear Suppliers Group. We continue to work and
encourage China to enhance export controls and other measures, but it
is clear that in recent years, China is increasingly sharing our
concerns and beginning to assume greater responsibility for addressing
them.
Now, this growing list of areas of cooperation is
impressive. But it is important that we neither overlook nor downplay
the continued areas of mistrust and disagreement, many of which are
highlighted in the volume that CNAS is launching today.
Reassurance
is especially critical when it comes to military activities. I think
it’s timely that I came in just after the few words I heard of the
previous panel. As China’s economy has grown and its global interests
have expanded, its military spending has quite naturally increased, and
its capabilities have been extended at sea, in the air, and in space.
And in some cases, these enhanced capabilities have been coupled with
actions, such as China’s over-broad assertion of its rights in the
EEZs, that have caused the United States and China’s neighbors to
question China’s intentions.
While China, like any nation,
has the right to provide for its security, its capabilities and its
actions also heighten its responsibility to reassure others that this
buildup does not present a threat. That we have restarted high-level
military-to-military dialogues is a positive step. And I’m hopeful that
this will allow us to help resolve some of the ongoing tensions, for
example, with respect to the South China Sea and the PLA Navy’s
activities. These discussions between us must be stable and ongoing,
not a stop-and-start conversation easily derailed by disagreement.
We
also are urging China to increase its military transparency in order to
reassure all the countries in the rest of Asia and globally about its
intentions, averting instability and tension in its own neighborhood.
We’re encouraged by the positive dialogue between China and Taiwan, and
we encourage both China and Taiwan to explore confidence-building steps
that will lead to closer ties and greater stability across the Taiwan
Strait.
The risks of mistrust are especially acute in the
arena of strategic nuclear weapons, space, and increasingly in the
cyber realm. Achieving mutual reassurance in these areas is
challenging, but as we learned during the Cold War, essential to
avoiding potentially catastrophic rivalry and misunderstanding. Both
sides need to devote creative thinking in how we might address these
thorny challenges.
Resource competition is another area of
concern. With its rapid growth and large population, China’s demand for
resources, whether oil, gas, or minerals, is surging, but resource
mercantilism is not the appropriate response. China’s moves in that
direction have raised legitimate concern not only in the United States,
but also among our other partners and among resource-rich developing
nations.
The problem is not just that China’s mercantilist
approach disrupts markets; it also leads China to problematic
engagement with actors like Iran, Sudan, Burma, and Zimbabwe, and
undermines the perception of China as a country interested in
contributing to regional stability and humanitarian goals.
The
United States and China share an interest in stable and sustainable
energy supplies. And far from seeing China as a competitor, we’re eager
to enlist China to help in developing well-functioning markets and
bolstering our common energy security in the years ahead. China must,
in turn, demonstrate that it will be a constructive participant in its
efforts rather than seeking to secure its own energy needs at the
expense of others.
Another area of frequent tension is our
economic relationship. Our two-way trade and investment has benefited
both of us enormously, and we both depend on it for our growth and
prosperity. At the same time, it does create tension and
misunderstanding. But that is why we have placed our economic
relationship so central in our dialogue. And we’re making progress, for
example, on a bilateral investment treaty while China takes steps to
become a constructive member of the global economic architecture,
including its membership in the WTO.
I want to say something
about the recent dispute about tires. That dispute highlights some of
the risks of our economic relationship, and there’s been no shortage of
commentary warning of spiraling economic nationalism and a coming trade
war. But it also is clear that this is a worst-case scenario, which is
far from inevitable. We do disagree with the Chinese Government on the
substance of this issue, which is why the President reached his
decision, and we followed that decision with the imposition of a
tariff.
But the important point is this all took place
within the WTO framework accepted by the United States and China, as
well as our own bilateral understandings. And I am convinced that both
sides are intent on making sure that this particular disagreement does
not spark a trade war or widespread protectionism. And if we succeed,
it will be because we have established well designed avenues of
cooperation and dialogue that allow us to handle these disputes in a
broader context.
Now, some say that human rights have nothing
to do with our strategic relationship, and therefore doesn’t belong in
the list that I’m discussing today. Indeed, some in China have even
argued that our interest in human rights and ethnic minorities and
religious freedom is designed to weaken China and so inconsistent with
the basic bargain I’ve been talking about. But I couldn’t disagree more.
Of
course we stand up for human rights because, as President Obama has
said, it is who we are as a people. But we also believe that a China
that respects the rule of law and universal norms provides reassurance
to others that it will bring the same approach to its international
behavior, as well as providing greater stability and growth for its own
people.
Now, strategic reassurance does not only apply to
the relationship between China and the United States. Our partners,
particularly in Asia, must have the same certainty that China’s
expanding role will not come at the expense of their interests. And
this not only requires that the United States bolster its own bilateral
relationships, especially with key allies like Japan, South Korea and
Australia, but also that we lead in updating and strengthening the
regional and international institutions that shape the context in which
China’s development occurs, so that change is constructive rather than
destabilizing.
In what President Obama calls this new era
of engagement, we are refining and reinforcing regional cooperation in
Asia, which is why Secretary Clinton recently announced our accession
to the ASEAN Treaty of Amity and Cooperation. And along with developing
new forums for regional dialogue and cooperation, we will stay
committed to our key alliances. They are consistent with a vision of a
peaceful, stable Asia that we and China share.
When it
comes to the international system, we must ensure that new powers like
China – and there are others as well, of course – can take their
rightful place at the table without generating fear or mistrust. That
means making the institutions more inclusive so that they reflect the
world of today, rather than the world of 1945 or the 1970s, and more
effective so that we can collectively overcome the problems of
interdependence. As we pursue these policies, we will be open to
China’s growing role, but we will also be looking for signs and signals
of reassurance from China. If China is going to take its rightful
place, it must make those signals clear.
In the face of
uncertainty, policymakers in any government tend to prepare for the
worst to focus on the potential threat down the road, and of course,
some of that is necessary. But we also have to make sure that by
preparing for the worst, we don’t foreclose positive outcomes; that we
leave ourselves open to the positive, and avoid the trap of
self-fulfilling fears. Your volume quotes my predecessor Rich Armitage,
“Nobody, including the leadership with China knows how it’s going to
come out. If it comes out badly, this is bad for us; if it comes out
well, it can benefit all of us. And that’s what we must dedicate
ourselves to.” A wise man, that Deputy Secretary. (Laughter.)
And
as President Obama said at the opening of the SE&D*, “I believe in
a future where China is a strong, prosperous and successful member of
the community of nations, a future where our nations are partners, not
out of necessity, but also out of opportunity. This future is not
fixed, but it is a destination that can be reached if we pursue a
sustained dialogue like the one that you and we will commence today,
and act on what we hear and what we learn.”
We in the Obama
Administration will uphold the United States’ side of this bargain. We
are ready to accept a growing role for China on the international
stage, and in many areas, we have already embraced it. China too needs
to demonstrate the same commitment to doing its part – reassuring the
United States, its neighbors in Asia, and the rest of the world that we
have nothing to fear from a more influential China, that Beijing shares
our vision of a new geopolitics of win-win solutions rather than
zero-sum rivalries. With such strategic reassurance and a shared
commitment to building an international system based on mutual trust, I
have no doubt that we can succeed in our common interests, not just in
common actions, and that will be a great benefit to us all. Thanks for
your time, and I look forward to your questions. (Applause.)
MODERATOR: Secretary Steinberg has graciously allowed to take – has graciously agreed to take a few questions. So we can start.
Yes, sir.
QUESTION:
Thank you. I’m Kumar (ph) from Amnesty, International. Thank you,
Ambassador, for mentioning human rights, which is a rarity* in
Washington. My question to you is that President Obama has planned to
visit China in a couple of months. What role will human rights play in
that visit? Thanks.
Deputy Secretary Steinberg:
Well, I – obviously, the specifics of the schedule is something that
the President and his team is still working on, but I think he made
clear in the speech that he gave to the – our Chinese counterparts at
the Strategic and Economic Dialogue that this is an issue which he
believes belongs centrally to our relationship, and I’m confident that
he will address it while he’s there as well. I think he’s indicated
very strongly that he thinks that having a full relationship with China
requires us to address these issues. We’ve been pleased that in
connection with the SE&D*, that China has agreed to move forward on
the human rights dialogue that we have, and we will continue to address
the full range of issues there.
So without being able to be
specific about the concrete activities that will take place, I’m sure
that you’re going to hear the President be very clear about our
perspective on that, as he did here in Washington.
MODERATOR: Yes, sir.
QUESTION:
Hi. Could you – Barry Schweid of AP – could you elaborate a bit,
please, on China increasingly sharing our concern, I think you said,
about the Iran situation? Or did I misunderstand you?
DEPUTY SECRETARY STEINBERG:
You did. But – well, I’ll – what I said was that I hope that the same
spirit that they brought to our cooperation on North Korea will be
manifested in how we deal with the P5+1. I do think that we’ve had very
productive conversations with the Chinese about it. This was an
important topic in the President’s bilateral discussions with President
Hu in New York. And I think the Chinese understand the dangers
associated with China’s – with Iran’s pursuit of its nuclear program.
Right
now, we’re all focused on exploring what Iran is prepared to offer
through this dialogue, and we will continue to talk with China, as well
as the other parties in the P5+1, about both how we hope to move
forward on the positive side, if Iran is willing to engage in
substantive dialogue, and what steps we will need to take if it’s not.
But thank you, Barry, and good to see you.
MODERATOR: Yes, sir.
QUESTION:
I just want to follow up on that. Chris Nelson, Nelson Report. On North
Korea, from the conversations you’ve had in the last week or so, there
was some noise out of Beijing – about a week – that Kim Jong-il said,
yeah, I’m coming back to the Six-Party Talks, and sure, I’m going to
talk about denuclearization.
What elaboration, if any, have
you been able to get from the Chinese? Do they take that seriously? Are
there conditions involved that make it a meaningless offer? Can you
give us a sense of what have you heard in the past week and what the
North Korean intentions really are? Thank you.
DEPUTY SECRETARY STEINBERG:
Chris, I think what we’ve heard as – at least in terms of statements by
the North, is some suggestion that they may be willing to pursue that
path. But I think we’re at the stage where what we’re interested in is
what they’re actually prepared to do, as opposed to what they say
they’re prepared to do. And we are in the process of finishing our
consultations among the other five as to just how to pursue finding out
what the North Koreans’ intentions are.
I think one of the
things that has been very clear, both from the discussions in New York
and from Ambassador Bosworth’s visit to the region, is that, first of
all, there’s a very strong consensus about what we’re trying to
achieve, both in terms of process and in terms of result, that all of
us agree that we want to get back into a process that is focused on the
Six-Party Talks, that this needs to involve all of the key countries of
the region.
And second, that the objective of these talks are
complete denuclearization of North Korea, and that we want to see this
move forward in way that doesn’t create the kinds of problems we’ve
seen in the past where there have been steps taken and undone that
failed to make progress on the goals that we’re trying to achieve.
I
think we also have a pretty clear consensus among us about how to begin
to explore that, and I hope, in the coming days, that we’ll be able to
say a little bit more detail about how we plan to pursue this. I will
be in the region myself next week and talking to our partners in China,
Japan, and South Korea about this as well.
MODERATOR: Yes, sir.
QUESTION:
Thank you. Dana Marshall with Dewey & LeBoeuf. There’s a lot of
discussion, of course, in Pittsburgh now about the need to rebalance
various economic trends and the imbalances that we’ve seen; commitment,
apparently, on the part of China to stimulate their own domestic
economy, do something about the imbalanced trade picture. I wonder how
– if you could characterize what you think their degree of commitment
is, and what sort of milestones – if any, what metrics might the
Administration use to judge performance, not only of their commitment,
but ours, and the other of the G-20?
DEPUTY SECRETARY STEINBERG:
Well, I’d hate to put it in terms of specific metrics. But I think that
there are lots of ways of looking at the full range of tools that are
available to the Chinese Government in terms of the way it manages its
economy – fiscal policy, monetary policy, and the like – that reflect
an overall strategy – and trade policy, including how they deal with
rules governing exports, tariffs, export provisions and the like – that
would reflect their overall approach to changing the focus from
export-driven to a more balanced strategy for growth.
And so
I don’t think there’s any single metric that you’d look for. But I
think if you take the suite of economic tools, of economic management
tools that a country like China can apply, and look at how they’re
adjusting them, it’s pretty – it will be pretty clear as to whether
they are designed to focus more on domestic consumption and using the
tools that would support economic – domestic economic growth, as
opposed to strategies that are focused on exports. And I think we’ve
had a productive discussion with them about what those things are. I
don’t think it’s necessary that we want them to do a specific one, so
much as to look at the suite of tools that are available that lead to
that rebalancing.
MODERATOR: We have time for two more. Yes, in the back.
QUESTION:
(Inaudible) with CTI TV of Taiwan. Mr. Secretary, you said that the
U.S. is encouraged by the relaxation of tension across the Taiwan
Strait. But would the improvement in cross-strait relationship – has
any impact on the U.S. decision whether or not to continue to sell
weapons to Taiwan, like the F-16 CDs? Taiwan has an argument, because
by buying those weapons and proceeding from a position of strength, it
will feel more at ease to open up more relationship with the Chinese
mainland. Thank you.
DEPUTY SECRETARY STEINBERG: Well,
as you know, and almost everybody in this audience knows as well as I
do, that the metric for our decisions about arms sales is very clear,
and it’s set forth in the Taiwan Relations Act, which is that we are
committed to help support Taiwan meet its legitimate defense needs. So
obviously, as we make decisions about arms sales, we assess, together
with our friends in Taiwan, what those needs are. And that’s the basis
on which we do it. It’s – there’s no single answer to it, but it is a
very straightforward calculation. And so as we look at the overall
security environment, we make the judgments about what is necessary for
Taiwan to provide for those security needs, and that’s the framework on
which we’re going to do it.
MODERATOR: And our last question.
QUESTION:
Hi. My name is (inaudible) from Chinese Embassy here in Washington.
Just now, you mentioned that one of the – maybe the irritant will be
the resources competition. In that context, you also mentioned
particularly China’s relations with quite a few countries, which it
happened to be the case U.S. is not very happy with them, or you are
not getting along well with them. But the point, actually, for China is
we have overall partnership relations, and with every country we like
to be partners. So actually, you have – you don’t very happy to see the
relations with China with those countries is not China’s problem, and
you should sort it out.
The other points I’d like to make,
actually, is this will put China in a position that will have more
potential to cooperate with the United States to address --
MODERATOR: Sir, could you put a question mark on the end, perhaps?
QUESTION: The question, actually is --
DEPUTY SECRETARY STEINBERG: I’ll make a comment anyway.
(Laughter.)
QUESTION:
Yeah. The question is: Don’t you think U.S. has a role to play in help
China to get more access to resources by, for example, opening your
market doors* for more Chinese investment? Thank you.
DEPUTY SECRETARY STEINBERG: Let
me address the first part, and then the second. I think – we are going
to have disagreements about global strategies and how to – what is the
right mix of carrots and sticks in some places and how to deal with
problematic countries.
My point here is that what we would –
we’d like to discourage China from getting in a position where it sees
its resource needs driving China to take a position which it might not
otherwise do if not dependent on them. And what’s common about the
countries that I identified was that in each case, China does have
significant resource interests there. And so it’s hard to disentangle
whether China’s strategy is driven by its genuine view that this is the
best way to influence countries, which we may disagree about, but it’s
a legitimate disagreement, as opposed to protecting its interest in
equity and mercantilist interest in those economies.
And so
what we would hope to do is disentangle those interests from our
broader discussion about how to deal with a problem like Sudan. And to
be fair, I think in both the case of Sudan, and maybe to a lesser but
not zero extent, of the case of Burma, I do think we’ve had some
constructive relations. And I think that China has increasingly
recognized that it’s in its own interest to work with the rest of the
international community to deal with the crisis in Darfur, to deal with
the humanitarian situation in Sudan, to support the CPA between the
North and South in Sudan and the like. And I do think there’s been
improvement in our own bilateral engagement over those issues. But
that’s my core point, is that it would be important for China to not
allow its resource strategy to unduly influence its broader interest in
global and regional stability.
In terms of access to
markets, yes, I think that it is important for us all to find a way,
because we believe, in the long run, that the most effective tools for
dealing with energy security are open, free-functioning markets for all
of us to work together. We have an interest in not seeing oligopolist
suppliers control the markets, and we have an interest in making sure
that we, as consumers, can see those markets function effectively.
There
have been specific issues that we’ve had, and we can debate the
specific merits about the way in which, particularly, when there are
Chinese state-owned investments, as to whether those investments meet
market tests. But I think the broad point you make, I think, is one
that we would agree to, which is that if we want China to be supportive
of market-based approaches to energy, that we should encourage China to
participate in those global energy markets and facilitate that.
Okay. Thank you.
(Applause.)