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Yale. Chinese President Hu
Jintao assured the audience at Yale University,
that his nation's rapid economic development was
not a threat to the United States and that the two
countries' shared strategic interests should
inevitably make them partners.
3.
Editor's Note
/ In
repeated his remarks as he left with Gates, Hu said
China would work to "protect intellectual property
rights," a reference to software and film piracy, a
major U.S.-China trade sticking point. Bootleg
versions of Windows and major Hollywood films are
widely available in China.
Mr Hu's party
career began to take off after Deng's rise to power
in the late 1970s. He was one of several young
administrators promoted rapidly because of their
performance or
patrons. FOR
MORE GATES DINNER STORY
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1.
Feature Story / 18th
Week May, 2006 / NEW HAVEN, Conn.
--
Chinese President Hu Jintao
in his
speech at Yale said, "There is a perception here,
(U.S) -- that China is a threat to America, but
that is not true and good relations are very
important to each
other."
Hong
Kong
Triad
/
"Jockey Club"
RadioPlayMusic
The measage Hu talked about to the business leaders
in Seattle were repeated. He talked about "win-win
outcomes" in joint ventures in China, and how his
country's economic development lifted markets
around the
world.
He spoke about China's consistent 9% annual growth
over two decades that had lifted millions of its
1.3 billion people out of
poverty.
But in an effort to downplay the power of the
surging economy as Beijing holds a growing trade
surplus with the U.S., he noted that China's
per-capita gross domestic product was about $1,700
and that his country did not rank in the world's
top 100.
"China's development will not compromise the
interests of other nations, nor will China's
development threaten anyone," he said.
Hu asserted that China's attention was focused not
on exercising influence on world affairs, but on
the internal struggle to resolve imbalances between
wealthy urban centers and poor rural areas and
maintain "social harmony."
"We need to concentrate our energy and resources on
resolving those problems, and that's why we hope to
see a peaceful international environment," he
said.
Ma Ling, author of a 2002 biography stated that,
"Hu is a very cautious person made more meticulous
by his years of work inside the [Communist]
Party."
Foreign Ministry officials privately say they
understand the enormous dividends a good public
impression can yield in a democracy in which
Congress is heavily influenced by public
opinion.
Yale was his last stop on a four-day visit to the
United States before heading on to Saudi Arabia.
was meant to quell Washington's concerns about
China's burgeoning trade surplus and growing
political muscle, as well as build business
ties.
His speech to an audience of about 600 students and
professors was also broadcast live in China except
for a brief question-and-answer session in which Hu
was asked whether Beijing views the United States
as an ally or adversary, and if China's economic
development comes at the cost of political
rights.
Hu answered that China would open its political
system gradually and "prudently," but that the
decades of booming growth "demonstrated that
China's political system suits its
development."
Hu, 63, did not directly address issues that were
the focus of his Thursday meeting with President
Bush: China's trade imbalance with the U.S., the
value of Beijing's currency and its reluctance to
press Iran to rein in its nuclear program. But he
portrayed America and China as equals and allies,
and seemed to answer Bush's call for China to
become a responsible "stakeholder" in world
affairs.
"Both China and the United States are of
significant influence in the world," he said. "Our
two countries must not only become stakeholders,
but should also become partners in constructive
cooperation."
The audience at Yale, Bush's alma mater and the
university that played host to America's first
Chinese graduate in 1854, was receptive and
polite.
Hu was a guest Tuesday night for dinner at the home
of Gates and his wife, Melinda, on Lake Washington.
Gregoire was the official host of the event, which
was attended by about 100 people. Some guests paid
$20,000 for two invitations, with proceeds used to
defray security costs and other expenses for Hu's
visit. Among invitees who did not need to pony up
were former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
FOR
MORE GATES DINNER
STORY
In the past, Chinese leader, Deng XioPing warmed
American hearts by donning a cowboy, danced the
hula and belting out renditions of "O Sole Mio,"
helping soften an impression of robot-like
communist
officials.
Close followers of Chinese politics can now vouch
for Hu Jintao performance in America, the man who
took over as Party leader in 2002 and is now
president and military chief as well.
He served in key posts in some of China's poorest
and most remote provinces, including Tibet and
Guizhou. FOR
MORE STORY AND TIMELINE.
FOR
MORE STORY AND TIMELINE.
Josie
Cory
Publisher/Editor
TVI Magazine
TVI
Magazine, tviNews.net, YES90, Your Easy Search,
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Chinese President Hu Jintao Successful Yale
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Students and Skeptics. Assures U.S. China Expo
Businessmen in Final Talk before Flying to Saudi
Arabia for Talks.
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Convergence - 17th Week of 2006 Spring
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