William Ehrman, our Ambassador, gave a speech on 21 May at the China University of Political Science of Law in Beijing, on the role of politics and law in British society, and how it affects the relationship between China and the UK. The University is also the home of the China-EU Law School. I thought you might be interested to read the speech here. Thank you for your kind comment on the Foreign Secretary's Guardian article, John!
http://ukinchina.fco.gov.uk/en/newsroom/?view=Speech&id=18298769
Posted at 11:46 25 May 2009 by Peter Wilson | Comments[0]
Everyone can see that the conversation between these two great powers has become a more public one. Premier Wen's comments on Chinese investment in the US last Friday, at his press conference following the National People's Congress, sparked a quick reaction from President Obama, who said "not just the Chinese Government but every investor can have absolute confidence in the soundness of investments in the United States". Foreign Minister Yang was in Washington last week. Both sides sent clear signals about their desire for a strong, stable relationship. The two Presidents will meet for the first time at the London Summit. Three main things struck me in the US this time: a) optimism: this is a bad economic crisis. But there is an abiding faith in the US economy's ability to innovate, and more attention now being paid to international efforts to do the same thing. There was no interest in Government circles in playing a blame game, even when talking about global imbalances - people want to work together globally to pull the world into recovery. b) pragmatism: all those I talked to used this word to describe Adminstration policies towards global issues. People are focussed on what works. On 4 March, Prime Minister Gordon Brown made a rare address to Congress. He spoke about the economic crisis, and what needed to be done at the London Summit on 2 April: the Congressmen applauding his speech came from both sides of the aisle. c) expertise: in one block on Massachusetts Avenue, it is possible to see ten people inside of three hours, all of whom have a strong expertise in China policy, many of whom have served in recent Administrations. All of them are experts, most of them are policy makers. The openness of the US system, its ability to come up with new ideas, and the level of its expertise on China are quite remarkable. I will not forget walking into one Congressional office and hearing two US staffers (admittedly for my benefit) talking to each other in fluent Mandarin. Hard to think of other legislatures round the world where this is possible, outside China. I went to New York too. We have a big interest in increasing our co-operation with China at the UN. We do a lot of work together on the P5. We are stepping it up. Thank you for your comments. Cyril - you are right to prompt me - sorry to be such a jetlagged blogger. Alan, I agree with you that the blogosphere in China is not free. But it is freer than other forms of communication here, growing fast, and says some surprising things. The trend is clear, but the consequences are not. Your continued opinions on this are very welcome. Surat - I may be in a minority on this, and I don't have a settled view, but at the moment I am less worried about cyber-nationalism than some of my Chinese friends. This weekend's publication of a nationalist tract called Zhongguo Bu Gaoxing (China's Not Happy) shows clearly that nationalism cuts both ways - just as it does in the rest of the world.
Posted at 09:08 16 March 2009 by Peter Wilson | Comments[0]
I'm going to Washington and New York next week. The Sino-American relationship has been described by strategists on both sides as the most important bilateral relationship in the world. I want to understand it better from the US side. Now is a good time to go. One of the things that I want to talk about is growth of the internet in China. With more than 300 million people on line, China is now the most wired nation in the world - it passed the US last year, and since I started writing this blog. Over 40 million people have blogs of their own. This has a powerful effect on public opinion. As the rest of the world wants to know more about China, it is really interesting to learn more about what some people think. I also want to learn more about US public opinion on China, and how it is changing. Happy to take your ideas on this with me, so do post them, from wherever you are. If you'd rather post them in Chinese, it is easier to visit my Chinese blog, www.vipwilson.sina.com .
Posted at 08:08 27 February 2009 by Peter Wilson | Comments[4]
