U.S. Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns on U.S.-China Relations

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2024
  • NEW YORK, June 6, 2024 - Ambassador Nicholas Burns delivers remarks on the state of U.S.-China relations and discusses related issues with Orville Schell, vice president and Arthur Ross director of the Asia Society Center’s on U.S.-China Relations. (58 min., 56 sec.)
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Комментарии • 164

  • @sulandelemere
    @sulandelemere 18 дней назад +88

    Difference in opinion over what’s happening in Xinjiang and Tibet? Does he mean the rising living standards and dual language education? Could it be combating terrorism?
    Does the U.S. have any good examples of how it dealt with terrorism - Afghanistan, bordering Xinjiang was that a success?
    Maybe by difference of opinion, he means China should eradicate the people of these regions like what happened in North America?
    While this was a human rights tragedy of the past, does the U.S. behave more righteous today? Has it learnt from its colonial settler past and human rights tragedies of Iraq and Libya to name but two.

    • @chriswong9158
      @chriswong9158 17 дней назад +1

      @@DDDrumpf Those Israeli bombs are not Made in China, but by a peaceful Nation call USA.

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P 13 дней назад +3

      Your comments would make a lot more sense if they were said in the 1870's

    • @sulandelemere
      @sulandelemere 13 дней назад

      @@Andy-P In what way?

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P 12 дней назад +3

      @@sulandelemere what happened to native North Americans. Could be called genocide back then but now?

    • @sulandelemere
      @sulandelemere 12 дней назад

      @@Andy-P respectfully, we still call it genocide today. If your point is that the U.S. (the elites that control the U.S.) have learned from past mistakes then this is wrong. The invasion of Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq - the destruction of Libya and Syria. These are just the more publicized wars and aggressions that constitute the greatest crimes of humanity post WW2. There is no other country that comes close to the destruction, death toll, and misery inflicted on humanity by the U.S. Obviously, I’m not blaming people for not waking up to this material fact - it takes a huge propaganda machine to cover up or neutralize these atrocities (usually in the form of presenting geopolitics as a simple battle between good and evil). So powerful is this machine that I even believe the U.S. ambassador is probably personally acting in good faith.

  • @trustmeiknow1
    @trustmeiknow1 17 дней назад +34

    The Ambassador argues the US hasn’t changed its policy, the Chinese have. This is rational. China has grown. It has changed. The US is no longer a hegemon. The problem is that it consistently continues to act like one.

    • @sheilawade433
      @sheilawade433 15 дней назад +1

      China modernized with US backing, while pirating patented US technology, then switched to a non-rules based rival paradigm, it seems. Americans consumers have sustained China's rise by purchasing cheap products made by the repressed workers in Chinese factories while deregulated corporate profiteers price gouged.
      Americans have good will for the Chinese people, but their leaders are exploiting them for an agenda that will not benefit them in the longterm.
      Xenophobic nationalist factions are reverting to past mistakes that will not likely lead to a better future for their children.

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P 13 дней назад

      thucydides trap. China will have to defeat America to take the crown

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 12 дней назад +1

      The ambassador argued China has changed to become aggressive! (I do agree)
      Why do you think China should be allowed to act aggressively without any negative consequences? (because China has grown?)
      Do you understand that the US has quite a bunch of allies? Economically/GDP-wise the sum of all these allies is larger than US, but militarily they are small. Seeing all these allies you have to think in China - US+allies and US+allies is a power that China cannot match, even in 20 or 40 years. This means even though GDP-wise China may in some time in future pass US (I see this not guaranteed, but if Western mood would get again to positive from current negative the chance is high), US+allies does stay the hegemon (only if US would act strongly bad on its allies this will change, but there is few sign for this and the allies stay, because US military might gives them protection).
      And seeing some of US actions and thinking very critical I would like China to become a 2nd force so that both need to agree which should avoid catastrophically wrong actions like NATO inviting Ukraine to beome a member. However only when China is acting in good intention and on Ukraine China did in my recent thinking not act in good intention, because instead of pushing NATO to give Russia a guarantee that Ukraine will never become a member China stood silent waiting Russia to succeed on its invasion (which even nearly all Western persons expected at the first day).

    • @jrz8156
      @jrz8156 12 дней назад

      You must be Adolf Hitler’s script writer in your previous life. 😂😂😂

    • @jrz8156
      @jrz8156 12 дней назад +2

      You must be the script writer for the supreme leader of the Third Reich, in your previous life.😅

  • @user-rg2yw5wg8s
    @user-rg2yw5wg8s 18 дней назад +45

    if u treat everything based on ideology and political system, it is obviously prejudiced.

    • @sakcee
      @sakcee 2 дня назад

      shut up ccp bot

  • @user-ok6re8gv1q
    @user-ok6re8gv1q 15 дней назад +11

    Scott ritter was not allowed to speak out. Assamge neither.

  • @iamactor
    @iamactor 15 дней назад +13

    While you keep selling weapons to Taiwan, you want us to cooperate with you? Are you kidding?

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 14 дней назад +1

      What is the problem of US selling weapons to Taiwain?
      Does the mighty China fear the little Taiwan? (I think it is/must be clearly the other way around)
      After China made over 45 years a giant step forward based on its own ability but with strong support of technology/knowledge/.... transfer from the West, China dared to become with Xi Jinping leadership aggressive in several ways that are the hell on earth for US/Western people. To contain China's aggressiveness somehow US has and is showing currently it also can be aggressive (neither technology access nor machine access for advanced semiconductors, custom tariffs).
      China has now time to re-consider its aggressiveness/targets and depending on China's decisions as well as US/Western thinking the situation will develop either in a way that is fruitful for both or the West becoming more and more aggressive to contain Chinas increasing aggressiveness.
      Your democratic relatives in Taiwan do enjoy a quite confortable life (US had no objection on them to become the world 90% supplier of advanced Semiconductors), but on dictatorships like Russia you can see how US/the West thinks and acts (the damage caused by dictatorships in WWII was huge) and Xi Jinping is obviously favorizing a strong communist party (or Xi Jinping) dictatorship for China.
      I am not sure China is willing to go to a democratic model as Taiwan, because only in such case I see a return to the cooperation as in the past possible. In case of a communist party dictatorship controlled mutual benefit interaction should be possible.

    • @tianyizhang2581
      @tianyizhang2581 12 дней назад

      @@friedhelmschroter8124They didn’t afraid of Taiwan but the U.S.. political decisions and even ideology confrontation are not the real matter that both countries care; what they care about is how to make the biggest possible profits and stop the other make profits. In my view, what happens now and what might happen in the future could be zero-sum games.

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 12 дней назад

      @@tianyizhang2581 1) The communist party has formally fixed as final date for the inclusion of Taiwan the end of Xi Jinping rulership (I understand 2035). No person in the West can see/understand how communist-China can succeed on this inclusion in a peaceful way seeing no willingness in Taiwan to give up democracy, the level of living standard they have reached being a member of the West. This leaves as only possibility the enforced inclusion (war) and communist-China shows daily that it seems to be committed to this by naval and airplane exercise around Taiwan. Taiwan is the 90% global share producer/supplier of today's strategically most important product, advanced Semiconductors. The West is so afraid of the situation that they just decided to spent huge money (about 50 billion) to set up production in US and Europe that will strongly reduce Taiwan share and where it is clear that this investment and more money is lost/from profit point senseless, because production in US/Europe is more expensive than current production in Taiwan. Because the West is extremely afraid (the loss of 90% of advanced semiconductors would be a global catastrophe) they are forced to do things they would never have considered if communist-China would not have become as aggressive as US sees it and Europe is slowly following suit.
      2) Above purely logical decisions are indeed superimposed by several kind of ideologic confrontations. A) US strongly prefers human rights, freedom of speech and individual freedom. In contrast communist-China continuously empowers communist party control by violating human rights, limit freedom of speech and individual freedom more and more. US is very confident its preferences are superior, because they have an about 200 years track record in which the world has reached an incredibly high wealth and the US allies at least since the end of WWII, when US imposed a rather stable democracy on Europe, do enjoy a long time of peace. During WWII US has fought 2 extreme dictatorships and this experience including getting a quite good understanding of how dictatorships do work resulted in their basic decision democracy is in today's modern world the better/much more stable system (I agree to this, but democracy also demands a highly educated electorate, because persons with low education tend to decide by feeling and have less clear view on the not always the truth telling politicians). I do understand that in contrast Chinese tend to see dictatorship rather positive, because they experienced under dictatorship an incredible improvement in wealth (however I think this incredible improvement is rather based on US support, because democratic Taiwan-China has reached a considerably higher level than dictatorial China). And Chinese should in their thinking/judgment also consider the Mao period, where the realization of ideologic targets created a lot of harm. B) US strongly prefers democracy. They may tolerate dictatorships that do act neutral, but they do actively fight dictatorships that show aggressive actions. In several respect it is not at all understandable why US has first approached/invited China, set a positive mood to bring up China and continued this positive mood long time despite suffering not acceptable trade deficits. My only explanation is as follows: At the start US wanted to have with China an additional power to contain USSR+Warsaw Pact. Later US enjoyed a nice life with sometimes considered crappy, yet cheap Chinese products.
      China has fought a civil war communism - capitalism that resulted in mainland China becoming communist and Taiwan becoming capitalist. On Hongkong democracy crash down a few years ago communist China reconfirmed boldly that it has no intention at all to consider democracy.
      C) It is normal that every country does strive to its best. This applies for sure also to US and on many US actions it is not easy to understand what is targeted by US for the best of the global order and what is target for US first/America getting some advantage. In my understanding in most concrete cases you will come to the conclusion that both targets are intertwingled in a complex way, this means one is able to see in the same US action a) US is maintaining the world order and b) US is targeting its advantages. Being the global hegemon since WWII there is increasingly the danger the hegemon does increasingly act as dictator in bad direction for US first, because hegemon = only 1 country is a dictatorship.
      I am not sure what will be the final outcome, but I am sure at this moment quite a lot of Chinese people (like you) do overestimate the strength of China. China will not become the new global hegemon, but if China finds some way to change current negative Western mood at least to a reasonable neutral or slightly positive mood China will surpass the US. If China continues its aggressive way (worst case would be inclusion of Taiwan by force), the West will do everything to harm China as much as possible and this means China would have reached what is called a Pyrrhic-victory (may succeed to include Taiwan, but will lose a lot of wealth in total have lost).
      Zero-sum has only a diminishing small chance in this extremely wide range of possible results.

    • @michaeljiang960
      @michaeljiang960 5 дней назад

      @@friedhelmschroter8124 No problem of US selling weapons to Taiwan and China can't do much except yelling.
      Also no problem of China selling anything to Russia and the US can't do much either except yelling.

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 5 дней назад

      @@michaeljiang960 I see it somehow different. US selling weapons to Taiwan should be no problem for China, as these weapons are sufficient only for defense/no real danger for China. In this situation I am asking myself, why is China yelling at all?
      China selling to Russia is contradicting US targets to reduce Russian military power and make Ukraine win against Russia. US is not only yelling, but applying sanctions.
      China selling to US/Europe has reached a new status. In the past US/Europe did the white collar work and China the blue collar work which was considered advantage for both sides despite US suffering a trade deficit far above any reasonable value. In the last 2/3 years China is showing in some product areas that it has catched up to do the white collar work also. I see this for example in Huawei having become the global market leader for G5 Base Stations. The most recent example is electrical cars where China is at least partially more advanced than US/Europe. This leads now to the danger, that substantial amount of workers/engineers may lose their job, because China still being on a rather low wage level in comparison to US/Europe.
      This has/will not only result in yelling, yet the relationship will completely change and both sides have to learn what is reasonable what not.
      On strategic targets China got even classified as an enemy resulting in US disallowing China access to the most advanced Semiconductors and this is a huge problem for China and not easy to overcome if at all. On Huawei Base Stations US made great efforts to kick out Huawei also by applying pressure on its allies not any more to order Huawei. On the electrical cars US has applied absolutely prohibitive 100% import duty not only on Chinese cars produced in China but also on Chinese cars produced at US's free trading partner Mexico. This is for me in total no yelling, but extremely harsh actions. On electrical cars Europe has also announced the introduction of import duty, yet only in the range of 10 to 30% depending on manufacturer and if I understand Europe has given China now some months to negotiate a new way of working together (selling products to each other without the danger of causing social unrest by workers/engineers losing their job) as the import duty will become valid only in a few months.
      Comparing the rather moderate EU stance on trade only you should understand that the much more harsh US stance is intertwined with US having changed its view on strategic targets to China as being an enemy and this is primarily associated to China's target on Taiwan "full inclusion", this means democracy crash down latest 2035 by war (nobody does see a chance Taiwan to agree "full inclusion" by free will).

  • @hyuxion
    @hyuxion 14 дней назад +5

    The question is: how many U.S. government employees can speak and understand Chinese? Without knowing your adversary, effective competition is impossible.

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 14 дней назад +1

      US persons are in the lucky situation that they are native english speakers while most other countries persons more and more get used/agreed to speak some english as the global bridge language.
      300.000 Chinese as students in the USA (where they need to speak english), but currently only if I remember correctly less than 100 US students in China would give some wrong image about the communication possibilities assuming communication would be possible only in Chinese.

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P 13 дней назад

      First understand China is the adversary, and many cases the enemy.

    • @hyuxion
      @hyuxion 13 дней назад

      @@Andy-P first understand China is a reality, it is not going away because USA does not like it. Then make decisions based on rational reasoning.
      There are many countries that US does not like in the world, live with the reality!

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P 13 дней назад

      @@hyuxion China is real, not going away. I do make decisions based on rational reasoning. Agreed US does not like some countries. So what is your point?

    • @hyuxion
      @hyuxion 13 дней назад +1

      ​@@Andy-PI apologize if my comment came across as offensive. I intended to refer specifically to American politicians.
      My point is that Nicholas Burns seems to regret the US decision to allow China to join the WTO two decades ago. However, that decision is in the past. Today, the US should focus on dealing with China from a practical standpoint rather than an ideological one. China has been governed under the same system for seven decades, and this has not prevented the US from cooperating with China in the past. Instead of attempting to contain China to subject it to US power or engaging China to change its political system, why not interact with China as an equal member of the permanent UN Security Council, based on the principles of the United Nations Charter?

  • @ray911abc
    @ray911abc 16 дней назад +9

    a new railway connecting china and europe is planned to be constructed. the starting point in china side is in xinjiang province. that's why us began to care about xinjiang

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P 13 дней назад

      What is going to be on the train? EU and China about to enter a trade war

  • @WilliamMacLeod-en3pm
    @WilliamMacLeod-en3pm 18 дней назад +23

    It’s my understanding that the Chinese minister of defence is a political appointee and not equivalent to the US SECDEF so it’s weird to hear him described as the leader of the PLA

    • @Kukura001
      @Kukura001 17 дней назад +5

      China's Ministry of Defence is in fact the ‘foreign ministry’ of the Chinese army. The Minister of Defence is merely a spokesman, with no powers or subordinate bodies. In peacetime, politically and administratively, the PLA is under the jurisdiction of the Central Military Commission of CCP. In wartime, the PLA is under the command of the Joint Staff Department.

    • @ggc7318
      @ggc7318 17 дней назад +3

      ​@chuatj, no one cares what Xi Xi Pee says too 😂

    • @ggc7318
      @ggc7318 17 дней назад +2

      ​@@DDDrumpfget lost wumao!

    • @ggc7318
      @ggc7318 17 дней назад +1

      @@DDDrumpf is that all you can say? "Ha, Ha, Ha " ?

    • @ggc7318
      @ggc7318 17 дней назад

      @@DDDrumpf wumao when are you coming to USA illegally ?

  • @rudykhoo7149
    @rudykhoo7149 17 дней назад +19

    Agreed with one china policy but their actions cannot honour the agreement. Agreed not to advance one inch towards USSR but their actions cannot honour their word.

  • @WWLooi-js8rl
    @WWLooi-js8rl 17 дней назад +12

    Master Cheng Yen of the famous Tzu Chi Foundation (Taiwan) has mentioned a few times, if the U.S. does not wake up, there won't be peace in this world.

    • @tianyizhang2581
      @tianyizhang2581 12 дней назад

      American politicians are far smarter than you thought. They were assessing the costs of being a real enemy to China mainland and being a real enemy to Taiwan. Thats why American congress always pretended they didn’t hear Taiwanese voices and insists on one-China policy

  • @user-go5ow2fc2c
    @user-go5ow2fc2c 11 часов назад

    Kudos to Ambassadoe Burns. My takeaway: Facts! “Other side arguing over basic facts, and the facts are incontrovertible!”. Most times, I feel messages sent over social media or press releases are just for its people living in the country rather than greater world. And many of the comments here that disagree with this meeting and world peace at large, are just trolls of the regime, just like the person that rudely interrupted the Ambassador in the middle of his conversation, she’s abusing Freedom of speech act in the US

  • @saeedshafqat1830
    @saeedshafqat1830 16 дней назад +2

    Interesting, informative, insightful in providing American perspective on China and the how the US views China as strategic rival and would sustain this rivalry in the future.

  • @windyelm5450
    @windyelm5450 8 дней назад +1

    Ambassador Nicholas Burns alleged China has changed a lot and became more aggressive. He needs to look from a different perspective. You simply cannot expect China to act the same way when they were relatively weak. When China becomes stronger, they sure will take steps to protect their core national interests, on issues like Taiwan, south China sea, etc.… So, the problem is not China has changed, it is the US has not changed its way to deal with a different, a lot more powerful China. Looking back, when secretary Blinken said to Chinese side in Anchorage that the US wants to talk to China from a position of strength. Yang responded: “in front of the Chinese side, the United States does not have the qualification to say that it wants to speak to China from a position of strength. The U.S. side was not even qualified to say such things even 20 years or 30 years back, because this is not the way to deal with the Chinese people. “

  • @chriswong9158
    @chriswong9158 17 дней назад +7

    Henry Kissinger Quote: “To be an enemy of America can be dangerous, but to be a friend is fatal.”
    China PRC still treat Mr. Kissinger as a friend.... China PRC has no interest in Burns... How does USA not understand.

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P 13 дней назад +1

      USA does understand. It understands very well. USA doesn't have to do what CCP say

    • @rbrookeb
      @rbrookeb 13 дней назад +3

      That Kissinger excerpt is the literal antithesis of the fuller quote and what was being said. He was warning against actions that would leave that message -“fatal to be an ally” here’s the context:
      Henry Kissinger said in November 1968, after Richard Nixon was elected U.S. president but before he took office: "Nixon should be told that it is probably an objective of Clifford to depose Thieu (South Vietnamese president Nguyen Van Thieu-ed.) before Nixon is inaugurated. Word should be gotten to Nixon that if Thieu meets the same fate as Diem, the word will go out to the nations of the world that it may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal."

    • @BCSTS
      @BCSTS 12 дней назад +1

      @@rbrookeb Thank you for context.....makes a huge difference in understanding quote !

    • @rbrookeb
      @rbrookeb 12 дней назад +1

      @@BCSTS you’re welcome 😌

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 11 дней назад +1

      I got extremely confused by your Kissinger quote, because what the words say is in complete contradiction to what I can see (being a democracy/friend brings you a prosperous wealthy and peaceful life, while American enemies like Russia, Iran, Venezuela, North Korea, ... do suffer considerably).
      Why do you bring here such strongly wrong/misleading partial quote, while the full quote brought by @rbrookeb shows that your partial quote is if not completely wrong, then at least only valid in a very special context.
      Do you understand that saying "China PRC has no interest in Burns" reveals an extremely arrogant behavior/thinking, something Chinese often do blame on US?
      Burns is the embassador of US and in this function 1) he primarily does not express his personal thinking, but rather what the US decision makers have set as official US policy and 2) he reports to the US government details of what is ongoing/said/discussed in China to support new/revised US decisions. Basically Burns = the US government and your sentence has the meaning, China has not interest to speak to US, but simply does what it wants. A bluntly arrogant way!

  • @garyhuang2625
    @garyhuang2625 15 дней назад +2

    The US ambassador to China referenced mutual defense treaty and strong military deterrence, a learning from D-day. This is not comforting. The only good news is that he didn't say pre-emptive.

  • @ericluffy7970
    @ericluffy7970 7 дней назад

    25 Minutes things get a little spicy. Loving the passion yall

  • @ReporterTorizo
    @ReporterTorizo 8 дней назад +1

    25:57 Does anyone know what happened here?

  • @ecaterinanicolaescu4462
    @ecaterinanicolaescu4462 16 дней назад

    Good dey❤❤

  • @kenpeters7127
    @kenpeters7127 12 дней назад

    It is a mutually foundation building to hear the embasssador reinterate both China and the US want to live in peace .

  • @MegaLeeJB
    @MegaLeeJB 15 дней назад

    I see many shops selling vapes in China, certainly in Shenzhen... I've also seen various ppl using them.

  • @marylaistirland6864
    @marylaistirland6864 17 дней назад +2

    I don’t agree

  • @gc23336
    @gc23336 4 дня назад

    Speak with truth in honour to the universal karma law US. Hope to see a better sincere humane and not a hypocrite government in US.

  • @patriciabray5726
    @patriciabray5726 15 дней назад +1

    The exchanges programs and the increase of students is positive for a new generation in both China 🇨🇳 and the US. Having been involved in hosting and housing the Ping Pong Team and then inviting a delegation from the All China Women's Federation to join the first anniversary of the "The Fourth UN Conference on Women: Action for Equality, Development and Peace women are moving around the world in their communities on health, against violence and corruption, economic opportunities to name a few! Enlighted Men are working together with women 😊

  • @say6607
    @say6607 15 дней назад +3

    both sides have to yield some in order to gain some, that's what we call compromise. mr. burns' stance leaves no room for compromise, so it'd be a waste of time for both side to meet and talk.

  • @whiteface8745
    @whiteface8745 4 дня назад

    He did a good job to paint China as the troublemaker

  • @oka2046
    @oka2046 16 дней назад +9

    Why can't China be stronger? So any strong/assertive position from China is viewed as a negative.

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 14 дней назад +1

      I don't think the US was/is worried about China getting stronger. US got angry when with the take over of Xi Jinping China started to become aggressive.
      This aggressiveness was found in 1) China crashing down the democratic freedom that existed in Hongkong from the British rulership. To crash down this freedom China/Hongkong issued a new law that puts any person who is criticising the Hongkong government even only verbally to go into jail for many, many years (this law resulted in freedom of speech being disappeared and nobody daring to say any critical word or even going to public protest/demonstration as you can see regularly in democratic countries). This crash down of the democratic freedom does violate also the treaty the UK had signed with China -the stop of democratic freedom was fixed much later, may be around 2050-, this means China intentionally violated a contract it had signed/was bound to for the sake of ???? (I never understood)
      2) China does claim all South China sea to 100%. This includes all island, this means China wants to steal several Islands from the other countries that are located on the South China sea and have islands more close to them than these Islands are to China. And China does not only act by verbal claim, but sends out it ships to push away these other countries fishermen or military ships.
      3) China has set a concrete time date for the inclusion of Taiwain into China and this inclusion is obviously intended to be done by military force with a complete crash down of the democracy Taiwan has/applies (because similar to Hongkong, the people living in Taiwan do prefer democracy which resulted for them in a quite wealty live -more early and higher than in China-, a live that they prefer, this means they would fight back on an military attack). To show how concrete its inclusion intention is China does react diplomatically extremely harsh when other countries politician go to Taiwan (especially US ones) and China is permanently running military trials by airplane, ships etc. around Taiwan.
      4) China has formed some form of alliance with Russia. And for US this is contra-productive, because US thinks Russia has invaded Ukraine to take it over/get it under its control, but US categorically denies the point that NATO (and EU) have behaved in a way that Russia was forced to invade Ukraine to avoid Ukraine becoming a NATO member and to appease the civil war on Ukraine's donbas region that was ongoing since 2014 and had caused 12/13000 persons dead with massive damage (I guess without this categoric denial despite clear logic/facts for it best summarized/explained by John Mearsheimer they would have to conclude that they have some main responsibility for this war which would be a desaster like their 2003 invasion to Iraq).
      5) China has cracked down some of its private companies to strengthen the control the communist party can do/exercise and is strongly working to suppress freedom of speech/thinking by Internet control and policing/putting into prison for long time people who speak out/about items the communist party wants to suppress. For US this is same behaviour as dictators are showing, yet China does it smarter and by its power much more stringent than a dictator could do this suppression (as a result of this suppression I understand a certain number of Chinese have left China to live in other countries). Into this category also falls what has happened strongly and is ongoing moderately in Xingjiang. In US what has happened in Xingjiang. would not have been possible, because the US by its constitution is not allowed to limit a persons freedom unless this person has committed a crime. For an US person getting knowledge about what has and is happening is like hell on earth, even if China may have some reason as aligning Moslems which is more moderate than US killing ISIS.
      6) By its strength (size, education level and cost of workmanship), but also by government subsidies China is targeting to dominate in future more market segments than it does today. The US has decided to actively counteract this will of China by applying limits on technology access/transfer especially on Semiconductors and using custom tariffs to allow much higher paid US workers to keep their jobs or get a job. And in contrast to China's believe it was strong enough to challenge US, I think China will recognize especially on the Semiconductors that it may not be able to achieve what a combination of sientists and workers in several Western countries continue to improve continuously. And if to my surprise China will succeed I guess China will ultimately recognize it had paid a punitive price/effort. On the custom tariffs I think China will understand that some control is necessary, because US/Europe cannot compete when even their simple workers out of social reasons/the general cost structure do earn several 1000, while a worker in China my today earn only 1000 in combination with China on production technology/efficiency being close or on par with US/Europe.
      In conclusion: The US is not worried about China becoming stronger (the prove is Taiwan where US allowed Taiwan to get an incredible 90% global market share on the most advanced Semiconductors), but the US hates China to progress towards communist party dictatorship, oppress its neighbor countries, targeting inclusion of Taiwan by war.
      By showing strong aggressiveness based on a certain strength China had achieved because the West has 50 years ago decided to integrate it into its democratic community by transferring huge amounts of technology to China, China has lost with Xi Jinping taking the lead this support of the West to a large amount. Where exactly the new equilibrium will be, is partly also determined by China, its willingness to be aggressive and its way of rulership (especially for US dictatorships are a no go. Hitler's NazI "dictatorship", Japan's Military "dictatorship" caused globally and also the US huge harm and US sees this continued in a long row up to the Russian "dictatorship" with the war against Ukraine.)

  • @michaeljiang960
    @michaeljiang960 5 дней назад

    All we did are correct, all they did were wrong, all their faults.

  • @LouisFobb-zs9hv
    @LouisFobb-zs9hv 18 дней назад +4

    Excellent!

  • @RandyAbraham-xf5qp
    @RandyAbraham-xf5qp 15 дней назад +2

    I enjoyed this discussion and always enjoy being informed by Ambassador Burns about our most challenging relationship, with China.
    I wonder if he felt that the Obama administration’s proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership represented a serious effort to advance our interests in the Asia Pacific region, and if he feels that our withdrawal, under Trump, represented a strategic retreat in the face of Chinese expansionism and Russian adventurism?

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 12 дней назад

      While I basically agree to Ambassador Burns comments on China I complete disagree with his absolute denial that NATO bears responsibility for Russia to invade Ukraine.
      Burns should be fully aware that Germany as well as France objected the US intention to invite Ukraine/Georgia to become NATO members. Does Burns really think Germany and France are I qoute "nobody". And this US adventurism to invite these countries has led now to the miracle objective that Ukraine (a military nobody) shall win against the 2nd largest atomic might. Don't you think that US adventurism would be the better description for such situation compared to Russian adventurism? And that the US likes "adventurism" you should have seen on the 2003 invasion of Iraq and elsewhere.
      Crash down of the Trans-Pacific Partnership showed indeed that US is not really an Asia Pacific country as Burns in a weak way argumented by citing Hawai, Alaska, some tiny Island and California. I believe the Trump retreat is rather based on reduction of trade deficit. However, US is involved in Asia Pacific by its allies Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and in some distance Australia and US wants/strongly targets to be involved in the development of this region, because it will become the future global core of economic activity seeing the ability of rapid development and the number of people (China + India alone = 3 billion, this means roughly 10x US).
      China has a 1000/2000 years track record of no will to expand and I don't see that this has changed. In this sense I am wondering how you speak about "Chinese expansionism"? China is rather setting up protection (the great wall) and does clean up some disputed areas.
      Some of the conflicts with US are originated in the fact US setting up a wall of military bases and allies around and as close as possible to China. If I would be China i would also push US away, the same way US pushed USSR away during the Cuban missile crisis, because US has a long long track record of being hostile if something/somebody is not to its pleasure.

  • @agriculturemachinedanhua3209
    @agriculturemachinedanhua3209 18 дней назад +8

    ambassador is a good ambassador as Blinken

  • @andywalker7547
    @andywalker7547 18 дней назад +7

    Keep up the good work! From Sydney AUS. 🌏

    • @Santeh60
      @Santeh60 17 дней назад +3

      Is that good work? I can't understand what's their purpose as ambassador. Isn't it to foster good relationship between countries? After all these years, why is there so much bitterness in the American hierarchy?

    • @andywalker7547
      @andywalker7547 17 дней назад +2

      Its tough work and its not easy but we need to connect/talk/and do the best we can. Theres 2 big tigers in the room and we just need to get used to it.
      Also, lets be honest anyone including myself in the comment board for this video couldn't do a better job in a 1000 years.
      Peace out ( no more responses from me)

  • @daniera7635
    @daniera7635 12 дней назад +2

    Nicholas Burns, what a remarkable human being...Keep up the excellent work in protecting our global democracy. You have my full support from Melbourne.

  • @isaia273
    @isaia273 16 дней назад +2

    Two American presidents and one vice president have visited Croatia and Russian president was not once here. So who started the war? Putin was in Slovenia and Serbia but not in Croatia. In previous incarnation Russian national anthem was composed in Croatia and so many other songs. Us insisting on Christianity is debilitating and harms humanity but it harms Croatia the most.
    Confucius and Lao Tzu are incarnated in Zagreb and were sent to China on the mission. Mao Zedong is also here, reincarnated. And this is his land of origin.
    Croatia used to be in Yugoslavia, so presidents did not come to Zagreb. But since we have been independent, they have been coming. And the fact that Putin did not visit the fraternal Slavic country speaks against the USA. Khrushchev and Brezhnev were Western puppets and destroyed the Soviet Union, but Putin is something else and deserves to visit us. That is my wish and I am certainly not alone among Croats in this wish.

  • @edwardallangabor850
    @edwardallangabor850 17 дней назад +5

    We are extraordinarily fortunate to have Ambassador Burns as a leader in building sustainable bridges for the future. Al

  • @edwinkwan4343
    @edwinkwan4343 17 дней назад +2

    All because of over assertion of a poor confidence lad still lost in the shame of the CR

  • @moyoyo7575
    @moyoyo7575 2 дня назад +1

    永远傲慢自我为中心自嗨的安格鲁撒克逊人

  • @user-lo1je7qk7z
    @user-lo1je7qk7z 16 дней назад +2

    The American version of wolf warrior. Interesting.

  • @user-ob8bi6ep5e
    @user-ob8bi6ep5e 18 дней назад +8

    很精彩的访谈,非常认可伯恩斯大使的观点,感谢为中国百姓的人权发声。只是奇怪评论区一片倒的亲中反美论调,这些人都哪来的。

    • @Kukura001
      @Kukura001 17 дней назад +3

      Their people will choose and reform their own government, even by way of civil war. But human rights should not be used as a tool for the powerful to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries.

    • @Santeh60
      @Santeh60 17 дней назад

      Writing in Chinese doesn't mean you are Chinese, many axxholes had learned the language to very high level but their soul and mind had been washed clean while in the "LAND OF THE FREE & BRAVE"...believing it is a far better system for the people of China.

    • @WWLooi-js8rl
      @WWLooi-js8rl 17 дней назад +1

      ​@@Kukura001 The U.S. can't even provide the most basic human rights of shelter and a safe environment in their land. Look at all the tent cities and druggies and zombies across urban America. Check out Venice Beach, Kensington Ave to cite just two examples. Where I work, there are people living under the freeway and rams!!

    • @friedhelmschroter8124
      @friedhelmschroter8124 14 дней назад +1

      @@kenbehrens5778 Human rights is only part of the story. Another one is freedom of speech and a 3rd key point is personal freedom (the state/your country can only jail you when you have committed a crime). In total this comes to the difference of democracy versus dictatorship. China is a communist party (or Ji Xinping) dictatorship, while Taiwan/US are democracies where regularly different persons become the leader and depending on the choice of the electorate this can be quite different/opposite directions, just compare Biden to Trump. In a dictatorship the leader does change seldom and there does exist the large danger that the dictatorship does terrible things (most prominent Hitler and Japan around WWII). Dictatorships do regularly use oppression of people who oppose their will/direction.
      You are right, in some areas of US the security is extremely bad. This has 2 reasons: 1) In US everybody has the right to buy a weapon and even if some ill minded person kills a lot of persons there is never a majority of people willing to remove this right, because this is US DNA, when the US was created the cowboy had a revolver and a rifle. 2) US is the most capitalistic Western country and in addition the variety of persons is considerably larger leading to an extreme wide range of poor to rich - in contrast to US in Europe some social security is present reducing the range poor to rich and especially allowing the poor a reasonable life.
      You are also right on poverty/homelessness. Again this is part of the US DNA, because when the USA got created there was so much land available to everybody as he could manage to work on by himself. This means there was never any need for people who were not able to earn their living to be supported, everybody could earn his living and if he chose not to, then this was his personal decision that has to be respected. In today's industrial world adding the problem of drugs I think it is not any more possible that everybody can earn his living, but US was up to now not willing to change towards European style.
      Points of evidence:
      1) In Hongkong China has crashed the democracy by force (people that were not willing to accept that either left Hongkong, shut their mouth/stopped protesting or got into jail for many years, also the persons that protested while democracy was still present were sent into jail if police had arrested them during democracy time). In Hongkong freedom of speech is dead, because if you say something wrong you will be jailed. In contrast in US you can say everything and neither police nor a judge can send you to jail.
      2) China has a Muslim province and I guess to align Muslim live to Chinese way nearly everybody was forced into concentration camps for months. Some pictures were leaked to Western journalists showing torturing. Some of these camps have been transformed into prisons probably for persons who resisted more strongly.
      Again, such kind of putting a certain religion people into concentration camp is not at all allowed/possible in USA.
      3) Western journalists like to contact/speak to people who are critical to China to better understand which are critical items in the Chinese society. It was found that these critical persons disappeared after some news report was published in the West that criticized certain points in China. As a counteraction the Video and Audio content does now get so modified that no identification of such source person is any more available. When somebody got jailed because he did something the communist party didn't like then a trial will follow before the judge decides. For this trial the accused person needs a lawyer. Western journalists liked to speak to such lawyers and it was noted that some lawyers simply disappeared without any reason.
      4) I saw reports on a new system where in a computer everthing what a person is doing is stored. This is combined with a face recognition program and access to all cameras. If for example a person passes the street on red light this will be recorded. On the summary record some action may follow depending on what the communist party does target. Such kind of system is against personal freedom, this means you can do whatever you want without the fear that it could be used against you. In Western countries it is explicitly forbidden to the police to take such records. Only after police has presented to a judge clear evidence of crime the judge may issue to the police the OK to do an observation and recording of what the person does with the intent to find a prove for the crime.
      In conclusion: On human rights/freedom of speech/personal freedom US and China are on opposite/conflicting sides/opionion and the reason for this is China rather being a dictatorship US rather being a democracy. Democracies are slower in taking decisions, but most/nearly all dictatorships have shown earlier or later bad doing (some even extremely bad, on China I cannot see and bad doing in the last 50 years, but this were rather easy times with a huge improvement), while in democracies the total country is active and freedom of speech and personal freedom are 2 paramount points to avoid the bad doing that happens in dictatorships, where people have in their DNA to limit their speech and personal freedom to avoid getting jailed.

    • @tracyli5201
      @tracyli5201 13 дней назад +1

      @@kenbehrens5778 There are so many, man. Just go and live in China for a decade, you will understand. 1. No free speech. That's one basic human rights. Any bad mouthing the CCP or the big boss, your online account will get suspended or even banned. Censorship of everything you can see. In worse cases, police will go and find you and take you for questioning. Happened to 2 of my friends already. Certainly no free speech in public. Instant arrest. 2. No political rights. There is zero. No right to vote or get elected. The government is a box. Everything runs through the Party. Nobody knows its balance sheet. Nobody knows how much we are taxed and how tax payer money is used. 3. There are so many violations. No end to this. During lockdown, half billion Chinese are locked at home for months to achieve zero covid. Can't go to hospital for emergency. Can't even buy fever drugs. 4. Invasive surveillance everywhere, both cyber and digital cameras, no privacy whatsoever. Big brother is always watching you. 5. There is no rule of law. There is only rule of the Party. 6. China is a Communist society, where the government is in control of every organization, including religious ones. So there is no civil society whatsoever..... Every dictatorship is similar, one supreme leader on top, be it Hitler, Stalin, Mao, in charge of the entire Party, Nazis, USSR, CCP, and runs over the entire nation.

  • @user-hs9ng1nx1h
    @user-hs9ng1nx1h 18 дней назад +7

    The main problem is that China did not recognize the UNCLOS in the West Philippine Sea . China must follow the International Arbitrary law of the sea.

    • @tongwu4667
      @tongwu4667 18 дней назад +13

      Where is west philippine sea?on the moon?

    • @smling11
      @smling11 18 дней назад +1

      UNCLOS cannot rule on territorial rights. It can only rule when territorial right is clearly defined. When UNCLOS tried to rule on right, it has ruled against her own existence. The escape clauses and claims of China are clearly submitted whrn China signed on UNCLOS, so UNCLOS either has to throw China out of UNCLOS so making her judgement irrelevant, or accept China submission and excuse herself from territorial ruling as the UNCLOS has no business. No UN body has any rights in defining territorial rights.

    • @user-kb4bo4vk3b
      @user-kb4bo4vk3b 18 дней назад +2

      south china sea,ok?

    • @jackychen5578
      @jackychen5578 18 дней назад +4

      How can the law of the sea in 40 years determine the islands I occupied 100 years ago?

    • @siewkonsum7291
      @siewkonsum7291 17 дней назад +1

      US Regime rejected the UNCLOS Charter and refused to sign it since its inception!
      What BS argument the US is now using UNCLOS to argue its distorted views?

  • @user-gr5kn8qi5y
    @user-gr5kn8qi5y 11 дней назад

    Nice speech,american ambassador,the world need peace,i love democracy,save our planet earth

  • @StoicRoadCyclist
    @StoicRoadCyclist 18 дней назад +4

    He is definitely qualified to be the next secretary of state!👍👏

  • @adriantan5807
    @adriantan5807 16 дней назад +3

    U get an ambassador to talk. What do u expect? Ra ra ra. That’s all.

  • @whatsthat163
    @whatsthat163 18 дней назад +10

    Ambassador Nicholas Burns is an excellent ambassador. He articulates very clearly his country’s position and it’s very fair comment and not belligerent at all, unlike some other country’s spokesmen whose aggressiveness is so revolting

    • @whatsthat163
      @whatsthat163 17 дней назад +1

      It’s easy for people to get carried away with partisan, diametrically opposing positions. But just let’s see what’s actually happening and going on-China’s behaviour simply scares its neighbours and heightens the danger of conflict with some of them, and with the US as a result. China insists that virtually all the sea belongs to it, citing historical apocrypha, repudiating the UN tribunal’s finding in favour of the claims made by the Philippines under the Law of the Sea. And very recently, Chinese ships have resorted to lasers, ramming and water cannons to keep Philippine ships away from the disputed shoals in the South China Sea. What logical conclusions would third parties to these actions draw?

    • @whatsthat163
      @whatsthat163 17 дней назад +1

      I’m just looking at the situation in the South China Sea and the plight of the poor fishermen in Philippines trying to make living, and the last thing they want is some people taking away their rice bowls

    • @Kukura001
      @Kukura001 17 дней назад +2

      @@whatsthat163 Both are in Hague, but the Permanent Court of Arbitration is not an international tribunal and its findings are not considered to be international law.

    • @Kukura001
      @Kukura001 17 дней назад

      @@DDDrumpf Both are in Hague, but the Permanent Court of Arbitration is not an international tribunal and its findings are not considered to be international law.

    • @Santeh60
      @Santeh60 17 дней назад

      ​@whatsthat163, it is necessary you need to step back several steps to learn what happened earlier. Your MSM has been lying to the Western public who reads or sees nothing else except all those big liars & propaganda machines churning out shit for you blinded & deafen public to consume.

  • @freydont
    @freydont 18 дней назад +4

    The next Secretary of State.

  • @sheilawade433
    @sheilawade433 16 дней назад +1

    15:24 The US was indirectly supportive of China during its war with Japan. Subsequently, China benefitted from favored trade status and sponsorship for admission to the UN security council by FDR.

    • @user-xy3jh9hp01j
      @user-xy3jh9hp01j 5 дней назад

      You should learn more about Chinese history.
      During the Japanese invasion of China, the United States was Japan's main supplier of steel and oil.
      Before Japan launched the Pearl Harbor attack, the United States allowed Japan to continue to occupy China in negotiations with Japan, as long as Japan withdrew from Britain's colonies in Southeast Asia.
      Thanks to Japan's greed, Japan was unwilling to give up Southeast Asia and launched a sneak attack.

    • @user-xy3jh9hp01j
      @user-xy3jh9hp01j 5 дней назад +1

      Please note that the United States did not vote in favor of China's membership in the United Nations.

    • @user-xy3jh9hp01j
      @user-xy3jh9hp01j 5 дней назад

      As for the WTO, China obtained the votes of approval by negotiating with every member and giving up its interests.
      The United States has never been a generous God, but a greedy vampire.

    • @sheilawade433
      @sheilawade433 5 дней назад

      @@user-xy3jh9hp01j
      Let Wikipedia know. That was the source of my comment.

  • @mil546
    @mil546 12 дней назад +1

    Thank you, Ambassador, was interesting.

  • @ThePrimaFacie
    @ThePrimaFacie 18 дней назад +6

    Pretty great talk, showing our thoughts on what is important. Freedom of thought and to voice ones opinion on what one feels that is important is a part of what makes a nation great. I will not take comments from the 50 cent army, thank you for the vid.

    • @papachen5828
      @papachen5828 18 дней назад

      Freedom of thought and voice? What’s wrong with your F eyes and ears? Just look at what happened and is happening in Caza now , 165 journalists at least ~~

    • @Santeh60
      @Santeh60 17 дней назад

      After listening for 20 mins into Burn's burning speech, I realised he is no diff from the NEOCONS in the HOUSE. Anything China is bad, anything US is Good. What trash is he blurbing?

    • @ThePrimaFacie
      @ThePrimaFacie 17 дней назад

      @@DDDrumpf See how your reply isnt deleted nor my comment? I am a citizen not a law maker nor a law enforcer. Even though this it is privately owned company whos web site we are talking on so they are allowed to do what they wish. That being said my right to say and do what I want (within reason and law) are not cut out because some state representative or entity thinks that is not ok. I hope that you can too and I wish for all to be able to in the future.

    • @ThePrimaFacie
      @ThePrimaFacie 17 дней назад

      @@DDDrumpf You first

    • @ThePrimaFacie
      @ThePrimaFacie 17 дней назад

      @@DDDrumpf So I should have realized that you are disingenuous and a troll because of your name calling. Ill admit thats my fault also for interacting with someone that has no real want of a discussion but for a dialogue of talking points. Yours is being upset in replying as it seems I offended you before I talked to you. How could that be? Is it cause I called you a name first? How could I? Unless the 50 cents have already been spent? IDK maybe not. Nothing you have said disproves what I have stated. I hope you have a better life and that you love deeper then the hate that you have for what ever it is you do. Best of luck

  • @talkeraxe812
    @talkeraxe812 14 дней назад

    No matter what you talk about and/or how you talk, it won't change anything for the ccp's plans and actions. To prepare for the fight!!