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发表于 2006-4-20 14:48:02 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
Chinese president extolls trade tie benefits at Boeing plant

Posted 4/20/2006 1:46 AM ET E-mail | Save | Print | Subscribe to stories like this  

  
Enlarge By Elaine Thompson, AP

Chinese President Hu Jintao addresses Boeing Co. employees inside the company's production facility in Everett, Wash.  



  HU VISITS THE U.S.

Chinese president visits Boeing



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EVERETT, Wash. (AP) — Chinese President Hu Jintao called Wednesday for fewer trade barriers and closer ties between his country and the United States, while defending China's heavily criticized policies on trade, currency and energy.
The meaty speech followed a warm welcome at Boeing Co., where Hu sought to soothe tensions over the U.S.-China trade deficit, telling workers his country would need thousands of new airplanes in the coming years.

Speaking to an audience of Washington state business and political leaders including Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates, Hu said his country does not seek a big trade surplus with the U.S. He also reaffirmed his government's commitment to crack down on software piracy, which should increase Microsoft's sales in China.

\"Strong business ties meet the fundamental interests of our two countries and peoples and will continue to play an important role in stabilizing our relations,\" Hu said through a translator. He flew to Washington D.C. shortly after the speech.

China's rapid growth and development will increase demand for American products and expertise in areas such as technology, Hu said, and \"I hope the American businesses will seize the opportunities.\"

The comments came just ahead of a summit with President Bush, where the two sides plan to tackle thorny issues including trade.

Visiting Boeing's widebody jet assembly plant earlier, he called his country's long-running relationship with Boeing an example of the potential of China-U.S. trade.

\"Boeing's cooperation with China is a living example of the mutually beneficial cooperation and win-win outcome that China and the United States have achieved from trade with each other,\" Hu said.

He estimated that demand for new aircraft in China will reach 2,000 planes in the next 15 years.

Hu's speech at the company's massive Everett plant came just days after Chinese officials confirmed a commitment to order 80 Boeing 737 jets, in a deal valued at $5.2 billion at list prices. The order has yet to be finalized, and airlines typically negotiate discounts.

The Boeing deal is one of several purchases the Chinese have announced recently as officials try to ease tensions over the massive trade gap between the U.S. and China.

Hu's meeting Thursday with Bush will cover a broad agenda, from China's much-criticized currency and other trade policies, to its aggressive search for oil and its positions on the developing nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea.

At his lunchtime speech, Hu touched on several of those issues, defending Chinese currency and energy policy but acknowledging that there have been bumps in the road.

\"Given the rapid growth, sheer size and wide scope of our business ties, it is hardly avoidable that some problems have occurred,\" Hu said. \"However, mutually beneficial cooperation and common development remain the defining feature of our business relations.\"

Hu said China takes its trade imbalance with the U.S. seriously, and noted that his country has trade deficits with Japan, Korea and some southeast Asian countries.

Hu promised that China will take a firm stance protecting intellectual property. He also said his country has already taken some steps to loosen currency regulation and promote financial reforms, in apparent response to U.S. criticism.

The Chinese president said the two countries should address trade issues through formal dialogue.

\"Trade issues should not be politicized,\" he said.

But Hu said strengthening China-U.S. ties will require both sides to continue promoting global free trade and economic development.

He said opportunities included nuclear energy, natural gas, energy conservation and new forms of environmentally friendly energy.

Despite the political tensions expected in Washington, Hu has received a warm and curious welcome during his visits to Boeing and, on Tuesday, Microsoft. The thousands of Boeing workers, some of whom waited hours for a 10-minute speech Wednesday, appeared eager for a glimpse of Hu.

\"China is one of the largest markets for Boeing,\" said Craig Thompson, an engineer at the Everett plant. \"The guy's coming here. I'm going to listen to what he has to say.\"

Hu began his day Wednesday visiting at his hotel with China scholars and academics, including former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft and former Defense Secretary William J. Perry.

On Tuesday, Hu toured Microsoft's suburban Redmond campus and dined at company chairman Bill Gates' home. Hu said he admired what Gates had achieved.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
发表于 2006-4-20 14:49:11 | 显示全部楼层
[s:8]  [s:8]  [s:8]  [s:8]  [s:8]
将小何拖出去乱棍打死
 楼主| 发表于 2006-4-20 15:08:43 | 显示全部楼层
China's Leader, in Seattle, Tells U.S. Not to Dwell on Divisive Issues
Elaine Thompson/Associated Press
A crowd gathered Wednesday at Paine Field in Everett, Wash., to see off President Hu Jintao of China, who is scheduled to see President Bush today.



By JOSEPH KAHN
Published: April 20, 2006
SEATTLE, April 19 — Gamely donning a Boeing baseball cap and mingling enthusiastically with local business executives, President Hu Jintao of China said Wednesday that his nation and the United States "enjoy extensive common interests" and could avoid major problems in their relationship if they "avoid politicizing" the issues that divide them.

Mr. Hu, on the second day of his first visit to the United States as China's top leader, continued a charm offensive directed mainly at commercial interests and offered an overview of economic relations that broke little new ground but displayed a prodigious memory for statistical data.

In a lunchtime address to 600 local officials and business leaders at a Boeing plant in Everett, Wash., Mr. Hu, only occasionally consulting his notes, recited the number of fixed-line telephone users in China (740 million), the installed capacity of nuclear power plants there (30,000 megawatts), China's export volume in 2005 ($1.4221 trillion) and the number of foreign-invested enterprises that have set up shop there since 1979 (530,000, including 49,000 linked to the United States), as examples of the boundless opportunities the two countries share.

He will meet President Bush at the White House on Thursday. While their talks are likely to cover a variety of topics, including the Iranian nuclear program, religious freedom and energy policy, Mr. Hu on Wednesday mainly took aim at a recent surge of protectionist pressure in Congress and defended the mutual benefits of open trade.

He cited research conducted by the American Chamber of Commerce in Beijing and Morgan Stanley, the investment bank, that he said underscored how trade with China was overwhelmingly beneficial to the United States.

"According to Morgan Stanley, in 2004 alone, high-quality yet inexpensive Chinese goods saved U.S. consumers $100 billion, and trading with China created over four million jobs in the United States," he said. "The fast-growing bilateral business ties have delivered great benefits to our peoples."

Mr. Hu acknowledged that some problems existed in ties between the countries, calling them "hardly avoidable." But unlike the Bush administration, which has laid out concerns about China's military spending, currency policy and quest for oil in considerable detail, Mr. Hu offered mostly oratorical platitudes.

He did not signal that he planned to reach major new accords with Mr. Bush. He stood firm on China's management of its currency, repeating the now standard line that Beijing intends to keep the exchange rate "basically stable," even as he promised to move toward greater flexibility down the road. The Bush administration and Congressional leaders have said the yuan is greatly undervalued and gives China an artificial trade advantage.

"China and the United States are fully capable of settling the problems that have occurred in the course of business growth and keeping their business relations on a sound track," Mr. Hu said.

Earlier in the day, he met a group of Chinese and American former officials and scholars who were convened in Seattle to discuss Chinese-American relations and China's rising power.

Although the participants included former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger; William J. Perry, a former secretary of defense; and many other notables from both countries, Mr. Hu delivered a few remarks about China's "peaceful development" strategy and did not engage in any dialogue, participants said.

At the Boeing lunch, he selected two written questions from a pile submitted by people in the audience, both of which turned out to be gently worded requests for him to expand on his vision for bilateral ties.

Before his lunch speech, Mr. Hu toured the Boeing site in a golf cart, met privately with company executives and visited a mock-up of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, a next-generation airplane. China has said it will buy 60 of the new twin-engine, widebody jets, becoming what Boeing calls a "launch customer" for the line of aircraft.

As he did at Microsoft on Tuesday, Mr. Hu turned on the charm when talking about China's enthusiasm for Boeing products. He sounded at times like a Boeing salesman, rattling off statistics about past deliveries and current orders for Boeing planes, the number of Boeing aircraft Chinese airlines now fly, 542, and the amount of money China has spent buying Boeing planes since Richard Nixon's historic visit in 1972, $37 billion.

"Boeing is a household name in China," Mr. Hu said. "When Chinese people fly, it is mostly in a Boeing plane. I'm pleased to say that I came to the United States on a Boeing plane."

Mr. Hu actually arrived in Seattle on Tuesday and flew to Washington on Wednesday from Paine Field, Boeing's private airport. His Air China 747-400 stood on the tarmac outside the Future of Flight museum where he spoke at lunch.

Alan R. Mulally, president of Boeing's commercial aircraft division, introduced Mr. Hu to a group of 5,000 Boeing workers in an event that had the aura of a pep rally. After Mr. Hu made a glowing tribute to Boeing's tradition of innovation, Mr. Mulally said simply, "China rocks."

Leslie Wayne contributed reporting for this article.
 楼主| 发表于 2006-4-20 15:09:11 | 显示全部楼层
真好看啊真好看,比国内的新闻好看多拉
发表于 2006-4-20 15:12:09 | 显示全部楼层
既然这么好看。。。你翻译过来给厅长过目!
发表于 2006-4-20 17:07:03 | 显示全部楼层
好东东
强烈支持啊,我正学英语呢.
发表于 2006-4-20 17:07:41 | 显示全部楼层
[s:8]  [s:8]  [s:8]
再次看傻眼。
发表于 2006-4-20 17:08:14 | 显示全部楼层
复制下来好好研读.......
发表于 2006-4-20 17:34:17 | 显示全部楼层
无语。。。。
发表于 2006-4-20 22:31:23 | 显示全部楼层
明天早起读几遍哈哈.
发表于 2006-4-20 22:32:33 | 显示全部楼层
都素火星。。。。。
 楼主| 发表于 2006-4-20 22:33:53 | 显示全部楼层
小山子这是纽约时报和今日美国的文章,我觉得很不错的,强烈推荐纽约时报和今日美国,真的很好看 
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