BEIJING, Feb. 23 (Xinhua) -- Thirty-five years after Richard Nixon became
the first U.S. president to journey to China and helped begin to thaw the cold
war, the details of his landmark visit remain vivid in the minds of Chinese
people.
Ji Chaozhu, former deputy UN secretary-general, served as an interpreter
during Nixon's tour. He clearly remembered the day of February 21, 1972. After
Nixon deplaned at the Beijing airport he shook hands with former premier Zhou
Enlai, who told the president, "your hand has stretched across the largest ocean
of the world".
"Nixon's tour was a significant chapter in Sino-U.S. relations, during
which the two countries ended two decades of conflict and started the process of
normalizing diplomatic ties," said Ji during an interview with Xinhua.
The U.S. had refused to recognize the People's Republic of China since it
was founded in 1949 because of the ideological difference.
Nixon's visit came at a time when the two super powers, the U.S. and the
former Soviet Union, were seeking hegemony. The U.S. adjusted its China policy
from conflict to dialogue.
During his visit, the Shanghai Communique was issued which laid the
groundwork for establishing official diplomatic ties some five years later.
The larch tree saplings Nixon brought with him and planted in the Hangzhou
botanical park in east China's Zhejiang Province have been propagated and now
grow in numerous other places in China.
Nixon was gifted with a pair of pandas, Lingling and Xingxing, by the
Chinese government and they became instant celebrities at the Washington Zoo.
More than 75 million people visited the panda couple at the zoo where they lived
until Lingling died in 1992 and Xingxing in 1999.
Nixon's visit not only helped normalize the relationship between China and
the U.S, but also broke China's diplomatic deadlock with the western world.
After Nixon's visit, many developed countries forged or normalized diplomatic
ties with China, including Japan, Italy and Spain. China became more integrated
to the international community.
Nixon's visit also had a great impact on international situation. Since
then, the U.S. had gradually taken favorable position in its competition with
former Soviet Union until the early 1990s when the cold war ended.
At a recent seminar in New York to commemorate Nixon's China tour, Rui
Xiaojian, former Chinese ambassador to the U.S. called the visit the "turning
point of the cold war".
Nowadays, multipolarization and globalization enables China and the U.S. to
have closer cooperation both in world affairs and trade. The U.S. became China's
second largest trading partner. The trade volume between the two countries hit
262.6 billion U.S. dollars in 2006.
Carla Hills, chairman of the Board of Director of the National Committee on
United States-China Relations said the two countries are doomed to have more
common interest in the future, and as long as they can learn what each other
needs, they would handle disputes effectively and improve their relationship in
a healthy way.