Editor's Note

In this year's US presidential elections, China is increasingly finding itself the focus of attention. Both President Barack Obama and Republican rival Mitt Romney are talking tough on China during their campaigns, accusing the country of currency manipulation, unfair trade practices and stealing American jobs and intellectual property. However, China bashing misleads the US public and deflects attention from the real problems it needs to address. Whichever candidate wins the presidential election, how they handle relations with China over the next four years will be critically important.

Major Issues

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China's growth has raised concerns among US policymakers on major economic issues from currency, trade, investment, to the outsourcing of jobs.
As the dispute over Diaoyu Islands between China and Japan escalates, the US is changing its tone on its position in dealing with the situation of Asia-Pacific region.
Chinese construction equipment maker Sany Group and telecom companies Huawei and ZTE have been involved in charges of posing national security threats to the US.

Photo

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Latest News

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Re-elected Obama faces complex relations with China

A newly re-elected President Barack Obama will need to spend some of his political capital on stabilizing the United States’ relationship with China even as those ties continue to get more competitive.

China Daily Exclusive

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US-China relations to stay the course in 2nd Obama term

The culmination of the US presidential race on Tuesday would also seem to end the slew of anti-China remarks, but experts say the outcome won't alter the nature of US-Chinese relations.

Opinion

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China bashing should soon subside

US President Barack Obama and his Republican challenger Mitt Romney blamed China for all the United States' troubles.

Honesty should be ticket to White House

Amid the US' economic woes, many Americans want to see the president taking on China, which they view as a threat to their economic supremacy.

China-US Relations

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US-China relations to stay the course

The culmination of the US presidential race on Tuesday would also seem to end the slew of anti-China remarks, but experts say the outcome won't alter the nature of US-Chinese relations.