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From our analysis, we found the following most relevant:General Accounting Office summarized the situation in 2002: "We identified nearly 700 individual commitments on how China's trade regime will adhere to the organization's agreements, principles, and rules. Other commitments grant market access to other members'goods and services." China's accession package was based on early-1990s trade rules, and the global economy has evolved significantly since thenPost-WTO accession, all trade-related regulations had to be offered for public comment and then openly published, giving the U.S. government a chance to beat back discriminatory rules and limiting Chinese officials from capriciously invoking vague laws against U.S. For the first time, non-Chinese companies located in China were granted the right to trade internationally and distribute those goods domestically within China, eliminating a previous requirement to use Chinese state-owned monopolies to conduct much of their operationsDrawing on the experiences of the two dozen former officials I interviewed, and on my own review of the history of U.S.-China relations since Nixon's 1972 visit, here are the potential building blocks of a U.S. strategy towards China for the coming decades.
U.S. security and prosperity is enhanced with strong military alliances and trade partnerships, none more so than in the Asia-Pacific.It's their region." While Beijing's overall implementation of nonproliferation rules has not been perfect, U.S. forces and allies are today safer with China inside the tent than if the workshop of the world had been left outside.
Before the coronavirus outbreak and events in Hong Kong grabbed the headlines over the last few months, the Trump administration spent the better part of three years decrying China's "unfair" and "not reciprocal" trade practices.