A teacher (center) instructs Chinese and Russian students in traditional Chinese opera at Heihe Experimental Elementary School in Heilongjiang province on May 19. Sixty Russian students from Blagoveshchensk visited the school as part of the Friendship Bridge youth cultural exchange program between China and Russia. [Photo/Xinhua]
Independence is key to model relationship, says former minister
China and Russia have a "model" relationship in which both maintain full independence and seek no political or military alliance, according to former Russian foreign minister Igor Ivanov. [Special coverage]
"I believe the Sino-Russian relationship can be considered a model-type relationship between great powers in the 21st century," Ivanov told China Daily.
"It is not a rigid political or military alliance; both countries maintain full independence in their decision-making."
He was commenting as Premier Li Keqiang started a three-day visit to Russia on Sunday, his first trip to the country in his current role.
Ivanov was Russia's foreign minister from 1998 to 2004 before becoming secretary of the Security Council of Russia until 2007.
Chinese Ambassador to Russia Li Hui, speaking before the premier's visits to Germany, Russia and Italy, said the essence of the Sino-Russian relationship is "non-alliance and non-confrontation". It does not target any third party but focuses on peaceful co-existence and working together for mutual benefit.
He said this "friendly and cooperative relationship" has showcased a new trend for international relations in the 21st century.
It is a good example of how ties among major global players can be forged successfully and highlights the fact that global politics is becoming increasingly multipolar, the ambassador said.
Ivanov, 69, a veteran architect of Sino-Russian relations in his work with former Russian president Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin, the current leader, said both countries are doing their best to take into account each other's interests, concerns and aspirations.
"Nobody is trying to act as a 'big brother', but each side is willing to go the extra mile to reach a mutually beneficial solution to even the most complicated problems," said Ivanov, now a professor at the Moscow State Institute for International Relations.
He said China and Russia have just embarked on a "long, long road".
"We still have to work hard to make our relations more efficient, including our combined influence on global affairs. In my view, there is much our two countries can do together to promote the new world order — both in terms of security and development agendas."
He said economic cooperation is significant and growing, but still lacks the depth and diversity both nations really need. "It is not about the overall size of trade or mutual investments, but more about the quality of economic ties," he said.
Ivanov said that energy cooperation is on a solid foundation, but added, "The foundation is not the whole house."
He said that exporting more high-tech products to China is a critical area for bilateral cooperation in the future.
"Our two countries have a lot of potential for developing technology and high-tech-related products," he said, adding that both countries complement each other to a high degree.
He said they should increase cooperation in space, communications, transportation and other areas.
"It will not be easy, but I'm sure the political will to move ahead exists on both sides. We should get down to specific projects, business plans, joint ventures and private-public partnerships to move in this direction."
He said both sides need to radically expand cooperation on universities and research laboratories, as well as promoting joint start-ups, new businesses and techno parks.
"This is much more difficult than building a gas pipeline from Siberia to northern China," Ivanov said. "But this is the future we have to seize together."
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