Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) is welcomed by U.S. President Barack Obama (L) at the South Lawn of the White House in Washington DC, the United States, Sept 25, 2015. Xi arrived in Washington, the second stop of his first state visit to the United States, on Thursday after a busy two-and-a-half-day stay in West Coast hub Seattle. (Photo/Xinhua)
It does not matter precisely how their ties are rhetorically framed - "new type of major-country relationship" or otherwise. China and the United States need a clear sense of direction as their relations approach a critical crossroad, and, as the latest talk about "frenemy-ship" indicates, could go either way. [Special coverage]
So, it matters whether each side gets reassurance that it can count on the due respect of the other. It also matters whether President Xi Jinping's visit has been successful - to both Beijing and Washington, actually the world at large.
Judging from the lists of achievements Beijing and Washington have published, the visit was nothing but a success - a big one from Beijing's perspective.
As some have observed, Chinese media have sounded more upbeat about the visit, and rightfully so, for it offered a badly needed dose of optimism for the worrisome state of bilateral ties.
That Beijing has published a much longer and detailed - 49-item - "achievements check-list" than Washington's "fact sheet" reveals a subtle difference in perspectives. While Washington dwells on hard facts, Beijing cherishes everything conducive to stabilizing ties.
That the agreement on promoting what it terms as "new type of major-country relationship" tops China's list while being absent on that of the U.S., too, offers food for thought. With some in the U.S. preoccupied with what they see as imminent threats, from the South China Sea to cyberspace, Beijing wants strategic consensus as much as, if not more than, pragmatic cooperation.
Business deals, like the purchase of 300 Boeing jetliners, is "ballast" for Sino-U.S. ties. But we need more than such "ballast" to deepen strategical mutual trust. Beijing's message in the lengthy list is clear: Everything conducive to building confidence is an achievement worth celebrating. Such enthusiasm deserves equally enthusiastic resonance from the other side of the Pacific.
Xi's visit was about mutual assurance, and served that purpose well. That is good for both countries.
Citing Chinese villagers' rescue of U.S. pilots during World War II and the two countries' collaboration in the recent fight against Ebola in western Africa, U.S. President Barack Obama told his Chinese guests that the two countries not only need to cooperate, but also can continue cooperating. That is very correct.
Once their remarks on "managing and controlling divergences in constructive manners" are honored in practice, the potential of Sino-U.S. partnership would be limitless. So would be the subsequent benefits.
Sino-U.S. agreements on matters of broader concerns, climate change and development cooperation in particular, added a global dimension to the visit.
When China and the U.S. join hands, the world benefits.