Obama China trip news blasted
UNITED States' ambassador to China lashed out yesterday at negative US media coverage of President Barack Obama's visit to China, saying it failed to take into account important progress on many issues.
Although producing no breakthroughs on key issues, Obama's first state visit to China that ended on Wednesday was heralded by both sides as a success.
The trip was the top news story in China, drawing strong interest from the Chinese public who, surveys suggest, are largely positive in their view of the US president.
However, much of the US media coverage was strongly negative, accusing Obama of failing to gain concessions on key issues such as Iran's nuclear program and climate change, as well as being weak on human rights.
Ambassador Jon Huntsman said the reports missed the fact that the visit had yielded important progress on cooperation in areas such as clean energy, military-to-military exchanges and stopping the spread of nuclear weapons.
"I attended all those meetings that President Obama had with Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao," Huntsman said, referring to the Chinese president and premier.
"I've got to say some of the reporting I saw afterward was off the mark. I saw sweeping comments about things that apparently weren't talked about, when they were discussed in great detail in the meetings," he said.
Huntsman made the comments during a question-and-answer session with Chinese and American students attending an international relations program at the elite Peking University.
He said criticism about limited Chinese exposure for Obama's remarks at a town hall-style meeting with students in Shanghai failed to consider the ubiquity of the Internet and blogging in China, where 350 million people use the Web.
"Go check some time and see how messages bounce around from Website to Website and blogger to blogger for a very long period of time and you'll get a sense of what the communication revolution is all about," Huntsman said.
Huntsman said Washington expects goodwill earned during the visit will translate into concrete achievements.
Although producing no breakthroughs on key issues, Obama's first state visit to China that ended on Wednesday was heralded by both sides as a success.
The trip was the top news story in China, drawing strong interest from the Chinese public who, surveys suggest, are largely positive in their view of the US president.
However, much of the US media coverage was strongly negative, accusing Obama of failing to gain concessions on key issues such as Iran's nuclear program and climate change, as well as being weak on human rights.
Ambassador Jon Huntsman said the reports missed the fact that the visit had yielded important progress on cooperation in areas such as clean energy, military-to-military exchanges and stopping the spread of nuclear weapons.
"I attended all those meetings that President Obama had with Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao," Huntsman said, referring to the Chinese president and premier.
"I've got to say some of the reporting I saw afterward was off the mark. I saw sweeping comments about things that apparently weren't talked about, when they were discussed in great detail in the meetings," he said.
Huntsman made the comments during a question-and-answer session with Chinese and American students attending an international relations program at the elite Peking University.
He said criticism about limited Chinese exposure for Obama's remarks at a town hall-style meeting with students in Shanghai failed to consider the ubiquity of the Internet and blogging in China, where 350 million people use the Web.
"Go check some time and see how messages bounce around from Website to Website and blogger to blogger for a very long period of time and you'll get a sense of what the communication revolution is all about," Huntsman said.
Huntsman said Washington expects goodwill earned during the visit will translate into concrete achievements.
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