Mahathir urges US to talk with China, accept its greatness
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad on Thursday called for talks to resolve the ongoing trade dispute between Washington and Beijing and urged the world to accept China's technological prowess.
The U.S. cannot expect to always be at the top in technology, and countries need to talk to deal with a powerful China, Mahathir said at a conference in Tokyo. He also appeared to side with Chinese telecom giant Huawei, which the U.S. has put on a blacklist.
"We try to make use of their technology as much as possible," Mahathir told the Future of Asia conference, noting that Huawei has achieved a "tremendous advance over American technology."
"We have to accept that the U.S. cannot forever be the supreme nation in the world that can have the best technology in the world," he said.
For months, the world's two biggest economies have been locked in a standoff over trade balances and technology, including allegations that China uses unfair tactics, such as stealing trade secrets.
The Trump administration has imposed 25% tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese imports and is planning to tax another $300 billion in imports that have so far been spared. It escalated the stakes this month by effectively barring U.S. companies from supplying Huawei with computer chips, software and other components without government approval.
Mahathir's comments drew praise from China's foreign ministry, which said it hoped all countries would listen carefully to the prime minister's advice and "seek opportunities of mutually beneficial and win-win cooperation."
"All developing countries, including China and Malaysia, surely have the right to develop their capabilities and improve their technological progress," ministry spokesman Lu Kang said at his daily briefing. "In fact, against the backdrop of economic globalization today, mutual development and common progress through mutually beneficial cooperation can open up more room for development for all countries."
Lu added that U.S. has provided no evidence that Huawei is a tool of the Chinese government.
"The U.S. has been sidestepping the issue that everyone is most concerned about all along, that is, whether it can present evidence," he said.
In his comments Thursday, Mahathir stressed that nations with differing ideologies must be able to get along.
"It is worth it to talk to each other and stop this confrontation," he said. He warned that conflict between the U.S. and China would only lead to "greater destruction."
"We want to see reasonable, responsible countries sit down around a table and discuss problems. How do we deal with China, a strong China which is very rich because China has got money," he said.
Mahathir arrived in Tokyo on Wednesday and leaves Friday.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has meetings with Mahathir and leaders of six other Asian nations this week, part of his administration's policy of courting Europe, the U.S. and other nations in part to counter China's growing global influence.
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