With a new confrontational approach, the Bush administration is pushing China 
to act as a more "mature trading partner," as U.S. Trade Representative Rob 
Portman puts it. That goal -- to make sure China plays fair by international 
trading rules -- will be tested next week when U.S. and Chinese officials 
convene a senior-level dialogue aimed at easing economic tensions between the 
two powers.
The April 11 meeting, to be held in Washington, will set the stage for 
Chinese President Hu Jintao's visit to the U.S. one week later. Next week's 
session could produce an agreement that would pave the way for U.S. companies to 
take part in Chinese trade exhibitions. In the days that follow, Chinese 
officials are expected to go on a multibillion-dollar buying spree of American 
goods, from soybeans to computer-networking gear to transportation equipment.
But progress on resolving substantive issues has been elusive. U.S. officials 
have begun to damp expectations for any breakthrough on their priority 
objectives, such as widening access to China's domestic market and stiffening 
China's enforcement of intellectual-property rights -- when the Joint Commission 
on Commerce and Trade formally convenes next week.
"Both sides recognize the stakes," said Myron Brilliant, vice president for 
Asia at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, who has consulted with U.S. and Chinese 
officials in recent days. "But there aren't going to be any home runs."
More likely is a modest package of commitments providing for closer 
coordination on combating piracy of intellectual property, including an 
agreement among Chinese computer makers to ship their products loaded with 
legitimate copies of Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system. Also under 
discussion is a proposal to ease rules in China that limit domestic access for 
international express-delivery carriers, such as FedEx Corp. and United Parcel 
Service Inc.
Next week's meeting and the visit by Mr. Hu come at a time of rising tensions 
between China and the U.S. Washington's hope is for China to become "a fully 
accountable stakeholder in the international trading system," Assistant U.S. 
Trade Representative Tim Stratford said on Capitol Hill this week.
To accomplish the goal, the Bush administration, while still supportive of 
economic diplomacy, has taken steps this year to toughen economic policy toward 
Beijing. Last week, the U.S. filed a protest at the World Trade Organization 
aimed at cracking open China's auto-parts market to foreign suppliers. And 
consideration is being given to additional WTO action to address concerns that 
China provides unfair subsidies to business to promote exports.
In China, some officials say they have been surprised by the surge in 
protectionist sentiment in the U.S. In the past, it has been Washington that has 
urged Beijing to embrace free trade. But in recognition of the uncertain 
political environment, Mr. Hu and other Chinese officials plan to extol the 
virtues of free trade and benefits of globalization in a bid to forestall the 
erection of new trade barriers.
One hope among Chinese officials is to begin to defuse tensions over the U.S. 
trade deficit with China, which topped $200 billion in 2005 by U.S. estimates. A 
senior Chinese official said yesterday that the agreements to buy U.S. goods 
expected from next week's delegation aren't meant to be one-time transactions. 
Rather, they are intended to be continuing contracts that will smooth out trade 
imbalances between the two countries.
"China does not intentionally pursue a large trade surplus with the U.S. We 
are willing to increase our imports," said the senior Chinese official.
Mr. Hu is scheduled to arrive April 18 in Seattle, where he will visit 
officials from Microsoft. He also plans to tour Boeing Co., which is in talks to 
sell as many as 80 planes to China, people close to the situation said.
Ahead of Mr. Hu's visit, a delegation of Chinese politicians and business 
executives led by Vice Premier Wu Yi will parcel out purchase agreements across 
13 states and 14 cities, in an attempt to show Americans the benefits of 
Sino-U.S. trade, the Chinese official said. Ms. Wu is scheduled to appear in Los 
Angeles today to begin the signing of what officials have described as "over $4 
billion" in deals.
On April 20, Mr. Hu is scheduled to meet with President Bush in Washington, 
his first official visit to the U.S. since taking office in 2003. Geopolitical 
concerns, from human rights to Taiwan to North Korea, will inevitably make their 
way onto the agenda. Chinese officials say that enlisting U.S. support in 
opposing any moves by Taiwan to seek formal independence is its highest 
priority. But economic issues, by far, are causing the greatest friction at the 
moment in U.S.-Sino relations. "This is a very important opportunity for both 
the United States and China," said Montana Sen. Max Baucus, the top-ranking 
Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee.
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