Speakers call for more collaboration in healthcare and for talk, not division
US and Chinese political and business leaders have voiced hopes for a more stable relationship between the two countries amid rising tensions between the two.
At a gala in New York on Tuesday hosted by the National Committee on US-China Relations, the committee's president, Stephen Orlins, said he hoped the clear skies in the city after days of storms would be "symbolic of what's going to happen with US-China relations".
"It's absolutely unquestionable to say the world is chaotic — war, economic dislocation, political torment or turmoil, weather that we have never seen before ... but we at the national committee know that at times of great challenge we can make progress. We can make a difference. We can make progress if we unite more forces that can be united."
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Orlins emphasized the collaboration between healthcare industries in the US and China. "It is more important than ever that China and the United States work together to address health issues facing both their populations and the world. The evidence is clear that such collaboration has helped save lives."
At the gala, the New York-based committee honored Albert Bourla, chairman and chief executive of the pharmaceuticals company Pfizer, for his leadership in advancing global health and promoting China-US collaboration.
China's progress in biopharmaceutical innovation has been remarkable and is reshaping the global competitive landscape, Bourla said.
The progress in China's biopharma industry has drawn growing attention from global companies, he said.
"Chinese biotech firms accounted for nearly one-third of all large pharma drug licensing deals last year, a major shift in where innovation is sourced, because innovation now also is produced in China."
Overcoming differences
Bourla also spoke of the long history of scientific collaboration between China and the US, saying it has demonstrated the two countries' ability to overcome differences and work together for the common good.
"When we look to the past, I think we can be encouraged. The United States and China have a long history of collaborating in science and healthcare, and despite the fact that there were always ups and downs in their relations, eventually they found a way to work together."
US and Chinese scientists have "done remarkable work in … preventing and treating infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, yellow fever, influenza, HIV and Ebola", he said.
"The exchange of scientific knowledge and trust-building has become a model for global health partners. It is a powerful example of science in the service of the community, the service of the world."
The lessons of collaboration remain vital today, Bourla said.
"We must draw on these lessons again. Cancer, Alzheimer's, heart disease, rare genetic disorders, they don't recognize borders. Neither (do) solutions.
"We must be committed to harnessing the world's best science wherever it resides. Usually, collaboration brings the best science. Patients, like all of us, are counting on us to come together across borders, sectors and disciplines."
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Charlene Barshefsky, the committee's chairwoman and a former US trade representative, said at the gala that progress is rarely linear, and the most recent news underscores the US and China are each trying to shore up their economies and ensure their national security, and the way they are doing this is not always the most productive.
"There's no question we will find common ground on every issue. Structural issues remain outstanding, a variety of points of contention between the two sides, but I take great encouragement and hope in the notion that leaders of great countries recognize the value of communication over conflict, and will always work to that end."
Amid all this disruption, "we're going to see the same, more positive pattern emerge", she said. "The world depends on stable US-China relations."
Contact the writers at minluzhang@chinadailyusa.com