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|   President Hu Jintao meets US Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday. [Photo/Agencies]  | 
WASHINGTON - President Hu Jintao and his US  counterpart Barack Obama agreed to "share expanding common interests"  while pledging closer cooperation in areas that included trade, energy,  the environment and protection of intellectual property rights, as they  held a summit in the White House on Wednesday.
"We both agreed to further push forward the  positive, cooperative and comprehensive China-US relationship and commit  to work together to build a partnership based on mutual respect and  mutual benefit, so as to better benefit people in our own countries and  the world over," Hu told a post-summit news briefing.
"We've shown that the US and China, when we cooperate, can receive substantial benefits," he said.
Hu said China will continue to provide a  level playing field for US investors and urged the US to relax its  restrictions on high-tech exports and offer a fair environment to  Chinese enterprises investing in the US.
He also asked Washington to recognize China's full market economy status.
With increased partnership a priority for  both countries, Hu touched on the subject when he addressed a welcoming  luncheon hosted by the US-China Business Council and the National  Committee on US-China Relations in Washington on Thursday before leaving  for Chicago.
"The China-US relationship is not one in  which one side's gain means the other side's loss," Hu said, addressing  concerns expressed by some people in the US over the increasing economic  and political competitiveness of China.
It is only normal, in any relationship, to  have disagreement and friction, Hu said. But he added that a strategic  and long-term perspective will ensure relations will not be affected or  held back by any individual incident at any particular time.
A joint statement was issued after the  summit, which was also used to unveil a series of deals, including  China's purchase of 200 Boeing aircraft. US officials said the $45  billion deals would support an estimated 235,000 American jobs.
During the post-summit news briefing, the  two leaders spoke glowingly about cooperation while trying to seek a  more mature and respectful relationship. They also shared some  unexpected laughs. 
"We want to sell you all kinds of stuff,"  the US president said, drawing laughter from the packed room. "We want  to sell you planes. We want to sell you cars. We want to sell you  software." 
While there were few signs the leaders had  ended disagreements on issues such as the yuan - which Obama said is  undervalued - and human rights, both sides, however, promised to seek  further cooperation on the world's most pressing problems and embrace an  era of "friendly competition".
After an event-packed day that also included  a meeting with business executives, Hu was hosted at a gala state  dinner, sprinkled with stars such as action hero Jackie Chan and singer  Barbra Streisand, in White House rooms bathed in purple and red lights.
"While it is easy to focus on our  differences, in cultures and perspective, let us never forget the values  that our people share," Obama said in a toast to Hu, pointing to mutual  hard work, sacrifice and love of family.
Experts hailed achievements made by Hu during his second day of the US visit.
Yuan Peng, an expert on US studies with the  China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, said the joint  statement was a guideline for relations in the next decade and beyond.
But he noted "it is important to implement the statement through pragmatic mechanisms and concrete actions".
Jamie Metzl, executive vice-president of the  Asia Society, said it is a positive sign that the two presidents  addressed differences in areas such as human rights and the yuan  exchange rate.
"Both sides are discussing areas for  collaboration. And the issues that divide us are being explored in a  positive and constructive way." 
Philip Levy, resident scholar at the  American Enterprise Institute, said there has been a shift in the Obama  administration's China policy.
"The House Committee on Ways and Means has  made it clear that they are less interested in denunciations of currency  practices than in practical attempts to solve trade problems," he told  China Daily.
"It is not that the US is any less  interested in seeing a currency appreciation ... rather, it seems to be a  constructive attempt to find those issues where cooperative action is  possible." 
Charles Freeman, at the Center for Strategic  and International Studies, said the Obama administration's tactic to  reduce strategic mistrust has led to greater emphasis on cooperation in  global affairs.
"It now recognizes that China is a  considerable ... mover in that architecture. By elevating its assessment  of China's role in global affairs, however, the US expects China to  play an active role and reduce threats to the (US-led) international  architecture," said Freeman.
Yukon Huang, senior associate in the  Carnegie Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,  said the two countries are trying to find common ground for more  productive dialogue.
"The economic woes of the US only exacerbate  the tension (over the yuan exchange rate). But China's economy is  growing at an average 10 percent per year. It has more flexibility to  find a win-win solution."
This year will see more high-level exchanges between the two countries.
Both presidents will meet again at the 2011 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Hawaii.
US Vice-President Joe Biden will visit China later this year to meet Vice-President Xi Jinping, who will pay a return visit.
Source: Zhang Yuwei and Ariel Tung in New York, Li Xiaokun in Beijing, AP, and Reuters contributed to this story
A win-win deals!
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