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While jobs and trade are the burning U.S. election issues, dealing with China goes beyond economics. It's about how the U.S. manages the rise of an Asian superpower. China's military budget is surpassed only by America's. China is rapidly modernizing its armed forces and asserting its claims to disputed islands in the South and East China Seas. That has unnerved neighbors and challenges the stature of the U.S. as the predominant military power in the Asia-Pacific since World War II. Obama and Romney both want to divert more U.S. forces to Asia and strengthen allies there. China views this as an attempt to contain it and has responded lukewarmly to U.S. attempts at forging U.S.-China military ties to help prevent a confrontation. The U.S. struggles to win China's diplomatic help on pressing international issues like Syria, Iran and North Korea, and China itself remains a closed shop politically. The ruling party has carried out market-style reforms but still monopolizes power and persecutes human rights and pro-democracy activists, as well as religious minorities in places such as Tibet. Obama has kept up U.S. criticism of Beijing's human rights record but hasn't let it get in the way of deepening relations. Romney argues that a nation that represses its own people cannot be a trusted partner in an international system based on economic and political freedom.
[Associated
Press;
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