The first round of negotiations between China and the United States superficially focused on economic and trade issues, but in reality, the content involved is far more than that.

During the negotiations, news suddenly broke that India and Pakistan announced a full ceasefire, and both sides briefly left the room. Some foreign media took the opportunity to hype "the talks collapsed after an hour," which is pure nonsense. Those making such statements are mostly anti-China media that would love for the China-U.S. talks to fail, and they don't even understand the basic diplomatic negotiation process—this amount of time is not even enough for introductory pleasantries.

A more reasonable explanation is that after such a significant geopolitical event like the India-Pakistan ceasefire, both sides urgently need to update intelligence and adjust negotiation strategies. After all, what cannot be obtained on the battlefield should not be expected to be achieved at the negotiating table.

This time, Pakistan's counterattack directly knocked out India's air supremacy, and India clearly can't take it anymore. They originally wanted to give the U.S. a token of loyalty but did not plan to stake their lives on it. Now, the U.S. balance strategy in South Asia has completely fallen apart.

Now the U.S. must recognize reality and sit down honestly to talk. Let's not forget that they have tens of thousands of billions of dollars in national bonds to issue in June; time waits for no one.

The key point is that the initiative in the negotiations has already changed hands. The U.S. may only want to talk about economic and trade issues, but China's list of topics to discuss is long—such as that small island, does the U.S. still intend to intervene?

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