As Xi Jinping just wrapped up his maiden Indian trip as Chinese president, the two old Asian neighbors are facing fresh opportunities to allay disputes and foster ties.
On the economic front, as had been widely anticipated, the two sides have signed a series of cooperative agreements, including one aimed at helping the South Asian country overhaul its decrepit railway system.
Following the recent overseas steps of Chinese leaders, some might have already sensed a peculiar Chinese-style of diplomacy in the making, that is, using its manufacturing and construction prowess as a diplomatic asset to strengthen ties with countries around the world.
Those who have been to China might be well amazed by how fast and efficiently the Chinese people are able to build things like roads, bridges and railways.
Behind such feats of "Chinese speed" is Beijing's decades of efforts to encourage research and promote technology, the huge investments involved, as well as the diligent nature of the Chinese people.
These have helped create the miracle of a lasting economic boom even amid global downturn and secured the country title of the world's second-largest economy.
In the pursuit of common development, China is now widely sharing such hard-won expertise with the rest of the world, particularly its less-developed neighbors, partners and friends in Asia, Africa and Latin America. These regions are the ones that mostly lack infrastructure-building capabilities.
Meanwhile, in the west and south spheres of Asia which Xi's latest trip has covered, the old concept of the Silk Road, a historical trade route stretching across Eurasia, has been born anew with China mulling initiatives to help beef up connectivity within this vast region and to rekindle its traditional amity with nations there.
One of the most exemplary cases of "Chinese speed" is high-speed railways.
Over the past several years, Beijing has been giving its cutting-edge technology in this field the hard sell across the developing world, with China-made trains and rails heading for Southeast Asia, Latin America, Africa, and even Europe.
Despite being called by some Westerners "traditional rivals" who tend to clash for territorial and geopolitical reasons, Beijing and New Delhi have opted to focus on economic cooperation where there is still huge potential untapped.
Analysts say with Xi's visit, the two Asian giants are set to craft a new type of relationship different from the "Western-dominated, post-WWII model of great power ties."
Such a relationship should be built upon a joint recognition from both sides that they are sincere partners, not feuding rivals. Building such a new type of relationship also requires the two sides' concerted efforts to set aside disputes for common development.
To this end, Xi, in a signed article published in the Indian media ahead of his trip, called on the two emerging powerhouses to draw upon each other's advantages and strengths.
For the Indian people, the upgrading of their country's colonial-era train network, which reportedly witnesses an average of about 15,000 deaths each year, is apparently a matter of urgency, and a help handing from China, which has built the world's longest and most heavily used high-speed railway network, is much awaited.
"With rich experience in infrastructure building and manufacturing, China is ready to contribute to India's development," Xi added.
The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn