"Trump's foreign policy, which centres around fighting what he calls 'radical Islamic terrorism,' will to some extent ease the current sour China-US ties," Liu Weidong, a researcher at the Institute of American Studies of the China Academy of Social Sciences, told state-run Global Times.
"China and the US share a lot in common on fighting terrorism and Trump's policy seems to shift from the present focus on competition between major powers, which mainly targets China to anti-terrorism," Xin Qiang, deputy director of the Centre for US Studies at Fudan University said.
Trump said on Monday that his administration will "aggressively pursue joint and coalition military operations to crush and destroy ISIS, international cooperation to cut off their funding, expand intelligence sharing and use cyber warfare to disrupt and disable their propaganda and recruiting".
Observers said ETIM, which was previously aligned with al- Qaeda, reportedly shifted its allegiance to ISIS as substantial number of Uyghurs, a Turkik speaking Muslims from Xinjiang, made their way to Syria to fight along with it.
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While Pakistan has conducted military operations against the ETIM bases in its tribal areas, recent bombing in Balochistan's Quetta, purportedly by ISIS, caused concern here amid reports that many of the Sunni Islamic militant groups in Pakistan as well as sections of Taliban shifted allegiance to it.
In a bid to prevent infiltration of militant, the armed forces of China and Pakistan recently launched joint patrolling along the PoK-Xinjiang border while Beijing formed a Quadrilateral Cooperation and Coordination Mechanism in Counter Terrorism involving Afghanistan-China-Pakistan- Tajikistan Armed Forces to guard against militants threat to Xinjiang and the region.