UNITED STATES Secretary of State Antony Blinken has capped a visit to Beijing by meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping as the two countries try to stabilise relations amid disputes over national security, the economy, and geopolitical differences on the Middle East, Ukraine and Southeast Asia.
Xi told the top US diplomat that the two superpowers “should be
partners rather than rivals” and should help each other succeed rather than
hurt each other, according to the state news agency Xinhua.
“I proposed mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win
cooperation to be the three overarching principles. They are both lessons
learned from the past and a guide for the future,” he said.
Xi said China would be happy to see a prosperous US and hopes
Washington will share this outlook for Beijing so bilateral ties can “truly
stabilize, improve and move forward”.
But as both Xi and Blinken said, there are still major issues that
threaten the recent improvement in relations.
Blinken raised the issue of Chinese “support to the Russian
defence industrial base” during five and a half hours of talks, according to US
Department of State spokesperson Matthew Miller, who added that the two sides
also discussed fractious topics such as Taiwan and the South China Sea.
China has not provided Russia
with arms for its war in Ukraine, but the US and other Western nations
say Chinese industrial exports like machinery and semiconductors have
helped Russia increase its production of weapons.
Beijing has called this normal trade between China and Russia that
should not be disrupted or restricted, also pointing out that the war is being
prolonged by major Western arms transfers and funding for Ukraine.
Blinken earlier met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who
cautioned that their countries could either “keep to the right direction of
moving forward with stability or return to a downward spiral” or even “slide
into confrontation”.
Wang said China observes a number of “red lines” that the US must
not overstep as their relations are tested by “negative factors”.
“China’s legitimate development rights have been unreasonably
suppressed, and our core interests are facing challenges,” he told Blinken.
The US warned China about its assertive moves around the
Philippines and promised to defend its ally.
“I made clear that while the US will continue to de-escalate
tensions, our defence commitments to the Philippines remain ironclad,” Blinken
told reporters, adding that he raised Beijing’s “dangerous actions in the South
China Sea” during meetings with top leaders.
In addition to clashing on Taiwan, which China claims as its own
territory and the US has been arming, the two nations have seen
tensions rising over artificial intelligence, a law that seeks to ban TikTok in
the US if its Chinese parent company refuses to sell it and China’s supply of
chemicals used to make fentanyl.
Underscoring the fraught nature of their relations, US President
Joe Biden signed into law a bipartisan bill that includes $8bn to counter
China’s military might along with $61bn for Ukraine and billions in military
aid for Taiwan just hours before Blinken arrived in China on Wednesday.
China-US relations have been turbulent in recent years with the
situation exacerbated among other things by a trade war, then-House of
Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan in 2022 and a row over
the US downing of a suspected
Chinese surveillance balloon last year. (Al Jazeera)
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