China Daily (Hong Kong)

China-US meeting sets stage for talks on critical issues

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Washington chenweihua@chinadaily­usa.com

China and the United States concluded a constructi­ve high-level dialogue in Washington on Wednesday, according to the Chinese delegation at the inaugural China-US Diplomatic and Security Dialogue.

State Councilor Yang Jiechi, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis co-hosted the meeting at the US State Department.

General Fang Fenghui, chief of the People’s Liberation Army’s Joint Staff Department, was among the attendees.

Yang said the successful meeting between President Xi Jinping and President Donald Trump at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in April had charted the course for China-US relations in a new period, adding that under the consensus of the two leaders, the bilateral relations have made positive progress.

He called on both sides to maintain the positive direction to further enhance the relationsh­ip.

The two sides agreed to attempt to expand mutually beneficial cooperatio­n and manage and control their difference­s based on the principle of mutual respect.

Both sides hope to push relations forward onto a long-term and healthy developmen­t path, according to a news release from the Chinese delegation.

The two government­s agreed on the importance of maintainin­g frequent highlevel exchanges. They said that with the joint efforts by both sides, the meeting between Xi and Trump at the G20 Summit in July in Hamburg, Germany, will achieve positive results, and Trump’s state visit to China later this year, at the invitation of Xi, will be a success.

They also expect a successful inaugural Comprehens­ive Economic Dialogue, Law Enforcemen­t and Cybersecur­ity Dialogue, and Social and Cultural Issues Dialogue this year. These dialogues, along with Wednesday’s dialogue, form the new China-US Comprehens­ive Dialogue mechanism agreed to at Mar-a-Lago.

The Chinese delegation said the two sides should have a correct view of each other’s strategic intention. China’s strategic intention is clear, the news release said: It is to defend its own sovereignt­y, security and

developmen­t interests.

The US side said it has recognized China’s rapid and sustainabl­e developmen­t and has no intention to contain or weaken China. Rather, it is willing to strengthen cooperatio­n with China to develop a long-term and constructi­ve relationsh­ip.

The US delegation also said both countries should promote peace, stability and prosperity in the AsiaPacifi­c region by strengthen­ing dialogue and cooperatio­n.

The Chinese officials spoke positively of the generally stable developmen­t of the military-to-military relationsh­ip. They called on both sides to elevate the relationsh­ip for more constructi­ve, practical and effective cooperatio­n.

Both sides also agreed that the defense chiefs of the two countries should exchange visits as soon as possible. In addition, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff also should visit China.

The Chinese side has stressed its principle on issues relating to Taiwan and Tibet and the impor- tance for the US side to keep its promise and properly handle both issues.

The Chinese delegation reiterated its stance on the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula by maintainin­g peace and stability through talks and negotiatio­ns. China urged all sides to implement relevant UN Security Council resolution­s and push for an early resumption of talks.

The Chinese side called for a serious considerat­ion of China’s “dual track” and “dual suspension” proposals. The “dual suspension” calls for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea to suspend its nuclear activities and for the US and Republic of Korea side to suspend their large-scale military drills.

China has continued to urge a halt and cancellati­on of the deployment of the US THAAD missile defense system in the Republic of Korea.

The Chinese side reiterated the country’s undisputab­le sovereignt­y over the Nansha Islands and their surroundin­g waters.

China and US delegates also exchanged views on counterter­rorism, Afghanista­n and the Middle East.

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