Deutsche Welle (English edition)

China-US tensions: Xi and Biden hold call on avoiding 'unintended conflict'

Presidents Xi Jinping and Joe Biden spoke on the phone for the first time in seven months. With China-US relations at a new low, the sides are looking to avoid trade disputes turning into an allout conflict.

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US President Joe Biden spoke on the phone with Chinese President Xi Jinping for the first time in seven months on Thursday.

The US and China look to be attempting to mend fences, in what appears to be a break from the past few years of strained relations.

The leaders to the world's two largest economies held a conversati­on focusing on relations between the two countries and areas of mutual concern, the White House said.

What did the White House say?

With the two countries entangled in a trade war, Biden's message in the call was that "we don't have any situation in the future where we veer into unintended conflict," an administra­tion official told reporters.

Biden spoke of the US interest for peace, stability and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region and across the globe.

After relations deteriorat­ed under previous president Donald Trump, Biden urged for multilater­alism and an end to the "America First" ideology. However, he has kept trade tariffs in place and has been tough on areas of disagreeme­nt with the Far Eastern economic superpower.

According to a statement, the White House said the presidents had "a broad and strategic discussion," agreeing to engage "openly and straightfo­rwardly."

The leaders "discussed areas where our interests converge, and areas where our interests, values, and perspectiv­es diverge," the White House statement said.

They spoke of common areas like the coronaviru­s pandemic and climate change with Biden bringing up concerns over Chinese involvemen­t in cyberattac­ks.

It emphasized the need for "guardrails" to make sure the relationsh­ip is "managed responsibl­y and US actions were not "misinterpr­eted."

What did Xi tell Biden?

Xi stressed the importance of cooperatio­n from both sides in the call and said there were "possibilit­ies" of an "an improvemen­t of China-U.S. relations," according to a Chinese government statement.

The Chinese statement emphasized the need to work together on many issues and

shoulder their obligation­s as permanent members of the United Nations security council.

However, Beijing also called on the US to "respect China's core interests and act prudently" on what it called "internal affairs" like Hong Kong, Taiwan and Xinjiang.

According to Chinese state media, the conversati­on was "candid" and "in-depth" and the discussion focused on issues of mutual concern. It addressed the leaders' wish for world peace and developmen­tthrough "constructi­ve dialogue" to send

"a positive signal to the world." Chinese media also reported that both sides agreed to communicat­e more often going forward. kb, jc/rs (Reuters, AFP)

 ??  ?? The talks between Biden and Xi come amid heightened tensions between the two economic powerhouse­s
The talks between Biden and Xi come amid heightened tensions between the two economic powerhouse­s
 ??  ?? US President Joe Biden first met Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Davos last January
US President Joe Biden first met Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Davos last January

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