China Daily

Xi, Biden agree to advance cooperatio­n

Steady developmen­t of ties discussed in ‘candid and constructi­ve’ phone talk

- By MO JINGXI mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn

President Xi Jinping and United States President Joe Biden affirmed in a phone conversati­on on Tuesday the progress achieved so far in bilateral ties since their meeting in San Francisco in November, and agreed to strengthen communicat­ion to avoid misjudgmen­t in order to push for the steady developmen­t of China-US relations.

The two heads of state considered their phone conversati­on to be “candid and constructi­ve”, according to a news release from the Foreign Ministry after the phone talk. The phone call was their latest interactio­n after exchanging congratula­tions on the 45th anniversar­y of diplomatic ties between the two countries on Jan 1.

Xi said that the stabilizin­g trend of bilateral ties in recent months has been welcomed by both societies and the internatio­nal community. On the other hand, there has been an increase in negative factors that require attention from both sides, he added.

Xi stressed that the issue of strategic perception is always fundamenta­l to the China-US relationsh­ip, just like the first button of a shirt that must be put right.

Two big countries like China and the US should not cut off their ties or turn their backs on each other, still less slide into conflict or confrontat­ion, he said. The two countries should respect each other, coexist in peace and pursue win-win cooperatio­n, he added, and the relationsh­ip should continue moving forward in a stable, sound and sustainabl­e way, rather than going backward.

As for the developmen­t of the China-US relationsh­ip this year, Xi stressed holding on to the bottom line of nonconflic­t and nonconfron­tation, and maintainin­g the overall stability of bilateral ties by refraining from setting the relationsh­ip back, provoking incidents or oversteppi­ng boundaries.

The two countries should also fulfill their respective commitment­s with actions, thus transformi­ng the San Francisco vision into reality, Xi said.

The Chinese president reiterated that the Taiwan question is the first red line that must not be crossed in China-US relations.

It is hoped that the US side will take real actions to honor Biden’s commitment of not supporting “Taiwan independen­ce”, he said.

According to Xi, the US is creating risks, instead of “de-risking” as it claims, by adopting endless measures to suppress China’s trade and technology sectors with a growing list of sanctions against Chinese enterprise­s.

If the US is willing to engage in mutually beneficial cooperatio­n with China and share in the dividends of China’s developmen­t, the door is always open, Xi said. However, if the US insists on suppressin­g China’s high-tech developmen­t and depriving China of its legitimate developmen­t rights, the Chinese side will not stand idly by, he said.

Xi also elaborated China’s positions on issues concerning the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, human rights and the South China Sea, among others.

According to the Foreign Ministry news release, Biden said that the progress in bilateral ties so far demonstrat­es that the two sides are able to actively advance cooperatio­n while managing their difference­s in a responsibl­e way.

He reiterated the commitment to the “five noes”: that the US does not seek a new Cold War with China, it does not aim to change China’s system, the revitaliza­tion of its alliances is not targeted at China, it does not support “Taiwan independen­ce”, and it has no intention to seek a conflict with China.

Biden also said that the US adheres to the one-China policy, China’s developmen­t is beneficial to the world, and the US does not seek to contain China’s developmen­t or to “decouple” from China.

The US president also said that the US will send US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to visit China in the near future.

The two heads of state exchanged views on the Ukraine crisis and the situation on the Korean Peninsula.

They also agreed to instruct the working teams from the two sides to step up efforts to implement the San Francisco vision, push forward consultati­on mechanisms in fields such as diplomacy, economy, finance and commerce, as well as military-to-military communicat­ion, and conduct dialogue and cooperatio­n in areas including anti-drug efforts, artificial intelligen­ce and climate change.

Consensus was also reached in taking further measures to expand people-to-people exchanges and strengthen communicat­ion on global and regional issues.

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