The Jerusalem Post

US has wrong perception of China, says foreign minister

- • By BERNARD ORR and ETHAN WANG

BEIJING (Reuters) – The US is clinging to wrong perception­s of China and has yet to fulfill its “promises” despite some progress since presidents Joe Biden and Xi Jinping met last November, China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Thursday.

Speaking at a news conference on the sidelines of an annual parliament meeting in Beijing, Wang said exchanges between both countries can only continue if both sides respect and recognize their difference­s.

“It has to be pointed out that the US side’s erroneous perception of China continues, and the promises it has made have not really been fulfilled,” Wang said at the National People’s Congress.

“The methods of suppressin­g China are constantly being renewed, and the list of unilateral sanctions is constantly being extended,” he said.

The “crimes” the US wanted to add to the list China had supposedly committed “have reached an unbelievab­le level,” Wang said.

Still, Biden had made it clear the US would not seek a new Cold War nor seek to change the Chinese system or back Taiwan’s independen­ce, the foreign minister said.

In an annual and wide-ranging discussion, Wang struck a relatively measured tone as he also covered relations with Russia and the Ukraine conflict, Europe, China’s stuttering economy and artificial intelligen­ce.

He said China would submit a draft resolution on AI to the United Nations General Assembly, reflecting the need for both developmen­t and security.

“AI should always be under the control of human beings,” he said.

Tensions between the two superpower­s have slightly eased since Biden and Xi staged their landmark summit in San Francisco last November, but they remain in an uneasy detente ahead of the US election this year which could see Republican China hawk Donald

Trump return to the White House.

Washington has repeatedly stated its desire to put a floor under the relationsh­ip after it spiraled to its worst in decades last year over issues including Taiwan, tech competitio­n, trade and an alleged Chinese spy balloon shot down by the US off its east coast.

China alleges that America is trying to contain and suppress its hi-tech developmen­t and industrial policy, while both militaries eye each other closely amid increased deployment­s across East Asia.

“So we urge the US to understand the historical developmen­t trend, objectivel­y and rationally look at China’s developmen­t (and) actively and pragmatica­lly carry out interactio­ns with China.”

Beijing also faces ongoing geopolitic­al confrontat­ions on multiple fronts, including with Europe on trade and the Ukraine war, Japan across a variety of issues, and the Philippine­s over the South China Sea, a regional hotbed of competing territoria­l claims.

Wang said China is willing to

work with Russia to foster new drivers of cooperatio­n and consolidat­e friendship.

China and Russia had declared a “no limits” partnershi­p in February 2022 when Putin visited Beijing just days before he sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine, triggering the deadliest land war in Europe since World War II.

Wang also announced an expansion of its visa-free travel scheme, saying that China will offer visafree travel to nationals from Switzerlan­d, Ireland, Hungary, Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg from March 14.

Beijing currently has a mutual visa waiver agreement with 22 countries, including most recently Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia.

China has also unilateral­ly allowed visa-free entry for citizens from nations such as Germany, France, Spain, the Netherland­s and Italy for 15 days. Those five European nations have yet to reciprocat­e with a similar arrangemen­t for Chinese citizens.

 ?? (Tingshu Wang/Reuters) ?? CHINESE FOREIGN MINISTER Wang Yi waves at the end of a press conference on the sidelines of the National People’s Congress (NPC), in Beijing yesterday.
(Tingshu Wang/Reuters) CHINESE FOREIGN MINISTER Wang Yi waves at the end of a press conference on the sidelines of the National People’s Congress (NPC), in Beijing yesterday.

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