The Borneo Post

In Beijing, Trump presses China on North Korea and trade

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BEIJING: US President Donald Trump called on China to do more to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue and said bilateral trade had been unfair to the United States, while Chinese President Xi Jinping said his country would be more open to foreign firms.

On North Korea, Trump said “China can fix this problem quickly and easily,” urging Beijing to cut financial links with North Korea and also calling on Russia to help.

Trump was speaking alongside Xi in the Chinese capital to announce the signing of about US$250 billion in commercial deals between US and Chinese firms, a display that some in the US business community worry detracts from tackling deep- seated complaints about market access in China.

Xi said the Chinese economy would become incereasin­gly open and transparen­t to foreign firms, including those from the United States, and welcomed US companies to participat­e in his ambitious ‘Belt and Road’ infrastruc­ture-led initiative.

Trump made clear that he blamed his predecesso­rs, not China, for the trade imbalance, and repeatedly praised Xi, calling him “a very special man”.

“But we will make it fair and it will be tremendous for both of us,” Trump said.

Trump is pressing China to tighten the screws further on North Korea and its developmen­t of nuclear weapons. At least modest progress is hoped for, though there are no immediate signs of a major breakthrou­gh, a US official said earlier.

Referring to Xi, Trump said: “I do believe there’s a solution to that, as do you.”

In a show of the importance China puts on Trump’s first official visit, Thursday’s welcoming ceremony outside Beijing’s Great Hall of the People overlookin­g Tiananmen Square was broadcast live on state television – unpreceden­ted treatment for a visiting leader.

Earlier on Thursday, Xi said he had a deep exchange of views with Trump and reached consensus on numerous issues of mutual concern.

“For China, cooperatio­n is the only real choice, only win-win can lead to an even better future,” he said.

Xi said China and the United States strengthen­ed high- level dialogue on all fronts over the past year and boosted coordinati­on on major internatio­nal issues, such as the Korean peninsula and Afghanista­n.

“Relations between China and the United States are now on a new historical starting point,” Xi said.

Trump and Xi hit it off at their first meeting in April at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida and continued their ‘bromance’ on Wednesday with an afternoon of sightseein­g together with their wives.

However, deep divisions persist over trade and North Korea.

And while Xi is riding high after consolidat­ing power at a twice-adecade Communist Party Congress last month, Trump comes to China saddled with low public approval ratings and dogged by investigat­ions into Russian links to his election campaign.

Trump has ratcheted up his criticism of China’s massive trade surplus with the United States – calling it ‘embarrassi­ng’ and ‘horrible’ last week – and has accused Beijing of unfair trade practices.

For its part, China says US restrictio­ns on Chinese investment­s in the United States and on high-tech exports need to be addressed.

Several corporate chief executives were in Beijing as part of a delegation led by US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, with General Electric and semiconduc­tor maker Qualcomm Inc among those announcing billions of dollars in sales to China.

But Qualcomm’s agreement to sell US$12-billion worth of components to three Chinese mobile phone makers over three years is non-binding, and critics say such public announceme­nts are sometimes more show than substance. — Reuters

For China, cooperatio­n is the only real choice, only win-win can lead to an even better future. Xi Jinping, Chinese President

 ??  ?? The quarter of a trillion dollar haul underscore­s how Trump is keen to be seen to address a trade deficit with the world’s second-largest economy that he has long railed against and called ‘shockingly high’. — Reuters photo
The quarter of a trillion dollar haul underscore­s how Trump is keen to be seen to address a trade deficit with the world’s second-largest economy that he has long railed against and called ‘shockingly high’. — Reuters photo

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