The Borneo Post

China envoy says prefers to resolve trade dispute

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WASHINGTON: The United States and China should avoid a trade war, China’s Ambassador to the United States Cui Tiankai said, stressing that Beijing’s preference was to resolve the dispute through negotiatio­ns.

“Negotiatio­n would still be our preference but it takes two to tango,” Cui told reporters after an hour- long meeting at the State Department with Acting US Secretary of State John Sullivan. “We will see what the US will do,” he added.

Cui said the me e t ing covered all aspects of the USChina relationsh­ip, which he described as “comprehens­ive and complex.”

“We discussed the overall relationsh­ip, including the

Negotiatio­n would still be our preference but it takes two to tango.

trade aspects,” he said.

Cui and State Department off icials said the meeting had been arranged before Wa shi n g ton announc ed proposed US tariffs on US$ 50 billion of Chinese products, a move that provoked Chinese retaliatio­n.

A US trade official said on Wednesday the United States may pursue negotiatio­ns to resolve deepening difference­s over trade, but he declined to say whether high- level meetings were planned.

One of the first opportunit­ies for the United States and China to discuss the dispute will be on the sidelines of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank meeting in Washington on April 20-22. A US official said no talks had been scheduled.

The State Department said afterwards that both sides had discussed the need to restore ‘ fairness and balance’ in the economic relationsh­ip between the United States and China, the world’s largest economies.

Both sides agreed on the importance of pursuing a “cons t ruc t ive US- China relationsh­ip that produces me a n i n g f u l re s u l t s ,” the department said in a statement.

The meeting also reaffirmed their commitment “to the complete, veri f iable, and irreversib­le denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula” – a reference to their cooperatio­n in resolving a crisis over North Korea’s developmen­t of nuclear missiles capable of hitting the United States.

China has traditiona­lly been North Korea’s closest al ly though ties have been frayed by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s pursuit of nuclear weapons and missiles and Beijing’s backing of tough UN sanctions in response. — Reuters

Cui Tiankai, China’s Ambassador to the United States

 ??  ?? Shipping containers are being loaded onto Xin Da Yang Zhou ship from Shanghai, China at Pier J at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, California. The United States and China should avoid a trade war, China’s Ambassador to the United States Cui...
Shipping containers are being loaded onto Xin Da Yang Zhou ship from Shanghai, China at Pier J at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, California. The United States and China should avoid a trade war, China’s Ambassador to the United States Cui...

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