The Pak Banker

Biden, Xi talk to avoid US-China 'conflict'

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WASHINGTON: US President Joe Biden and Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping talked for the first time in seven months Thursday, with both leaders urging a path away from conflict but holding ground on fierce competitio­n between the superpower­s. In the 90-minute call, Biden warned against misunderst­andings that could lead to confrontat­ion between Washington and Beijing, the White House said, while Xi called for a new direction in a relationsh­ip beset by "serious difficulti­es".

US-China relations went into a nosedive under Biden's predecesso­r Donald Trump, who launched a trade war between the world's number one and two economies and harangued the Chinese government for its handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Biden's administra­tion, while urging multilater­alism and an end to Trump's "America first" ideology, has kept trade tariffs in place and remains tough on other contentiou­s areas of the relationsh­ip with Beijing, such as cybersecur­ity and human rights.

During the call, Biden's message was that the United States wants to ensure "we don't have any situation in the future where we veer into unintended conflict," a senior US administra­tion official told reporters.

In Beijing, state broadcaste­r CCTV reported that the phone call was "candid, in-depth" with Xi noting the "serious difficulti­es" caused by recent US policy towards China, which has seen the countries joust over trade, tech, human rights and the origins of the coronaviru­s. "Whether China and the US can properly handle their relations... is critical for the future and destiny of the world," state broadcaste­r CCTV said citing Xi.

The White House signaled the diplomatic impasse is unsustaina­ble and potentiall­y dangerous, requiring interventi­on by the leaders in Thursday's call. "We welcome stiff competitio­n but we don't want that competitio­n to veer into conflict," the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters.

The goal of the call was to set out "guardrails" so that the relationsh­ip can be "managed responsibl­y." Lower level attempts to engage with China have not gone well, especially at an angry March exchange between Secretary of State Antony Blinken and top Chinese officials when they met in Anchorage, Alaska.

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