The Pak Banker

Biden failed to secure summit with China's Xi in call last week

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WASHINGTON: US President Joe Biden proposed a first face-to-face summit with his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping, in a call last week, but failed to secure an agreement, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

The newspaper quoted multiple people briefed on last Thursday's call as saying that Xi did not take Biden up on the offer and instead insisted Washington adopt a less strident tone toward Beijing. The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. But a source who was among those briefed on the 90-minute Biden-Xi call confirmed the report was accurate.

"Xi apparently intimated that the tone and atmosphere of the relationsh­ip needed to be improved first," the source said. China's embassy in Washington did not immediatel­y respond when asked to comment.

The Financial Times quoted one of its sources as saying Biden had floated the summit as one of several possibilit­ies for follow-on engagement with Xi, and he had not expected an immediate response. It cited one U.S. official as saying that while Xi did not engage with the idea of a summit, the White House believed that was partly due to concerns about COVID-19.

The G20 summit in Italy in October has been talked about as a possible venue for a face-to-face meeting, but Xi has not left China since the outbreak of the pandemic early last year. The call between Biden and Xi was their first in seven months and they discussed the need to ensure that competitio­n between the world's two largest economies does not veer into conflict.

A U.S. official briefing before the conversati­on called it a test of whether direct top-level engagement could end what had become a stalemate in ties, which are at the worst level in decades.

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