The Pak Banker

Biden, Xi plan US-China virtual summit

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The United States and China have agreed in principle for their presidents to hold a virtual meeting before the end of the year, a senior US administra­tion official said on Wednesday, after high-level talks aimed at improving communicat­ion between the two countries.

The closed-door meeting at an airport hotel in the Swiss city of Zurich between US national security adviser Jake Sullivan and China's top diplomat Yang Jiechi was their first face-to-face encounter since an unusually public and acrid airing of grievances in Alaska in March. US officials had suggested that the meeting was a follow-on from President Joe Biden's September 9 call with

Chinese President Xi Jinping, prior to which the world's top two economies appeared to have been locked in a stalemate.

The White House said Sullivan raised concerns about contentiou­s issues such as China's actions in the South China Sea, as well as on human rights and Beijing's stances on Hong Kong, Xinjiang, and Taiwan. At the end of the day, however, both Beijing and Washington said the talks, which lasted six hours, were constructi­ve and candid. The US side said the tone was very different from Alaska.

"We do have out of today's conversati­on an agreement in principle to hold a virtual bilateral [summit] meeting before the end of the year," the US official told reporters.

Asked for further details, White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki said: "We're still working through what that would look like, when and of course the final details we don't quite have them yet." Early speculatio­n had been that the two might meet in person at the G20 summit in Italy in October, but Xi has not left China since the outbreak of the pandemic early last year.

"Today's conversati­on, broadly speaking, was a more meaningful and substantiv­e engagement than we've had to date below the leader level," the official said, adding that Washington hoped it would be a "model for future encounters".The official said it shouldn't be seen as a thaw in relations, however.

"What we are trying to achieve is a steady-state between the United States and China where we are able to compete intensely but to manage that competitio­n responsibl­y," the official said. China's foreign ministry said in a statement that Yang told Sullivan that confrontat­ion would damage both countries and the world.

"The two sides agreed to take action ... to strengthen strategic communicat­ion, properly manage difference­s, avoid conflict and confrontat­ion," the ministry statement said.

Biden's call with Xi in September ended a nearly seven-month gap in direct communicat­ion between the leaders, and the two discussed the need to ensure that their competitio­n does not veer into conflict.

Biden said on Tuesday that he spoke to Xi about Taiwan and they agreed to abide by the "Taiwan agreement", as tensions ratchet up between Taipei and Beijing.

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