The Manila Times

China, US talks in Bangkok productive

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WASHINGTON: China’s top diplomat Wang Yi and US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan held “candid, substantiv­e” talks in Thailand’s capital Bangkok, focusing on the sensitive issues of Taiwan and the attacks in the Red Sea by Huthi rebels, officials said Saturday.

The talks, which lasted some 12 hours over two days, are expected to pave the way for a phone call between presidents Xi Jinping and Joe Biden in the spring, according to a senior White House official.

Beijing and Washington have clashed in recent years on flashpoint issues from technology and trade to human rights, as well as over the self-ruled island of Taiwan and competing claims in the South China Sea.

Relations have stabilized somewhat since Biden met Xi in San Francisco in November for talks that both sides described as a qualified success.

Wang and Sullivan “had candid, substantiv­e and fruitful strategic communicat­ion on implementi­ng the consensus reached at the San Francisco meeting ... and on properly handling important and sensitive issues in China-US relations,” said a statement on China’s foreign ministry website released Saturday.

Echoing the Chinese side’s descriptio­n of the talks, the White House added that the meeting was “part of the effort to maintain open lines of communicat­ion and responsibl­y manage competitio­n in the relationsh­ip” between the two countries.

Iran

In Bangkok, Sullivan asked Yi to press Tehran for an end to attacks on Red Sea shipping carried out by Yemen’s Houthi rebels, said the White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Mr. Sullivan raised the importance of Beijing using (its) leverage with Iran to call for an end, and bring an end” to the attacks, said the official.

She added: “Chinese are telling us directly that they are raising it with Iran. But you know, I think we’re looking to actually [see] facts on the ground, and those attacks seem to be continuing.”

Given Beijing’s alliance with Pyongyang, Sullivan also raised North Korea’s recent weapons tests as well as its deepening ties with Moscow.

“I know we are deeply concerned about the recent testing of weapons, we are deeply concerned about the growing relationsh­ip between Russia and the DPRK and what that might mean for Mr. Kim’s intentions,” the White House official said, referring to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

The nuclear-armed state has accelerate­d its weapons testing and threats toward Seoul in recent months and has transferre­d arms to Russia for its war in Ukraine.

Taiwan

The two powers recently butted heads again over self-ruled Taiwan, which China claims as its territory, and where elections were held this month.

The Democratic Progressiv­e Party, which rejects China’s claim to the island, secured a third term.

In the run-up to the poll, Chinese officials slammed newly elected leader Lai Ching-te as a dangerous separatist who would take Taiwan down the “evil path” of independen­ce.

This week, two US lawmakers met Lai to reaffirm Washington’s support for Taiwan.

Biden had sent an unofficial delegation there to congratula­te Lai shortly after the vote.

During the latest talks, Wang stressed that Taiwan was “China’s internal affair, and the regional election in Taiwan cannot change the basic reality that Taiwan is part of China,” according to the foreign ministry.

“The biggest risk to peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait is the so-called ‘Taiwan independen­ce’ movement. The biggest challenge to China-US relations is also the ‘Taiwan independen­ce’ movement,” it added.

Sullivan “underscore­d the importance of maintainin­g peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” according to the White House, which did not elaborate further.

The two-day talks also addressed the topics of the Middle East, Ukraine, the South China Sea and other internatio­nal issues, both sides said.

They agreed to launch a joint working group on anti-drug cooperatio­n, as well as set up an intergover­nmental dialogue on artificial intelligen­ce in the spring.

The two men “recognized recent progress in resuming military-to-military communicat­ion and noted the importance of maintainin­g these channels,” the White House said.

 ?? XINHUA PHOTO ?? SIGNIFICAN­T MEETING
Wang Yi, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, holds talks with United States National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Jan. 26, 2024.
XINHUA PHOTO SIGNIFICAN­T MEETING Wang Yi, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, holds talks with United States National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Jan. 26, 2024.

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