The Philippine Star

US, China holding security talks amid trade tensions

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Even as the United States and China butt heads over trade, their top diplomats and defense chiefs will be meeting in Washington today, looking to tamp down tensions on other issues that have put a chill on relations between the two world powers.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis will meet with their counterpar­ts Yang Jiechi and Wei Fenghe at the State Department.

The talks were due to be held in Beijing last month but were postponed after Washington announced new arms sales to Taiwan, and US and Chinese vessels came close to colliding in the South China Sea.

Although the rescheduli­ng of the US-China Diplomatic and Security Dialogue signals an effort by the two sides to contain the slide in the relationsh­ip, it’s something of a placeholde­r ahead of a planned meeting at the end of the month between US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping at a Group of 20 summit in Argentina.

That’s where the two leaders are likely to address the burgeoning trade dispute that’s already hurting constituen­cies in both nations and threatens to weigh on the wider global economy.

Trump has slapped tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese products, in a push to narrow the US trade deficit and push back against what the US views as predatory Chinese tactics on the high technology industry. Beijing has retaliated with tariffs on $110 million worth of US goods.

“We want this to be a constructi­ve, results-oriented relationsh­ip with China,” US Ambassador to China, Terry Branstad, told reporters on Thursday. “The United States is not trying to contain China, but we want fairness and reciprocit­y.”

He described Friday’s meeting as a chance for a “frank and open” exchange of views on issues like North Korea, human rights, and cooperatio­n on Afghanista­n and Iran, where the US is pressing Beijing to cut oil imports.

Branstad said they would also discuss “strategic security” and avoiding accidents between the two militaries. The US Navy says a Chinese destroyer came close to the US Decatur in late September in an “unsafe and unprofessi­onal maneuver” near a disputed reef in the South China Sea, where Beijing has sweeping but disputed sovereignt­y claims.

China clearly views today’s talks, which will be followed by a joint news conference, as a scene-setter for the upcoming meeting between Trump and Xi.

Yang met Wednesday with US national security adviser John Bolton and urged that the two sides “manage difference­s properly” and look to make that summit a success, China’s state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

“China is in damage control mode,” said Yun Sun, a China expert at the Stimson Center think tank, noting Beijing’s uncertaint­y about what exactly Trump wants out of trade deal but it hopes that with US mid-term elections out of the way the mercurial American president may be more inclined to reach a compromise. “Their top priority is to stabilize relations,” she said.

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