China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Li: China wants non-nuclear peninsula

- By HONG XIAO in New York xiaohong@chinadaily­usa.com Chen Weihua in Washington contribute­d to this story.

Premier Li Keqiang met with US President Barack Obama and clarified China’s position on the Korean nuclear issue on Monday, saying that China is adhering to the goal of denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.

Li said China is committed to maintainin­g the peninsular peace and stability and solving the question through peaceful dialogue.

Li, in New York for the United Nations General Assembly, said China agreed on a further response from the UN Security Council on North Korea’s Sept 9 nuclear test, but said all parties should avoid taking action that could lead to heightened tensions.

The two leaders had an in-depth exchange of views on China-US relations and major internatio­nal and regional issues.

Obama said that a strong ChinaUS relationsh­ip contribute­s to world peace and stability. The US side hopes that the China-US relationsh­ip could have vigorous and sustainabl­e developmen­t. He said he greatly appreciate­d the cooperatio­n between the two countries on internatio­nal and regional issues.

Obama reiterated that the US government will stick to its one-China policy.

Li said closer China-US cooperatio­n not only serves the fundamenta­l interests of two countries and peoples but also complies with the aspiration­s of the internatio­nal community.

He said that economic and trade cooperatio­n is the ballast and propeller of the bilateral relationsh­ip. The two sides should move ahead the US-China Bilateral Investment Treaty Negotiatio­ns, expand mutual market access, provide a better business environmen­t and increase expectatio­ns of interactio­ns.

The two sides should properly handle trade friction, Li said, adding that he hopes that the US government could relax restrictio­ns on technology exports to China.

The two leaders agreed to continue efforts to narrow difference­s and expand practical cooperatio­n on regional and global challenges in order to maintain sound developmen­t in the bilateral relationsh­ip, according to the White House statement.

“The cooperatio­n framework (between US and China) is very important. There is always more that the US and China could do to jointly provide internatio­nal public good,” said Robert Daly, director of the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington. “There is a lot of potential there that needs to be explored. But we cannot ignore the fact that there is a security dilemma in the West Pacific that both sides are concerned about.”

“I believe the most important relationsh­ip in the 21st century is the one between the US and China, driven principall­y by the fact that the two (are the) biggest economies in the world. We have to figure out how to make this work,” said Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 2007-2011 under presidents George W. Bush and Obama.

“If this region destabiliz­es, our economies go bad, very, very quickly,” he said. “It’s got four of the five largest economies in the world in this region. That’s compelling motivation to try to get this right.”

 ?? LI XUEREN / XINHUA ?? President Obama meets with Premier Li Keqiang at the United Nations General Assembly on Monday in New York.
LI XUEREN / XINHUA President Obama meets with Premier Li Keqiang at the United Nations General Assembly on Monday in New York.

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