Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

China demands US action to improve ties

Foreign minister says both countries should cooperate across board

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BEIJING – China’s top diplomat called on the U.S. on Monday to take steps to improve ties as tensions simmer over Taiwan, trade and other issues.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s remarks Monday were delivered virtually to a forum marking the 50th anniversar­y of the Shanghai Communique signed during the ice-breaking 1972 visit to China by President Richard Nixon.

That trip led seven years later to the U.S. and China establishi­ng diplomatic relations, upon which the U.S. cut formal ties with Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory to be brought under its control by force if necessary.

Wang urged Washington to “reinstate a reasonable and pragmatic China policy” and work with China to put their relations on track. He reiterated China’s complaints that the U.S. was not upholding its commitment­s but didn’t mention any specific steps China would take.

The sides need to view their relations “in the broader perspectiv­e, with a more inclusive attitude, and choose dialogue over confrontat­ion, cooperatio­n over conflict, openness over seclusion, and integratio­n over decoupling,” Wang said.

China has been particular­ly irked by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s characteri­zation of ties as “competitiv­e when it should be, collaborat­ive when it can be, adversaria­l when it must be,” saying the sides should be cooperatin­g across the board, in spite of their sharp differences.

“The United States should truly see China as a partner in the course of developmen­t, rather than an adversary, and power games,” Wang said.

Rapprochem­ent between Washington and Beijing in 1972 was largely drive by their mutual distrust of the Soviet Union. In the decades since, China has grown increasing­ly close to Moscow, while U.S.-Russia tensions have soared over the war in Ukraine.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Beijing last month, and China has refused to either condemn or endorse Russia’s actions, despite its insistence on upholding national sovereignt­y above all.

“China must decide where to stand and understand that bilateral relations with the U.S. will only become more strained in the absence of a clear choice to stand with internatio­nal law,” said forum participan­t Jacob Lew, chair of the influential National Committee on U.S.China Relations and a former U.S. treasury secretary.

The Shanghai Communique dwelt extensivel­y on the status of Taiwan, which split from the mainland amid civil war in 1949 and has never been governed by the communist People’s Republic of China. Following the 1979 break in ties with Taiwan, the U.S. Congress passed legislatio­n assuring that the U.S. would ensure Taiwan could defend itself and treat threats to the island as issues of “major concern.”

Taiwan continues to be the main irritant in U.S.-China relations, particular­ly as successive U.S. administra­tions have approved arms sales to the island and increased high-level contacts with the democratic­ally elected government in Taipei.

On Saturday, China’s Defense Ministry protested as provocativ­e the passage of the guided-missile destroyer USS Ralph Johnson through the Taiwan Strait. The Strait is in internatio­nal waters, and the U.S. Navy said the ship’s passage “demonstrat­es the United States’ commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific. The United States military flies, sails and operates anywhere internatio­nal law allows.”

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