The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

China urges U.S. to scrap tariffs, restore goodwill

Foreign minister cites ‘irrational suppressio­n’ of its tech progress.

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China urged the Biden administra­tion to take steps to “build up goodwill,” including removing tariffs and sanctions, as Beijing continued to put the onus on Washington to repair their fractured relationsh­ip.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told a forum Monday in Beijing that the two sides should reopen dialogue platforms cut off under former President Donald Trump and back away from some of the previous administra­tion’s policies. He reiterated the need to remove “unreasonab­le tariffs,” abandon “irrational suppressio­n” of China’s technology progress, and cited curbs on Chinese media and students as another issue of concern.

“Under the current circumstan­ces, the two sides may start from easier things, interact actively and build up goodwill,” Wang said, adding that Beijing and Washington were still capable of “getting big things done” for the world. “We hope that the

U.S. side will adjust its policies as soon as possible.”

The speech represents China’s most high-profile comment on ties since U.S. President Joe Biden and China’s Xi Jinping spoke by phone earlier this month. While both sides want to stabilize a relationsh­ip shaken during Trump’s term, Biden has signaled a desire to maintain many of his predecesso­r’s China policies.

Other speakers at Monday’s event included Hank Paulson, the former U.S. treasury secretary, Kevin Rudd, the former Australian prime minister, and Maurice Greenberg, former chairman and CEO of American Internatio­nal Group Inc.

Paulson said it falls on both countries to work to improve ties. “The U.S. and China must decide how and where to compete and how to avoid conflict,” he said. “If we don’t, the world will be

very dangerous place.”

In his call with Xi, Biden expressed concern about China’s “coercive and unfair economic practices” as well as human rights abuses in the Xinjiang region.

Xi cautioned Biden against interferin­g in what it considers its own internal affairs and urged the U.S. help reestablis­h communicat­ion mechanisms to avoid misunderst­anding and miscalcula­tion.

Wang’s comments Monday about easing visa pressure on Chinese students and media pointed to one possible area of compromise.

Biden’s Indo-pacific coordinato­r Kurt Campbell said in January that the U.S. could reverse such actions to build confidence with China.

“From China’s perspectiv­e, the responsibi­lity of deteriorat­ion in China-u.s. relations during the Trump administra­tion lies mainly with the U.S.,” said Zhou Qi, director of Institute of Global Governance and Developmen­t at Tongji University. “To get the ties back on track, the U.S. needs to change its attitude first.”

 ?? ANDY WONG/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Attendees at the Lanting Forum on China-u.s. relations on Monday sit near a television screen showing China’s Ambassador to the U.S. Cui Tiankai.
ANDY WONG/ ASSOCIATED PRESS Attendees at the Lanting Forum on China-u.s. relations on Monday sit near a television screen showing China’s Ambassador to the U.S. Cui Tiankai.

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