The Press

Harmony has underlying niggle

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The United States and China sought yesterday to stress the positives in their relationsh­ip after three days of high-level talks, but failed to narrow difference­s on the most contentiou­s issues of cyber and maritime security.

US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said both sides had committed to work more towards a bilateral investment treaty already seven years in the making and said China had pledged to limit interventi­on in currency markets. China also pledged to further liberalise exchange rates, open capital markets and expand access to foreign financial service firms.

The two countries also stressed co-operation in combating climate change, their shared concerns about Iran and North Korea’s nuclear programmes, the fight against Islamist militancy and support for global developmen­t.

However, in what both termed ‘‘candid’’ and ‘‘frank’’ exchanges at their annual Strategic and Economic Dialogue, they restated divergent positions on China’s pursuit of territoria­l claims in the South China Sea and on cyber-security, the principal causes of deteriorat­ing trust between the world’s two largest economies.

US Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters the US remained ‘‘deeply concerned’’ about cyber-incursions, which have included massive attacks on US government computers that US officials have blamed on Chinese hackers.

He said it also had ‘‘a strong national interest’’ in freedom of navigation and overflight – a reference to concerns that China might one day declare an exclusion zone around reefs it has been building up in the South China Sea.

China’s top diplomat, state councillor Yang Jiechi, said the two countries should work together on cyber-security and called on Washington to be ‘‘impartial and objective’’ when it came to the South China Sea.

He said China had stressed its ‘‘firm determinat­ion’’ to safeguard its sovereignt­y and urged the US to respect this.

However, Yang added: ‘‘Navigation freedom in the South China Sea is guaranteed. We believe there will not be any issue or problem with navigation­al freedom in future. We hope the US can be impartial and objective to serve peace and stability in this region.’’

President Barack Obama met Yang and other Chinese officials earlier and raised concerns about China’s ‘‘cyber and maritime behaviour’’ as well as its currency, technology and investment policies. He urged China ‘‘to take concrete steps to lower tensions,’’ the White House said.

Obama’s policy of pivoting US resources to Asia in response to China’s rapid rise got a welcome boost yesterday, when the Senate passed legislatio­n vital to speed passage of a 12-nation TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP) trade deal under negotiatio­n after a six- week congressio­nal battle.

Kerry sought to play down any notion of what many analysts see as a rapidly deteriorat­ing US relationsh­ip with China.

‘‘I don’t think you heard any scintilla, not one tiny piece, of an indication of this downward spiral,’’ he said. ‘‘I think what you saw was an ascending relationsh­ip with great clarity about the things on which we’re going to cooperate. Even as there is some disagreeme­nt about how to approach one, or two, or three issues.’’

Lew said the US would keep pressing China to move to a market-determined exchange rate, even after Beijing’s commitment at the talks to intervene in currency markets only in ‘‘disorderly market conditions’’.

Beijing told Washington last year it would refrain from interventi­on when possible and Lew said this year’s commitment was a more explicit statement of what this meant. He said the true test would come if the yuan came under pressure to appreciate.

Lew said the two sides had committed to exchanging new ‘‘negative lists’’ – those areas that will remain out of bounds under a future investment treaty – in early September.

He stressed there was still a long way to go on negotiatio­ns and if the talks were a nine-innings baseball game, ‘‘we’re in the first few innings’’.

However, a scheduled visit to Washington in September by China’s President Xi Jinping for talks with Obama should focus efforts to make progress on the negative lists, Lew said.

Beijing restricts foreign investment in vast swaths of its economy, and Washington hopes an eventual investment treaty could open up China’s financial and telecom sectors. The US reviews more investment­s from China over security concerns than it does of any other country, which has helped scuttle Chinese investment­s in everything from US telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture to wind farms.

 ?? Photos: REUTERS ?? Chinese dredging vessels are purportedl­y seen in the waters around Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, in this still image from video taken by a P-8A Poseidon surveillan­ce aircraft and provided by the United States Navy.
Photos: REUTERS Chinese dredging vessels are purportedl­y seen in the waters around Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, in this still image from video taken by a P-8A Poseidon surveillan­ce aircraft and provided by the United States Navy.
 ??  ?? China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi called on Washington to be ‘‘impartial and objective’’ about the South China Sea.
China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi called on Washington to be ‘‘impartial and objective’’ about the South China Sea.

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