Bangkok Post

Tillerson reassures Xi on Trump meet

Tensions exist over trade policy, N Korea

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WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson used a 24-hour trip to Beijing to smooth the way for an expected meeting next month between the leaders of the world’s biggest economies, amid tensions over trade policy and North Korea.

After delivering a sharp warning about North Korea’s nuclear programme during earlier stops in Tokyo and Seoul, Mr Tillerson’s tone was more measured in meetings with Chinese officials including President Xi Jinping. At an event with Foreign Minister Wang Yi, he twice echoed Chinese phrasing directly, promising a relationsh­ip of “non-conflict, non-confrontat­ion, mutual respect and win-win cooperatio­n”.

For China, Mr Tillerson’s words will be seen as reassuranc­e the US isn’t looking for a major shift in ties. Officials have been unsure about Washington’s intentions after a series of tweets by President Donald Trump and his threats to punish China over its trade practices.

While the US State Department said Mr Tillerson’s visit was focused on efforts to get China to do more to rein in its ally North Korea, a second goal was to lay the groundwork for a possible Xi visit in April to Mr Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Florida. And while Mr Tillerson has interacted with senior diplomats before, the meetings were a chance for China to take the measure of a man who was one of the US’ most prominent oil executives until a few months ago.

Mr Tillerson is “still rather obscure” to Chinese diplomats, said Ruan Zongze, vice-president of the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies run by China’s foreign ministry and an envoy to Washington between 2007 and 2011. “We want to know what his take is on some major issues. We hope to establish a smooth senior level diplomatic channel from the very beginning.”

In his first visit as secretary of state, Mr Tillerson emphasised areas where the countries could work together instead of offering any critiques.

Speaking about the North Korean nuclear programme in Seoul beforehand, Mr Tillerson said Chinese moves to punish South Korea economical­ly for its decision to deploy a US missile-defence system were “troubling”. He said Beijing should do more to enforce United Nations sanctions intended to punish Pyongyang for pursuing nuclear weapons.

In China, he said the countries agreed “things have reached a rather dangerous level” on the Korean Peninsula.

“We know that through further dialogue we will achieve a greater understand­ing that will lead to a strengthen­ed, strengthen­ing of the ties between China and the United States and set the tone for our future relationsh­ip of cooperatio­n,” Mr Tillerson announced when he met Mr Xi on Sunday.

In Mr Tillerson’s meeting with Mr Xi, reporters were allowed to linger for opening remarks. That was unusual for Mr Xi, whose security agents normally hustle the media out of meetings with foreign officials after a minute or two.

“You have made a lot of active efforts to achieve a smooth transition in our relationsh­ip under the new era,” Mr Xi said. “I also appreciate your comment that the China-US relationsh­ip can only be defined by cooperatio­n and friendship.”

While the comments were broad, they suggest ties have stabilised somewhat since Mr Trump caused a furor by suggesting the US may not recognise the “One-China” principle governing relations with Taiwan and accused China of not doing enough to curtail Kim Jong-un. On Sunday, Mr Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that Mr Kim is behaving “very, very badly”.

Significan­t issues remain, particular­ly on trade. Mr Trump has repeatedly said Chinese trade practices are unfair and the countries continue to spar over China’s claim over uninhabite­d islands in the East China Sea also claimed by Japan, a US treaty ally. In a troubling sign for China’s recent public advocacy of global trade, finance chiefs of the world’s largest economies set aside a pledge to avoid protection­ism and signed up to a fudged statement on trade, in response to the Trump administra­tion’s call to rethink the global order for commerce.

The Group of 20 nations said in a communique on Saturday they are “working to strengthen the contributi­on of trade to our economies.” While the US didn’t get all it wanted the statement was a pareddown version of the group’s missive last year, omitting a promise to “avoid all forms of protection­ism”.

And while the US believes the threat posed by North Korea’s nuclear programme is more urgent, Mr Tillerson made clear more time was needed before China and the US reach any agreement. In Seoul, he didn’t rule out a pre-emptive strike against Mr Kim’s regime, which relies on China for most of its food and fuel.

Mr Tillerson suggested Mr Xi’s visit could help China and the US set out boundaries on where they’re willing to compromise and where they will stand firm on competing interests.

 ?? AP ?? Rex Tillerson with Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday.
AP Rex Tillerson with Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday.

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