San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN SEEKS TO GET CHINA RELATIONS ON TRACK

President will meet with Xi at summit in San Francisco

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President Joe Biden and China’s Xi Jinping swept into San Francisco on Tuesday as the two leaders made their final preparatio­ns for their first engagement in a year at a historic estate outside of the city.

Biden expressed hope that the talks would help put a shaky U.S.-China relationsh­ip — marked by sharp difference­s over the last year — in a better place. The two leaders arrived in the city to be greeted by hundreds of demonstrat­ors who lined up along their motorcade routes, waving Chinese, Taiwanese and Tibetan flags as well as signs in support of and in opposition to the Chinese leader.

Biden, before leaving Washington to make his way West on Tuesday to attend this year’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n forum, said his broad goal was to get Washington and Beijing “on a normal course correspond­ing ” once again even as they have sharp difference­s on no shortage of issues.

“Being able to pick up the phone and talk to one another if there’s a crisis. Being able to make sure our militaries still have contact with one another,” Biden told reporters at the White House. “We’re not trying to decouple from China, but what we’re trying to do is change

the relationsh­ip for the better.”

The two leaders will meet at Filoli Estate, a country house museum about 25 miles south of San Francisco, according to three senior administra­tion officials. The officials requested anonymity to discuss the venue, which has not yet been confirmed by the White House and Chinese government.

Separately, a U.S. official confirmed that Biden and Xi are expected to announce an agreement that would restore talks under what’s known as the Military Maritime Consultati­ve Agreement.

The agreement is used by the U.S. and People’s Liberation Army, navies and air forces to improve safety in the air and sea. Until 2020, they had been meeting regularly since 1998 for the talks. The official requested anonymity to preview the expected leaders’ announceme­nt.

Biden arrived at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport Tuesday afternoon and Xi landed shortly after. The Chinese president was welcomed on the tarmac by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Gov. Gavin Newsom and U.S. Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns.

Hundreds of onlookers gathered on the leaders’ motorcade route, some holding signs that read “End CCP,” the initials of Chinese Communist Party. Another sign read “Warmly Welcome President Xi Jinping” and was affixed to concrete bollards.

Pro-China and antiChina demonstrat­ors also gathered near the Moscone Center, the venue where many APEC meetings were being held.

Beijing supporters waved U.S. and Chinese flags as they waited for Xi’s motorcade to arrive at the swanky hotel near the convention center where the Chinese delegation is staying. Several supporters used oversized Chinese national flags to obscure the few Xi critics there and used loudspeake­rs to play the patriotic “Ode to the Motherland.”

Scuffles broke out between the two groups, but police quickly intervened to maintain order. The crowds were kept out of the road by tall, metal barriers.

Wei Gong, of Charlottes­ville, Va., brought her 9-yearold daughter, Deanna Wei, to welcome Xi. Her child wore a traditiona­l Chinese, horseface skirt and held U.S. and Chinese flags.

“I have never seen him,” the mother said of Xi. “We just want to see him.”

The long complicate­d U.S.-Chinese relationsh­ip has come under heavy strain over the last year, with Beijing bristling over new U.S. export controls on advanced technology; Biden ordering the shooting down of a Chinese spy balloon after it traversed the continenta­l United States; and Chinese anger over a stopover in the U.S. by Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen earlier this year, among other issues. China claims the island as its territory.

The talks at Filoli will give the leaders a chance to try to dial back tensions in a picturesqu­e backdrop.

The sprawling estate along Northern California’s coastal range features a Georgian revival-style mansion and English Renaissanc­e gardens.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI AP ?? President Joe Biden talks with Gov. Gavin Newsom, his wife, Jennifer, and San Francisco Mayor London Breed (back to camera) in San Francisco on Tuesday.
EVAN VUCCI AP President Joe Biden talks with Gov. Gavin Newsom, his wife, Jennifer, and San Francisco Mayor London Breed (back to camera) in San Francisco on Tuesday.

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