San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Beijing, Seoul ministers meet to bolster ties

- By Zen Soo and Kim TongHyung Zen Soo and Kim TongHyung are Associated Press writers.

HONG KONG — South Korea’s foreign minister met his Chinese counterpar­t in the southern Chinese city of Xiamen on Saturday, as Seoul seeks to improve ties with its top trading partner even as U.S.China relations remain strained.

Ahead of the trip, South Korea’s newly appointed Foreign Minister Chung Euiyong told reporters that he expected North Korea to be a key issue in talks with Wang Yi.

In his opening statement, Wang said China and South Korea will “seek a process for a political resolution of the Korean Peninsula issue,” as part of pursuing policies for peace amid North Korea’s nuclear standoff with Washington. Chung said both China and

South Korea share the goal of “complete denucleari­zation” of the Korean Peninsula.

He said South Korea asks China “to continue serving a constructi­ve role in the stable management of the situation on the Korean Peninsula and achieving substantia­l progress in the Korean Peninsula peace process.”

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement the top diplomats also agreed to push for a visit to South Korea by Chinese President Xi Jinping once the coronaviru­s pandemic is stabilized, and acknowledg­ed the need for threeway cooperatio­n with Japan while pushing for a trilateral summit between the countries.

South Korea’s JoongAng Ilbo newspaper speculated that China’s decision to host Chung in Xiamen, a city close to the selfruled island of Taiwan, was intended to send a message to Washington against attempting to shore up a U.S.led “antiChina coalition.”

The Biden administra­tion has stepped up efforts to bolster cooperatio­n with allies South Korea and Japan, focused on China’s growing influence and the North Korean nuclear threat.

On Friday, Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan hosted his South Korean and

Japanese counterpar­ts at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., for discussion­s on the countries’ threeway partnershi­p and Washington’s policies on North Korea.

The United States and China are at odds over a range of issues from trade to human rights in Tibet, Hong Kong and China’s western Xinjiang region, as well as over Taiwan, China’s assertiven­ess in the South China Sea and the coronaviru­s pandemic. China has also been accused of lax enforcemen­t of U.N. sanctions aimed at curbing North Korea’s nuclear program.

The worsening relations between Washington and Beijing have raised concerns in Seoul that it would become squeezed between its main security ally and biggest trade partner.

 ?? Kim Yun-gu / Associated Press ?? South Korean Foreign Minister Chung Euiyong (left) greets Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi at their meeting in Xiamen, China. North Korea’s nuclear program was a focus of the talks.
Kim Yun-gu / Associated Press South Korean Foreign Minister Chung Euiyong (left) greets Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi at their meeting in Xiamen, China. North Korea’s nuclear program was a focus of the talks.

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