The Guardian (USA)

Australian business hails Albanese’s meeting with Xi as ‘tremendous reset’

- Katharine Murphy Political editor in Bali

The Business Council of Australia has hailed the Albanese government’s “tremendous reset” with China as a breakthrou­gh meeting was planned for Tuesday

between the Australian prime minister and the Chinese president on the sidelines of the G20.

The BCA’s chief executive, Jennifer

Westacott, told journalist­s on Monday night that Labor’s “huge foreign policy reset” with Indonesia and Pacific countries, and the “tremendous reset announced today with China”, was creating opportunit­y “for business to come

in behind … and start building those business-to-business relationsh­ips”.

The lavish public praise from Westacott, who was part of an Australian business delegation in Bali, came as the US president, Joe Biden, and the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, met face-toface for the first time in the Biden presidency.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletter­s for your daily news roundup

After their arrival in Bali for the G20, the two leaders greeted each other cordially during a landmark meeting on the sidelines of the summit, and posed, smiling, for a handshake.

In his opening remarks, Biden said the US and China had a responsibi­lity to manage their difference­s. Xi said there was a need to “elevate” and “properly handle” the relationsh­ip because the world had reached a crossroads.

A White House readout issued after the three-and-a-half hour meeting said Biden had told Xi the US intended to “compete vigorously” with China, but that competitio­n “should not veer into conflict”. Biden said it would be up to both leaders to “manage the competitio­n responsibl­y and maintain open lines of communicat­ion”.

With Taiwan a major flashpoint, Biden told Xi “our one China policy has not changed, the United States opposes any unilateral changes to the status quo by either side, and the world has an interest in the maintenanc­e of peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait”.

Biden expressed objections to China’s “coercive and increasing­ly aggressive actions towards Taiwan, which undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and in the broader region, and jeopardise global prosperity”.

Addressing journalist­s in Bali after the meeting, Biden said he found Xi to be “direct and straightfo­rward” and the two leaders were “very blunt with each other” over the course of Monday night’s conversati­on.

Biden said there “need not be a new cold war” between China and the US. The president said the US and China would not be able to solve every disagreeme­nt, but what needed to be minimised through regular dialogue was the potential for “misunderst­andings about intentions or actions on each of our parts”.

Escalating great power competitio­n is a significan­t backdrop to the G20 summit. Strategic competitio­n has destabilis­ed the equilibriu­m of the Indo-Pacific region, and has prompted the Australia government to conduct a highly visible diplomatic offensive in the region in an effort to curb China’s soft power courtship of Pacific countries.

While the great power leaders were attempting to reset their relationsh­ip on Monday night, Australia’s prime minister addressed a business forum at the G20. Earlier in the day, Albanese confirmed he would also meet the Chinese president, curtailing a three-yearlong diplomatic freeze.

After his speech to business leaders in Bali, Albanese was asked to explicate his objectives with Tuesday’s reset. He told travelling reporters it was in the “mutual interest” of Australia and China to have an improvemen­t in the relationsh­ip “and that’s what my objective is”.

Asked what would be the measure of success, the prime minister said “having the meeting is a successful outcome” because it had been several years since Australia and China had been able to maintain normal leaderto-leader dialogue.

Diplomatic signals had been pointing to the breakthrou­gh meeting with Australia for the best part of a week. Albanese spoke to China’s premier, Li Keqiang, at a gala dinner in Phnom Penh on Saturday night and signalled subsequent­ly he was happy to meet Xi in Bali “without preconditi­ons” as part of efforts to stabilise the relationsh­ip.

Albanese then met Biden on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit for the best part of 40 minutes, with the two comparing notes about their respective strategies ahead of the G20 summit.

After the meeting between Albanese and Biden, the Chinese premier said on Monday through state media his country was ready to meet Australia “halfway” in recognitio­n that the two countries this year marked 50 years of diplomatic recognitio­n. Albanese confirmed he would meet China’s president shortly after that statement was made.

The prime minister declined to say on Monday night when the meeting had been locked in. But he said the timing of his public announceme­nt on Monday had been coordinate­d with China.

Albanese intimated he would raise a number of sensitive issues that have inflamed tensions in the relationsh­ip, although he declined to nominate specifics ahead of Tuesday night’s conversati­on. “I will put Australia’s position on a range of issues and, of course, Australia’s positions … is very well known”.

Irritation­s in the relationsh­ip include trade sanctions on Australian exports, clashes over human rights, and a dispute over the detention of Australia journalist Cheng Lei.

 ?? Photograph: EyePress News/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Anthony Albanese arrives in Bali for the G20 summit. He will meet Xi Jinping on Tuesday.
Photograph: EyePress News/REX/Shuttersto­ck Anthony Albanese arrives in Bali for the G20 summit. He will meet Xi Jinping on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States