Beijing and Washington agreed to further roll out dialogues and collaboration involving areas such as the two nations' militaries, climate change and artificial intelligence, as senior Chinese and U.S. officials wrapped up their two-day strategic communication in Beijing on Wednesday. Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who is also director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, co-chaired the high-level talks with United States National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan. The two sides "had a candid, substantive and constructive discussion", a Foreign Ministry statement said on Wednesday. Observers said the productive Beijing meeting can help manage differences and stabilize bilateral ties in the near future. Wang and Sullivan previously held three rounds of strategic communications in Austria, Malta and Thailand. The two sides also discussed "having a new round of interactions between the two heads of state in the near future", the ministry said. They agreed to continue implementing the consensus reached at the San Francisco summit last year, and to maintain high-level exchanges and communication at various levels. As part of the meeting's outcomes, the two countries agreed to continue cooperation in areas such as counternarcotics, law enforcement and repatriation of illegal immigrants, and in addressing climate change. The two sides agreed on a number of institutional arrangements, including holding video conversations between military theater commanders at an appropriate time and convening the second round of the China-U.S. Intergovernmental Dialogue on Artificial Intelligence. "Strategic communication helps Beijing and Washington better understand each other in the context of the bigger picture, pave the way for future high-level interactions, boost progress on some specific issues and help to manage problems," said Wu Xinbo, dean of Fudan University's Institute of International Studies. The Beijing meeting also shows Washington's readiness to keep the ties steady during the remainder of Joe Biden's term as U.S. president, Wu added. On the Taiwan question, Wang emphasized that China will surely be reunified. The U.S. should put into practice its commitment to not supporting "Taiwan independence", adhere to the one-China principle and the three China-U.S. joint communiques, stop arming Taiwan, and support China's peaceful reunification, he said. Sullivan said the U.S. upholds the one-China policy and does not support "Taiwan independence", "two Chinas" or "one China, one Taiwan". On the economic front, the annual trade volume between the two countries exceeded $660 billion last year. Wang said "national security needs to have clear boundaries" and should be properly defined in the economic realm. He asked the U.S. to stop suppressing China in the economic, trade and science and technology fields, saying that using "overcapacity" as an excuse for protectionism "will harm global green development and affect world economic growth". Sullivan said Washington agrees that the two sides should treat each other as equals, competition should be healthy and fair, and the U.S. has no intention of decoupling from China. On the situation in the South China Sea, Wang asked the U.S. "not to support and condone the Philippines' infringement of (China's) rights and interests". Su Xiaohui, deputy director of the Department of American Studies at the China Institute of International Studies, said, "If the U.S. persists in perceiving China as an adversary, it will create huge uncertainty for bilateral relations, and also bring about greater risks." The two sides also exchanged views on topics including the Ukraine crisis, the Middle East and the Korean Peninsula. Regarding the Ukraine conflict, Wang said Washington should not shirk its responsibility or arbitrarily impose "illegal unilateral sanctions". |
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