US top diplomat Blinken visits China for tough talks
US top diplomat Blinken visits China for tough talks

US top diplomat Blinken visits China for tough talks

Antony Blinken arrived in China for his second visit in a year to discuss a range of issues amid rising tensions between the two countries.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Shanghai on Wednesday to tackle an array of unresolved issues that threaten the stability of US-China relations.

Blinken will meet with business leaders before traveling to Beijing on Friday for talks with Foreign Minister Wang Yi and a possible meeting with President Xi Jinping.

Tensions between the world’s two largest economies have eased noticeably since his last visit in June. At the time, Blinken was the highest-ranking US official to visit China in five years.

The trip was followed by a meeting between the two countries’ presidents in November.

Blinken’s soft diplomacy

A day before he meets Beijing’s top brass to tackle issues like Russia, Taiwan and trade, Blinken sampled local food, watched a basketball game and strolled along Shanghai’s famous Bund promenade.

He visited local Communist Party leader Chen Jining and told him President Biden was committed to “direct and sustained” dialogue between the world’s two largest economies. 

State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said that Blinken raised concerns about China’s “trade policies and non-market economic practices.”

The top US diplomat also “stressed that the United States seeks a healthy economic competition” with Beijing and called for “a level playing field for US workers and firms operating in China.”

Chen, who is the Chinese Communist Party secretary for the city, welcomed Blinken. “Whether we choose cooperation or confrontation affects the well-being of both peoples, both countries and the future of humanity,” he said.

Although relations between Washington and Beijing have thawed, the countries have made little progress in curbing China’s supply of chemicals used to make fentanyl. Taiwan remains a flashpoint, and tensions are rising over China’s support for Russia in its war in Ukraine.

Source: Dw

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