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US President Joe Biden is looking forward to talks with Xi Jinping in the “coming weeks”, top White House aide Jake Sullivan told the Chinese leader yesterday as they met for rare talks in Beijing.
Sullivan, the first US national security advisor to visit China since 2016, met Xi as he wrapped up three days of talks in Beijing which also saw him sit down with Foreign Minister Wang Yi and other high-ranking officials.
His visit came as China was embroiled in security rows with US allies Japan and the Philippines.
Sullivan told Xi during a meeting yesterday in Beijing’s ornate Great Hall of the People that Biden “looks forward to engaging with you again in the coming weeks”.
“President Biden is committed to responsibly managing this consequential relationship to ensure that competition does not veer into conflict or confrontation, and to work together where our interests align,” he said.
Chinese state media said Xi told Sullivan that in spite of “great changes”, China and the US could still enjoy good ties.
“China’s commitment to the goal of stable, healthy, and sustainable development of China-US relations hasn’t changed,” Xi said.
“We hope that the US will work with China to meet each other halfway,” he added, according to CCTV.
Sullivan told reporters at the US embassy that the talks with Chinese officials had lasted for 14 hours, describing the discussions as “constructive, candid, substantive”.
The Ukraine war came up during the talks, but Sullivan said that both sides had not reached “any particular plan”.
“I can’t say that we did make progress on that issue,” he said.
The talks did not touch on the upcoming US election, but Sullivan said that Vice President Kamala Harris wanted to maintain “open lines of communication” with China.
On Wednesday, Sullivan and top diplomat Wang had discussed plans for their leaders to talk in the coming weeks.
They also clashed over China’s increasingly assertive approach in disputed maritime regions.
The officials agreed to hold a call between the two sides’ theatre commanders “in the near future”, a readout from the White House said.
Sullivan also raised the importance of “freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea, where China and the Philippines have clashed in recent months, and “stability” in the Taiwan Strait, Washington said.