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Biden-Xi meeting: Will it succeed in mending strained US-China ties?

SRI NewsDesk
By SRI NewsDesk Published November 16, 2022
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When US President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping shook hands for their first face-to-face meeting as leaders of the world’s two top husbandries, there was further than just symbolism in the play.

The three-hour-long meeting on Monday- held on the sidelines of the G20 peak in Bali – came in the background of Beijing- Washington ties nosediving to major lows over the once several months, transferring out stopgap that the two global powers might have left the worst behind.

Though differences remained over thorny issues like Taiwan and North Korea, pragmatism appeared to have won as the two leaders looked set to help the deteriorating relations from turning into a new cold war.

After the largely- anticipated meeting, the two chairpersons expressed amenability to open lines of communication and mend their relationship, despite stewing differences on mortal rights, Russia’s descent in Ukraine, and backing for their separate domestic diligence.

“We’re going to contend roundly. But I’m not looking for conflict, I’m looking to manage this competition responsibly,” Biden said after his addresses with Xi.

Read More: TAIWAN A FLASHPOINT IN U.S CHINA RIVALRY

‘Baby- way’
In their opening statements, both Biden and Xi stated that they sought ways to get along despite their differences. The two leaders spent a lot of time together further than ten times ago when they were both vice chairpersons, and before the accommodations started, both men appertained to their close fellowship.

Biden’s “reasonable success” in the quiz choices, according to Yu Jie, an elderly exploration fellow on China at the London- grounded think tank Chatham House, puts him in a better position to direct Washington’s relations with Beijing.

Likewise, Yu says Xi’s continued connection to power within the Chinese system may give him further room to engage in tactfulness. “Xi is keen to renew a routinised medium and dialogue to steady the bilateral ties with Biden,” Yu was quoted as saying by the non-profit media organisation NPR.

Today, I met with President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China.

We discussed our responsibility to prevent the competition between our countries from veering into conflict and finding ways to work together on shared challenges that affect the international community. pic.twitter.com/ufneHdcyCF

— President Biden (@POTUS) November 14, 2022

Still, Yu cautions that Monday’s meeting is simply “a baby step” in the right direction. “It’ll not resolve any substantial grievances both sides have had against each other, but only decelerating down the deterioration of their relations.”

The major points of disagreement between the US and China weren’t bandied during Biden and Xi’s meeting.

Last month, the US dramatically confined the import of some crucial semiconductor technologies, supposedly intended to stymie China’s growth in pivotal technological diligence, including military elevation and artificial intelligence.

On Taiwan, Biden said he “did not suppose there’s any imminent attempt on the part of China to foray Taiwan”. still, a White House readout stated that the chairman expostulated to Beijing’s “coercive and decreasingly aggressive” conduct in the waters near the tone-ruled islet, Taiwan.

Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, outlined three primary lines that the US demanded to abide by for relations to ameliorate last time Not gumming China’s development, esteeming China’s claims to homes like Taiwan, and admitting Beijing’s Communist Party rule.

Following the meeting at G20, Biden emphasised in a news conference that the US’s position on Taiwan has not changed. And to add another subcaste of nebulosity to US tactfulness, he added that Washington’s one-China policy to has not changed.

Source: TRT World

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