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China, US trade barbs on trade, territorial claim
By Ben Dooley
Beijing (AFP) June 14, 2018

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi traded barbs on trade and China's territorial claims Thursday, just as the two seek cooperation on resolving the North Korean nuclear issue.

The top American diplomat made a flying visit to Beijing to brief China's leadership on Tuesday's historic meeting between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

He also met with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Pompeo appeared with Wang in Beijing's Great Hall of the People for a brief press conference, where the two discussed the prospects for cooperation on ending Pyongyang's nuclear weapons programme.

But while the two world powers have worked together to pressure Pyongyang, their relations have been been fraught by tensions on other issues.

One particular sore spot has been the massive trade imbalances between the two countries, a bone of contention for Trump.

"Our deficit with China is still too high," Pompeo warned, adding the issue was a key concern for the US president, who will decide Friday whether to impose tariffs on billions of dollars of Chinese imports.

"We hope the US will meet the Chinese half way and use a win-win, instead of lose-lose approach," Wang said, urging Washington to refrain from "creating further obstacles to our cooperation".

- Taiwan tensions -

The two sides also aired grievances over security issues, with Wang saying he had "expressed grave concerns" over recent US actions on Taiwan, which China sees as a breakaway province.

Beijing has consistently opposed moves by the Trump administration to strengthen ties with the self-ruled island, which split from the mainland in 1949.

Two days after the US opened a de facto embassy in Taipei, Wang said he had urged the US to "stop official exchanges and all military links with Taiwan".

China's state-run Xinhua news agency said Taiwan came up in Pompeo's meeting with Xi.

"Xi expressed his hope that the United States will handle sensitive issues, including the Taiwan issue and economic and trade frictions, in a prudent way to avoid serious obstruction to bilateral ties," Xinhua said.

On North Korea, Xinhua quoted the Chinese leader as saying that Beijing was committed to seeing "denuclearisation of the peninsula and its peace and stability".

The news agency said Pompeo brought a message from Trump conveying his appreciation for Xi's "important advice and help over the Korean Peninsula issue".

The issue of the South China Sea was also addressed by Pompeo at his press conference with Wang.

Pompeo said he had "reaffirmed our concern with respect to China's efforts to build and militarise outposts in the South China Sea, endangering the free flow of trade, and threatening the sovereignty of other nations and undermining regional stability".

Beijing has transformed reefs and islets in the resource-rich region's waters into artificial islands capable of hosting military facilities.

China had pledged it would not militarise the area, where it has overlapping claims with Vietnam and the Philippines, among others.

But the US has accused Beijing of breaking that promise by deploying a range of military hardware including anti-ship missiles, surface-to-air missiles and electronic jammers across the region.


Related Links
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com


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Tariffs not denting military relations with US allies: Mattis
Washington (AFP) June 11, 2018
Ongoing tensions between America and its closest allies over tariffs and other issues have not soured military-to-military relationships, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Monday. President Donald Trump has recently blasted several nations, including Canada, over what he has called unfair tariffs on US goods. Trump refused to sign a joint statement over the weekend endorsing global trade rules, and accused Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of dishonesty. But Mattis said defense minis ... read more

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