In phone call, China’s Wang tells Rubio leaders have set tone and direction of US-China ties
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US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (left) spoke with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Jan 24.
PHOTOS: REUTERS, AFP
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WASHINGTON – Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi spoke with new US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Jan 24, and Beijing said he told the known China hawk that the direction and tone of US-China ties had been set by their leaders and he hoped Mr Rubio would play a constructive role for the good of the people of both countries.
Mr Rubio, in the first telephone call between the two top diplomats under the new administration of US President Donald Trump, told Mr Wang that Mr Trump, who began his second term on Jan 20, would pursue a relationship with China that “advances US interests and puts the American people first”, a State Department statement said.
“The Secretary also stressed the United States’ commitment to our allies in the region and serious concern over China’s coercive actions against Taiwan and in the South China Sea,” it said.
China’s Foreign Ministry said the two discussed US-China relations and Taiwan.
“I hope you would conduct yourself well and play a constructive role in the future of the Chinese and American people and in world peace and stability,” Mr Wang told Mr Rubio, who in his Senate confirmation hearing last week labelled China as the gravest threat facing the United States.
The talks came after Mr Trump said on Jan 22 he was considering a 10 per cent duty on Chinese imports because of Beijing’s role in the fentanyl trade.
According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry’s statement, Mr Wang told Mr Rubio their respective heads of state had “pointed out the direction and established the tone for China-US relations”.
“The teams of both sides should implement the important consensus of the two heads of state, maintain communication, manage differences, expand cooperation, promote the stable, healthy and sustainable development of China-US relations, and find the right way for China and the United States to get along in the new era,” Mr Wang said.
Last week, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Mr Trump agreed in a phone call ahead of the latter’s inauguration to create a strategic communication channel on “major issues”.
Mr Trump said in a speech to the World Economic Forum on Jan 23 that he sees a very good relationship between the United States and China, and that he hopes China can help end Russia’s war in Ukraine.
In an interview with Fox News aired on Jan 23, he said he had had a “good, friendly conversation” with Mr Xi and thought he could reach a trade deal with Beijing.
Mr Trump said on Jan 20 he had received an invitation to visit China and could travel there as soon as 2025.
In the first year of his first term, Mr Trump quickly struck up a relationship with Mr Xi and both men lavishly hosted each other in Florida and Beijing. But that did not stop ties from deteriorating into a trade war that unleashed a series of tit-for-tat tariffs and uprooted global supply chains.
Mr Rubio said at his confirmation hearing that China believed it was on a path to supplant the United States as the dominant world power in the next 20 to 30 years.
Mr Wang said China has “no intention of surpassing or replacing anyone, but we must defend our legitimate right to development”.
On Taiwan, he said that the island has been part of China’s territory since ancient times and Beijing would never allow it to be separated from China.
Democratically governed Taiwan rejects Beijing’s claim of sovereignty, and says the Communist Party of China has never ruled over the island, where the Republic of China government fled to Taipei in 1949 after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong’s communists.
US arms sales to Taiwan, allowed under US law, have continued to strain Beijing’s ties with Washington.
“The United States has made a solemn commitment to pursue the one-China policy in the three Sino-US joint communiques and must not break its promise,” Mr Wang said.
“A major power should behave like a major power, should assume its due international responsibilities, should maintain world peace, and should help all countries achieve common development,” he said, echoing criticisms US officials have made about China. REUTERS