US, China officials to hold top-level security talks Friday

The talks are the latest sign of a normalisation of US-China security ties, after relations soured dramatically amid tensions over trade and the South China Sea. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON (AFP) - US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defence Secretary Jim Mattis will host their Chinese counterparts on Friday (Nov 9) in Washington for a round of high-level diplomatic and security talks, the US State Department announced.

The second US-China Diplomatic and Security Dialogue will bring Mattis and Pompeo together with senior Communist Party foreign affairs official Yang Jiechi, and General Wei Fenghe, a department statement said.

The talks, which follow a first meeting held in June 2017, are the latest sign of a normalisation of US-China security ties, after relations soured dramatically amid tensions over trade and the South China Sea.

In early October, a US defence official said that a planned visit by Mattis to China had been cancelled, because Beijing declined to make Wei available.

But addressing a Middle East security conference last week, Mattis said his Chinese counterpart Wei would shortly travel to Washington, adding that "strategic competition does not imply hostility".

Washington and Beijing have been locked in a high-stakes stand-off over President Donald Trump's move to end what he says have been years of unfair trade practices by China.

Trump imposed new tariffs on roughly half of Chinese imports this summer while Beijing fired back with tariffs on most US products.

He went on to escalate the feud into a full-press offensive - boosting military support for rival Taiwan, accusing China of interfering in US elections, stepping up denunciations of Beijing's human rights record and curtailing its access to US nuclear technology.

But Trump sounded a more conciliatory note last week, heralding "very good" talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, and later declaring that he expected their trade conflict to end with "a very good deal".

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang also told a visiting delegation of US lawmakers last week that he hoped their countries can meet "halfway" amid friction over trade, security and other issues.

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